Posts Tagged: womenswear

Vyayama

Vyayama was founded with the intention of providing a natural alternative to synthetic yoga wear, with the belief that the products we use should be held to the same standards that we hold for ourselves.

Tabii Just

Women’s clothing brand Tabii Just, produces a chic clothing line designed to encourage conscious consumption.

iluut

Producing a classic Scandanavian collection, iluut designs are sustainably sourced and completely traceable.

MATTER

Inspired by travel, and borne of late night conversations and dreams shared by friends Yvonne and Ren, MATTER have a mission to make clothing that matters.

Featured Video – Kowtow

A moving and evocative fashion video for Gosia Piatek’s New Zealand ethical brand, KowTow with music from Castle by Halsey.

Plume

A carefully curated collection of pieces are produced in highly limited quantities, on a seasonal basis, and available only for a limited window.

Shanghai Tang EcoChic Collection

The Shanghai Tang x EcoChic Capsule Collection is the first limited edition, up-cycled collection from the winner of The EcoChic Design Award 2014, 2015 cycle – Kévin Germanier.

Featured Collection Susana Colina SS17

A sneak peak at Susana Colina’s Spring Summer 2017 collection ‘Phoenix’ that celebrates femininity, and geometric lines with a clear minimal aesthetic.

Featured Collection – Naadam SS17

A sneak peak at Naadam Cashmere’s Studio Collection, which incorporates designing ethical luxury fashion using innovation to redefine sustainability.

Featured Collection – Stella McCartney SS17

A lovely Spring Summer 2017 collection from Stella McCartney that combines menswear and military overtones in a very understated way with mens pinstripe shirting dresses, oversized khaki trench coats and parachute jumpsuits.

Lisa Folawiyo

Having perfected the art of wearing “Ankara” a local West African fabric, Lisa Folawiyo built a collection of womenswear and accessories around the textile.

Featured Collection – Christopher Raeburn AW16

British designer Christopher Raeburn continues to use repurposed materials, many from unexpected military sources. The Winter Camp Ceremony collection uses decommissioned rubber suits, as well as remade ceremonial wool uniforms, and hand knits.

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