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Feb 24, 2010 11:41PM

Fashion Funhouse Emporium Covers 'The GreenShows Eco Fashion Week'

The GreenShows Eco Fashion Week Fall 2010

by Jamar Graham

 

I was sent by Fashion Funhouse Emporium to cover 2nd bi-annual The GreenShows Eco Fashion Week, February 14-17( the same week as the official New York Fashion Week)

Covering the Green Show’s was an interesting feat. I was coming into this project with a open mind to see if ethical and ecological fashion design can change my feelings towards actually purchasing it. My editor wanted to know if it was "going to be more of the burlap-looking shit and organic cotton tees with "peace" scribbled on them?"

My idea of eco-fashion is shopping thrift.  For me, that’s saving the planet.

As with any “Fashion Week,” there is good and bad and that’s no exception for The Green Shows. Boxed in a small venue in the East Village, the purpose of this show is to promote the design and consumption of fashion made from organically grown fabric, and that it did.

The organization pledged to locally recycle all materials used in production,locally compost all possible foods, products, and compostable materials, donate all reusable goods to charities and organizations after use, work with local vendors for production to limit the carbon footprint, and use alternative energy sources whenever possible.

This started with the air-conditioning.  There was none. It was my only complaint about The Green Shows.

Opening night started with designer Gary Harvey, proponent of using secondhand clothing and thrift as the fabrications for his one-of-a-kind couture-esqe dresses. Highlight of his shows included a denim dress made from forty-one pairs of Levi’s 501’s, fourteen gray hooded sweatshirts transformed into a skirt and top, twenty organic cotton slogan t-shirts donated by Katherine Hamnett fabricates a dress, and his perhaps his most statement look was a dress made form 30 copies of the "Financial Times" newspaper.

 

Photos courtesy of Statepr.com. Click here to see full collection

 

 

Vaute Couture (awful name, no?) offered a more fun colorful alternative to eco-fashion showcasing outwear made from a new alternative fiber Primaloft ECO. The brand also introduced knits in the form of tanks, scarfs, and off--the-shoulder tunics. Cute and fun was the aesthetic of this collection.

Photos courtesy of Statepr.com. Click to view full collection.

 

Sonja den Elzen, designer for Thieves showed a very “on trend” collection inspired by the urban nomad. The collection featured black on black, combinations of texture; including recycled leather, hemp, and bamboo, finely draped jackets, ruched mini dresses, leather detailing, and and great hand in tailoring and construction. Rugged and tough is what Thieves had to offer.

Photos courtesy of Statepr.com. Click to view full collection.

 

Deux fm showed what seemed to be the classical and feminine side of eco-fashion. Clean, simple, and lots of red lipstick; great dresses draped and wrapped around the bodies of the models, as well as structured little jackets to compliment the simpleness of the jersey wrap dresses. Cute touches were added by cinching the looks with bow-tie belts that could possibly be worn as headbands. Comfortable and clean was the statement here.

Photos courtesy of Statepr.com. Click to view full collection

About the Author: Jamar Graham studied fashion at Parsons School for Design and Davis College. He worked as a visual merchandiser, designer, trend forecaster and stylist assistant. He makes things out of other things like these hippie designers. He likes cats and eats Lucky Charms. He uses semicolons where they don't belong. His blog is better than mine. To read more of Jamar's real work head over to The Summer After Parsons and TrendLand.

 

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Dec 3, 2009 1:16PM

SCI-FASHION: Don't Dig on Swine? Fashion Gifts Inspired by Artificially Engineered Pork

Did you just munch on Tofurkey for Thanksgiving and wish there was a better tasting meat that doesn't harm animals?  You love bacon, but think Wilbur of "Charlotte's Web" is an ideal pet? Well, science has got you covered!

Researchers in the Netherlands have grown your fleshy tasty friend in a petri dish.  Okay, from the sounds of it, the artificially engineered "pork" is not quite ready for human consumption, but the process doesn't hurt your buddies. Cells extracted from a live pig were mixed with a "broth" and then multiplied.  Yummy Yum Yum!  What has been described as "soggy pork" according to Telegraph UK apparently has not been tasted yet. I imagine a bunch of bespectacled scientists in lab coats, with a glob on a fork saying to each other, "you taste it." Then "No, I'm not tasting it, tell Melvin to try it!"

With the holidays fast approaching, here is Fashion Funhouse Emporiums gift guide to satisfy the animal lovers on your list.


Photo: Zazzle.com

Crisp, smokey and made from canvas, these shoes are an ode to the meat even some vegetarians admit to relapsing over.  I honestly wouldn't wear these ever, not because they are bacon, but rather they are canvas Keds slip-ons.  But hey, this site isn't about me. Its about all of my readers, If you know someone that will dig on these swine shoes, get them at Zazzle

Photo: Noir

True Story:  My grandfather raised pigs.  He used to collect all the fruit and vegetable scraps to feed to them.  Once he had a bunch of grapes that he dumped into their trough.   Later that day, my aunt noticed one of the pigs was stumbling around. It kept falling and making weird, loud, moaning noises. She rushed to get my grandfather, yelling "something is wrong with the pig!" Upon further examination, they realized that the grapes had fermented in a bucket before they fed them to the gluttonous porker.  He was totally sh*t faced. This ring from Noir features a pig with wings. He must have gotten into the wine.

Photo: Elezar

If you're looking for a bag that looks like leather, but want to save your animal friends, here is a more cruelty-free version. This faux lamb clutch is made from high-end biodegradable material produced in Italy. It can work in the office and go straight to cocktail hour.  It comes in black, navy, red and the pearlized blue shown above.  The Vivi Collection from Elezar.

Photo: Lush

I have a friend who talks so much about Lush products that I swear she's being paid in odd jelly soaps and "emotibombs" (Emily, I'm taking about you!) So in trubute to our oinking, mooing and poop throwing friends, it makes sense to feature this product which is not tested on animals and according to my friend, smells amazing.  This weird picture above which looks like Jello shots is actually a soap...or something.  It smells like black cherry soda. If I didn't think gelatinous foods were so repulsive, I'd smear it on my body right now. Thankfully, Lush has a whole mess of sweet scented shower items that come in the form of smoothies and bar soaps.

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