Berliner Boersenzeitung - Fast-fashion fallout: young people in UK spurred into sewing

EUR -
AED 4.204498
AFN 79.528787
ALL 98.228473
AMD 438.890345
ANG 2.048707
AOA 1049.721995
ARS 1364.791856
AUD 1.755674
AWG 2.063384
AZN 1.939078
BAM 1.96002
BBD 2.311546
BDT 139.9194
BGN 1.950165
BHD 0.431583
BIF 3408.233405
BMD 1.144735
BND 1.470721
BOB 7.910789
BRL 6.404442
BSD 1.14495
BTN 98.152312
BWP 15.285441
BYN 3.746652
BYR 22436.796346
BZD 2.299681
CAD 1.563267
CDF 3296.835716
CHF 0.93874
CLF 0.027731
CLP 1064.179535
CNY 8.222654
CNH 8.207317
COP 4698.642917
CRC 582.662052
CUC 1.144735
CUP 30.335464
CVE 110.502903
CZK 24.815506
DJF 203.872686
DKK 7.458863
DOP 67.604661
DZD 150.487194
EGP 56.858047
ERN 17.171018
ETB 156.143188
FJD 2.567863
FKP 0.843771
GBP 0.842548
GEL 3.14231
GGP 0.843771
GHS 11.712859
GIP 0.843771
GMD 80.131247
GNF 9923.364084
GTQ 8.797826
GYD 239.879103
HKD 8.981186
HNL 29.855276
HRK 7.52674
HTG 149.790522
HUF 403.226436
IDR 18591.919319
ILS 3.997241
IMP 0.843771
INR 98.244149
IQD 1499.809298
IRR 48221.94143
ISK 144.396912
JEP 0.843771
JMD 182.563041
JOD 0.8116
JPY 164.373585
KES 147.957019
KGS 100.107185
KHR 4591.745211
KMF 493.380611
KPW 1030.258563
KRW 1552.86102
KWD 0.351056
KYD 0.954025
KZT 584.039526
LAK 24726.477812
LBP 102583.917199
LKR 342.47685
LRD 228.39473
LSL 20.321985
LTL 3.380104
LVL 0.692439
LYD 6.23342
MAD 10.484272
MDL 19.76595
MGA 5191.017065
MKD 61.479055
MMK 2403.639675
MNT 4096.359543
MOP 9.253639
MRU 45.254836
MUR 52.131213
MVR 17.634599
MWK 1985.213283
MXN 21.950525
MYR 4.842645
MZN 73.27488
NAD 20.322252
NGN 1795.632872
NIO 42.130519
NOK 11.517952
NPR 157.050172
NZD 1.891765
OMR 0.440125
PAB 1.14483
PEN 4.138336
PGK 4.775281
PHP 63.70223
PKR 322.960029
PLN 4.281076
PYG 9143.685509
QAR 4.173585
RON 5.049314
RSD 117.183041
RUB 90.994866
RWF 1621.1406
SAR 4.292998
SBD 9.551595
SCR 16.27441
SDG 687.413577
SEK 10.949712
SGD 1.471161
SHP 0.899582
SLE 26.007996
SLL 24004.510499
SOS 654.317258
SRD 42.412375
STD 23693.693094
SVC 10.017567
SYP 14884.150451
SZL 20.317007
THB 37.293168
TJS 11.32253
TMT 4.006571
TND 3.407035
TOP 2.681081
TRY 44.952345
TTD 7.747782
TWD 34.262478
TZS 3065.832507
UAH 47.438631
UGX 4154.890652
USD 1.144735
UYU 47.652592
UZS 14690.43465
VES 112.078723
VND 29848.952282
VUV 138.325032
WST 3.156143
XAF 657.35212
XAG 0.031993
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.093703
XDR 0.82053
XOF 657.372262
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.143321
ZAR 20.300378
ZMK 10303.981366
ZMW 29.851355
ZWL 368.604044
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.23

    0%

  • BTI

    1.4500

    47.625

    +3.04%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    10.35

    -0.19%

  • BP

    0.3260

    29.246

    +1.11%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    71.1

    +0.07%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3340

    11.816

    -2.83%

  • RIO

    1.0300

    59.57

    +1.73%

  • AZN

    -0.5100

    72.49

    -0.7%

  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    69

    +2.17%

  • BCC

    -0.0450

    87.455

    -0.05%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    21.865

    -0.5%

  • CMSD

    0.0939

    22.325

    +0.42%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.96

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.4550

    53.9

    -0.84%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    41.11

    +0.75%

  • VOD

    -0.0150

    10.245

    -0.15%

Fast-fashion fallout: young people in UK spurred into sewing
Fast-fashion fallout: young people in UK spurred into sewing

Fast-fashion fallout: young people in UK spurred into sewing

From jogging outfits to summer dresses, Lea Baecker has stitched together most of her wardrobe herself from inside her London flat, part of a burgeoning number of young amateur seamstresses.

Text size:

Like many others in the growing horde of sew-it-yourself enthusiasts, she has grown increasingly disillusioned with the retail clothing industry, viewing it as too destructive.

"My main motivation was not having to buy ready-to-wear clothes anymore because I didn't want to support fast fashion," Baecker, 29, told AFP, referring to clothes made and sold cheaply to be thrown away after minimal use.

The doctoral student in neuroscience only started sewing in 2018, beginning with small bags before moving on to clothes.

Four years on, she estimates about 80 percent of clothes in her wardrobe are homemade, from pyjamas to long fleece coats, as well as jeans made with denim scraps scalped from relatives.

Baecker now buys new clothes "very rarely", she added, wearing one of her self-made long, hand-sewn dresses.

- 'Scale' -

The fashion and textile industry is the third most polluting sector globally after food and construction, accounting for up to 5 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a 2021 report by the World Economic Forum.

Low-cost fashion retailers are regularly criticised for their waste and pollution, as well as the pay conditions imposed on their workers.

Tara Viggo knows fast fashion only too well, having worked in the industry for 15 years as a pattern maker.

"I realised the scale that the fashion industry was working at and it was a bit terrifying," she told AFP.

In 2017, Viggo decided to start creating her own patterns -- the blueprint drawings on paper before garments are made.

She started out small, selling only around one set of patterns per year, a far cry from the four a day that she would sometimes churn out in the ready-to-wear industry.

Viggo conceded independent operators like her were only tiny competitors to the big brands, but insisted they still could have a meaningful impact.

"The more of us that do (it), the better," she said.

"It's like a trigger... People start to look at where their consumption" is, she added noting it also made you aware of the true costs involved.

"Once you know how to sew your own clothes, you can't fathom that a shirt should be £3 ($4.10, 3.60 euros) anymore."

- 'More young people' -

Viggo's "Zadie" jumpsuit is now a top seller on "The Fold Line", an online platform selling independently produced sewing patterns, according to its co-founder Rachel Walker.

Since its launch in 2015, the website has grown from about 20 designers to more than 150 today.

Rosie Scott and Hannah Silvani, who run a London workshop selling fabrics from fashion designers' unsold stock, have also seen the resurgence in sewing's popularity, particularly among young people.

"The clients have changed," said Scott.

"More young people have shown interest in sewing -- young people who are really interested in making their own clothes and making them sustainably."

Women make up more than 90 percent of the clientele, she also noted.

Customers can choose from some 700 designer fabrics, sold from £8 a metre for cotton voile -- a sheer, lightweight cotton fabric -- to £110 for the same length of lace.

Orders soared during the pandemic and are still going strong despite the lifting of restrictions, Scott said.

- Instagram key -

The sector's explosive growth would not have been possible without Instagram, where the sewing community has made a pastime once seen as unfashionable much more trendy.

The photo-sharing platform "is really important", Baecker said, allowing sewists to post images of their designs and engage with each other.

This is what prompted her to join the social network, where she now regularly shares her latest works.

"I found each pattern has a specific hashtag that you can look up and then you can see a lot of different people wearing the same pattern and you can imagine how it can look on yourself," she explained.

For example, Viggo's #Zadiejumpsuit -- which comes in velvet or cotton, with or without sleeves -- has been tagged in almost 11,000 posts.

Meanwhile, the hashtag #handmadewardrobe features in more than 900,000 posts.

With Baecker sharing so many of her creations, she has also inspired friends to join the growing sewing revolution.

"That is my proudest achievement... getting my friends into sewing as well," she said.

(O.Joost--BBZ)