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Recycling Urban Eco Fashion
Junky Styling
Here’s something fun ...
Junky Styling, a new East End London store founded
by Anni Saunders and Kerry Seager. An eco
epicurean fashion boutique based on the joys of
clothing recycling, Junky Styling has gained an
international mystic with its creative one-off
styles.
Saunders and Seager are not
designers by training but rather stumbled into
designing their own clothes to save money for
traveling. The originality and freshness of their
designs plus the environmental friendliness of
recycling clothing quickly popped them into eco
fashion awareness. Saunders and Seager have
developed a design style based upon their destroy,
repair, enhance, and reform approach which they
call “Wardrobe Surgery”. They take old, recycled,
donated clothing and deconstruct it removing parts
of it such as sleeves, lapels or panels and then
reconstruct the remaining bits by moving seams,
reassembling sleeves as leggings, or perhaps a
sleeve turns into a torso when opened out. And
then they might add bits of details such as
ruffles on shirts and cuffs on trousers from other
recycled clothes. Saunders and Seager might
become the Picassos of eco fashion.
Clients and customers of
Junky Styling range from young eco warriors to
matronly art society ladies searching for the new
“look.” While Junky Styling closely embraces
recycling, one of the touchstones of the
environmental movement, Seager has stated “we are
obviously eco friendly but our main drive was to
create and produce beautiful clothing.” We are
beginning to find more and more environmental
principles being incorporated into fashions and
other industries.
Miguel Adrover
Saunders and Seager are not
the only designers incorporating environmental and
recycling principals into their fashions. New
York’s Miguel Adrover has added ammunition belts
to ladies fashions to emphasize the plight of
indigenous tribes fighting for their lands in the
Amazon rainforests and being forced out by
American oil companies. Miguel Adrover has also
used recycled fabrics such as a mini skirt made
from an old Louis Vuitton handbag and plaids found
at flea markets in some of his big New York
shows.
Deborah Lindquist
Deborah Lindquist, Los
Angeles designer for the celebrities,
“reincarnates” old and vintage clothing and
accessories by recycling them into reconstructed
one-of-a-kind eco haute couture. Lindquist
transforms her love of the environment by
recycling old cashmere, saris, kimonos, scarves
and other old bits and pieces into her
environmentally-sensitive wearable eco art.
Corsets and bustiers are a trademark of
Lindquist.
Lindquist makes a fashion and
environmental statement by using recycling to
reincarnate, renew, and transform the old into new
beauty. According to Lindquist,
"I want to do my best to take care of the planet
by designing with recycled and eco-friendly
materials. I think we all have to start with what
we know because it can seem like a daunting task
since I feel the world is in crisis. I design
clothing, so I figured I'd start there."
Lindquist says she loves the strange and beautiful
details that each recycled piece brings to her
creations. "Instead of getting a bolt of fabric
that anyone down the block could buy, using
recycled materials creates a more individual
look."
So, what does this have to do
with organic clothing? Directly, not much; but
indirectly, quite a bit. Recycling is important
for reusing and conserving natural resources.
Organic clothing is important in reducing chemical
toxins found in conventional fertilizers and
pesticides and from garment manufacturing
processes. If you think of the environmental
movement as being a large tree dedicated to
improving the health of our planet and all life,
then eco-friendly fashion and organic clothing are
like two large branches of the Tree that each have
smaller branches that intermingle and come
together sometimes. For example, both recycling
fashion and organic clothing could be called eco
sustainable fashions. Organic purists decry that
not all eco fashion is healthy. And fashion
mavens sniff that not all organic clothing is
fashionable. But both contribute to improving the
health of the planet, sometimes in different ways
and sometimes in the same ways. This is one of
the features of the environmental movement that
give it vibrancy and relevancy.
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