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Tough sell: How Commercial Bay is faring almost a year on after opening
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Face Masks & Formal Fridays: The Fashion Lessons Gleaned From 2020
What we wore this year coincided with one of the most remarkable times of our lives. We summarise the year in style from trackpants to Zoom-ready earrings - and everything in between By Dan Ahwa Wednesday Dec. 16, 2020
Change the system
How do you fix a broken fashion system no longer conducive to the changing ways we buy clothes? In March, Belgian fashion designer Dries Van Noten organised a series of Zoom brainstorms with the industry, calling into question discounting in season and retail’s out of sync delivery deadlines.
When we spoke to the designer in November upon the release of his new spring/summer 2020/2021 collection inspired by New Zealand-born artist Len Lye, he explained 2020’s situation had ignited real commitment, with the initiative supported by the likes of newly appointed Chloe creative director Gabriela Hearst and leaders from Nordstrom and
Someone hasn t bothered reading the link.
Macro 2
More ironic humour from Andy Borowitz (and very close to the truth!)
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report) A furious Donald J. Trump attempted to fire the Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, sources report.
According to the sources, Trump was so irate about the Supreme Court’s dismissal of his election challenge on Tuesday that he phoned Barrett directly to inform her that she was “history.”
“I hired you to get a job done, and you didn’t get it done,” Trump angrily informed Barrett. “You’re out of here.”
Sources say that Barrett had the unenviable task of informing Trump that Supreme Court Justices are appointed for life and therefore cannot be fired, a revelation that left Trump “flabbergasted.”
Essay
Earlier this year, Ingrid Starnes was forced to close all its retail stores after Covid-19 severely disrupted its business. Now the fashion label is embarking on its next chapter with a brand new business model – one which promotes an honest and sustainable future for fashion, writes Ingrid Starnes managing director Simon Pound for Ensemble.
For our next season we won’t decide how many pieces to make, our customers will. We think too many clothes are being made, which is perhaps a contradictory position for a fashion label, but we’re really trying to do something about it.
This attempt at a meaningful alternative to overproduction is possible because we’re in the unusual position of being freed from the traditional retail model, one upside of a year that started with the most hope and excitement we’d had, and went very sideways very fast.
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