Showing posts with label Inspirational Woman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspirational Woman. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 June 2024

Amanda Johnston - The Sustainable Angle - Curation & Education

 

Who Made Your Clothes is a question often asked. Today we will ask Who Made Your Fabric as this is created before your dress, your shoes or indeed the fabric that covers the seat you may be sitting on while you read this. This is the question The Sustainable Angle asks each and every day and for 2 days each year it culminates in the magnificent Future Fabrics Expo.

The Expo brings together producers, manufacturers, innovators and forward thinkers who are already creating a better sustainable fabric future and show you what is possible right now and excite you with what’s on the horizon. Part of our Inspirational Woman Amanda Johnstons role is to curate the Expo. She oversees the look, feel and flow of this inspirational space which allows a cross pollination of ideas between exhibitors and is exciting for visitors to become more knowledgeable directly from suppliers and through the brilliant and inspiring seminars held throughout both days. In the run up to Future Fabrics Expo 2024, which starts next Tuesday the 25th of June, now is the perfect time to tell Amanda’s story. 

 


 

D: I'm really interested in how influences from your past have affected you as a person and the journey that you're on through your career, with that in mind, I like to start with the question where did you grow up, Amanda?

 

A: I grew up in Manchester which has those interesting connections with fabric because it was known as Cottonopolis. When I started learning about textiles, I found that it’s at the root of all of the issues we've got with cotton, now.

Growing up I was always totally fascinated with fashion, image, creativity, art. So that was obviously where I was going to find my path, I knew that from a really young age. I've always sewn, I designed and made my own clothes and clothes for dolls and like a lot of designers will tell you, I was hell bent on going on that path and decided I needed to go and study in London, either at St Martins or Kingston, and did my degree in fashion design at Kingston University. I thought I was in heaven; I had met my people, I knew what I should be doing.

 

Mum was very artistic, she could turn her hand to making anything which means her influence was always there in the background. Interestingly that influence (unless they have it embedded in their family culture) is not there when I when I teach some of the younger people who are learning to be designers today a lot of them don't know how to sew on a button or take a hem up.

 

D: My grandmother taught me how to sew on a button and to darn and mum made us clothes when we were younger.

 

A: With our generation, that was a given. But now it's so rare for people that are much younger than we are, it’s rare for them to have that in their lived memory.

 

D: Where do they go to mend their clothes, or do they?

 

A: Teaching fashion students, you think, well, they will know how to do this stuff. Some of them do, but not all of them and you can find yourself teaching them quite rudimentary skills.

 

D: You would think that if this was if they really wanted to do that, learning these skills would be something that you would have learnt as part of the path to university.

 

A: Indeed, but some of them don't and not all of them necessarily come from an Arts Foundation. When I studied, we all did Arts Foundation, which was amazing. I did two years because I was so into it and did it while I did my A’ levels.

Some of them come from very different backgrounds today, particularly international students and they've not always had that grounding. Whereas we had that bit of playtime, to understand the other specialisms in art, time to play, time to explore, they've not necessarily had any of that. So, they're coming from a different grounding. 

 


D: After university, what did you do?

 

A: I went straight into freelance designing. I went and worked in Milan for a little while then came back to London and got straight to work with a colleague, who was the person I eventually co-wrote the Fabric for Fashion books with. We worked together, because he was a menswear knitwear designer and my specialisms were womenswear and textiles so we complemented each other and that joint knowledge increased the projects we could do together. Back in the 1980s that was a very nice earner. I got to have wonderful experiences, which saw me working all around the world and seeing factories in different parts of the world too. This was just prior to the point globalisation started to kick in. I was travelling to India and Turkey, places like that, but not really seeing this fast fashion because it was just about to gear up. What I was seeing as a designer and product developer, was a relentless hamster wheel cycle that started to feel like it was speeding up. It was at that point I started feeling that this is not what I love anymore. We get into creativity in the first place because we feel love for the practise, and it all became a bit tedious. During the 20 years I worked in the industry for all manner of different companies, either fully based here or based here with manufacturing elsewhere, I got to see a broad scope of the industry and eventually fell out of love with it.

 

Once I had my kids I knew I wasn’t going back to that freelance lifestyle and working as a jobbing designer was not compatible with having a young family. When I did that, I took a pause which was when my very dear friend Dilys Williams who I had worked with in the industry in the late 80s, called me to see what I was up to. She was at the London College of Fashion, hadn't yet started the Centre for Sustainable Fashion. She was course leader on one of the courses and asked me to come and help out. So, I decided I'll try that for a while and absolutely fell in love with teaching, and to be working with Dilys was amazing, she is so fabulous to work with. Dilys was the one that infected me with sustainability knowledge and the bug, because of course, she’d work with Katherine Hamnett really closely in the industry, which in turn had made her question ‘what are we doing?’ How can we as creative’s loving the idea of fashion, not stop to think about what its impacts were. Of course you learn about fabrics, about weights, weaves, and identifying say wool and cotton. But at no point where you supposed to think about the provenance of the materials, or who made them. It was all about how it looked and what collection it would be used for, that's how the industry works. To actually stop and think and be in a position where you realise the impacts, both socially and environmentally and to work with somebody who was working to educate and embed it into the curriculum was amazing. So of course I stayed and carried on doing that. It was Dilys who introduced me to Nina (Marenzi). Because I had just co-written the first Fabric for Fashion book, Dilys said to Nina ‘if you're going to start this organisation, you must meet Amanda.’ When I met Nina she already had my book, which was really nice. She told me ‘I want to start The Sustainable Angle which sounded amazing and of course I wanted to be involved. We did the first Future Fabric’s Expo in 2011 in London College of Fashion, which Dilys facilitated for the first 2 years. The older I get the more I realise is, that what makes the difference to making things happening is all those connections and those fortuitous little meetings where the planets align. I'm such a believer in, that you met that person at that time for a reason, and things flourish out of those meetings and evolve and change and can really change everything. Although it was in an academic environment, it of course drew industry in because LCF has amazing links with industry. Eventually we were invited to spread our wings elsewhere. We were then part of another trade show, which we quickly outgrew, because we couldn't make our own parameters and we needed to own what we were trying to do ourselves without any outside influences. When you pop up inside something else, which we still do now because it's important to disseminate, but when you do that, it’s like you're in somebody else’s house. It's really important for us to create the parameters, to define what we do and how we do it, and for knowledge and education to be the bedrock of that, which it isn't in a lot of events. We have grown massively in the intervening years. 

 


 

D: You spoke earlier about connections and The Expo is all about that, that connection of like-minded people exhibiting beside each other.

 

A: The reason we call ourselves an Expo and not a trade show is because it's so much more, it’s all-encompassing. We create an entity and experience that enables all of those things you just defined. Yes, we are connecting the industry to the best practise suppliers we can find. The Expo is a sort of hybrid. It's a hybrid event that intends to utterly inspire, captivate and provide knowledge and educational solutions in a one stop shop. As the curator I want people, when they walk into that space to be inspired and feel ‘I want to be part of this. What's going on in here? I want to be part of that.’ That way when you've got them at Hello and you've managed to captivate them with the energy and excitement of everything we've put together, then you can start to educate and lead them towards the solutions. My thing is you want to change hearts, minds, spirit, and practise. We want all of those things. We want to grab somebody's imagination, their will to change and make it seem like it's the coolest thing on earth and not a big hill to climb either as we're going to give you all the tools to do it, it’s all here. The other thing of course is to create an environment that is welcoming, an environment which is designed, unlike most trade shows which are like a market, with rows of stuff. We make it beautiful and embracing and open and you'll notice that when you come into the Expo, it’s really open. We want to encourage cross pollination between our suppliers and we have some really amazing projects that are brought to life at the Expo just by people doing that very thing. At the moment we call these the Expo Offsprings. We're always asking, ‘who did meet and who did you connect with? What conversations did you have? Are you doing a project together? Are we going to see it at the next Expo?’

 

 

D: That’s a great encouragement. Because they are not there, not there to sell. They are there to learn and connect.

 

A: Obviously anybody with a marketing budget, if they’re giving us some of it, they want to be able to sell some stuff too. They also really value the fact that they are also being put in front of great brands and whole teams, we attract the communications teams because they want to learn the language and to learn about how's it’s all being disseminated, along with the product development sourcing teams, designers, CEO's everyone across the board and that's important to them. Of course another element is this very open networking, because everybody feels they are all part of a very cool club that’s so dedicated to this particular intention. You don't have anybody else floating around other than people and suppliers who are committed to doing the best possible thing, they're excited by it and they want to share it with everybody. Which is, when you think about it, the antithesis of how the fashion industry runs normally. Which is not sharing and keeping suppliers a secret. That's the old way, that hyper competitive, don't give any information away way. The sustainability world is the opposite of that. It is welcoming, all embracing, open. This is what we are doing visually and physically when we put the Expo together to really encourage that, and to then find out which babies have been born through the cross collaborations that come about because of this, connecting absolutely amazing organisations that are doing very cool innovations between themselves. It's really exciting.

 

D: They find the key to what’s missing in their part of the process so they can continue to progress.

 

A: And maybe they never even thought, thought about it. Because you can't go looking for the thing you don't know about. But you can find it. You can discover it in a in a place that's been designed to help you to discover it. That's really gratifying and hugely exciting. 

 

 

D: Also the talks that happen as part of the Expo are extremely inspiring.

 

A: They are designed to amplify our cool themes through the education we are driving, from where's your place in the industry, to making a contribution, to averting biodiversity loss through your choices of raw materials and in your suppliers? Which in turn is related to climate change issues. Because Nina's interest obviously came directly from her study of the impacts of intensive agriculture and how by turning that around and looking at regenerative agriculture and all the scientific evidence that says, you can make massive positive gains by using regenerative agriculture, that is a big thing for us. The fibres that are grown in regenerative agriculture, for example, whether it’s cotton, or a fibre from an animal, the science holds up on that. That's the root of what she wanted to do with this organisation, to really address that, the power of changing agriculture to deliver on restoring biodiversity and addressing climate change. Those core themes, are amplified through our seminar series. We run 7 seminars on each day over the two days of the Expo, and we have a hell of a lot to cover, because it's all of those things plus it's around water, it's around the circular economy, recyclability, the social component. We have so many things to tackle each time we do it, and what we try to do is amplify the cool themes, and each time build on them bringing in new knowledge, or new initiatives that are inspiring other brands. Thinking, ‘oh this brand did that, how did they do that? Let me find out because we should be doing that.’ All the time we try to excite people with optimism, because the sustainability discourse, can be very pessimistic, it can feel very no hope. That's something we really; both in how we put together the whole Expo and the seminar series always want to have. Look, here's a problem, but we've got solutions. Here are the solutions that are coming. We want people to leave with, that sense of excitement.

 

D: You also have a huge room filled with fabrics that you can use now that will create that change.

 

A: Exactly. Plus we have a huge innovation area which points to the future. We are showing around about 10,000 possibly more materials, during the two day Expo, across all different fibre categories that are commercially available right now. Which represent a positive impact and optimism, allowing you to change your supply chain, think differently about where your materials are coming from, how you're using them and how they're joining the circular economy for example. So, we're giving everything, every tool that we can put together to drive people forward and make change easy. Our job is really to make it easy.


 

D: What's in store for this year's Expo?

 

A: The Expo is always a building showcase, it's always more but this year with an extra spotlight on home and interiors. We started that last year, because we found that architects and interior designers were coming to us anyway, even though we speak directly at fashion and finding materials. We thought we need to do a proper curation that really speaks to this area, because that's informed by fashion too. Of course there are different specialisms within that, as you have to think much more about wearability and fire retardancy, things like that, which then edge into a stronger area of water use, pollutants, chemical use. We did a big research piece on that last year and that will be developed this year. We are also developing a footwear hub. We've had a few footwear suppliers in the collection before, but we've never made it a specialist area, so we will do that too.

 

D: Footwear is difficult isn’t it?

 

A: It’s very difficult. We are working with some great people to draw together some design stories, design journeys as I like to call them, but also materiality considerations, thinking about the typical materiality of any built shoe. The interesting thing with footwear; although it's not specialism of mine and although I have moderated footwear students, what I didn't take stock of is, that in your average shoe you can have an average and sometimes more, of 26 different materials for one pair of shoes. Now that makes the whole design thinking thing very different from a dress. If it's a single fabric dress, you might have some buttons you might have a little bit of lining, you might have a zip, but basically it's one dress if you're doing a print dress. But with a shoe, 26 different materials, it's extraordinary. So there are a multitude of considerations to think about changing when we think about footwear materials and design. It’s far more complex. It will be a smallish area to start with, but I think it's going to be brilliant to see and it will be pointing a lot to very future thinking innovations like 3D printed shoes.

The innovations display: we showed 70 innovations last year and there will be more this year. 

 


 

D: On the innovation front, you have different categories. Can you tell us what they are?

 

A: We naturally have projects that exemplify circular thinking. Anything that incorporates recycling and circular, they'll be in the innovations area. But when we talk about the new generation of innovations it's about either working with innovations that are tackling the waste stream, so for example, and this is an ongoing thing, are the opportunities that are presented by agricultural waste. That will be shown again with Canopy Planet because we've been working with Canopy Planet, the NGO for a few years now to address the destruction happening to ancient, indigenous forests. They're trying are speaking to the fashion industry, getting them to think very differently about feedstock materials. This is a research project that the Laudes Foundation who fund Canopy Planet, first kicked off. Now we're seeing a lot of companies bubbling up that are taking advantage of the thinking; we have food and agricultural waste, we really need to be using that a lot more intelligently, that can be diverted to make textile fibres to address the cellulose gap. We're at a point where our global fibre demand is at its peak. There's a big demand for cellulose and we're at peak cotton so there’s a gap that we're not able to supply which means we need much more creative thinking and thinking more broadly about where else we get cellulose from and how else we get it. The other category is the Bio Fabricated material category, which is the new future generation of materials, which is currently seeing a lot of investment, into generating leather alternatives. There are four different streams for this, one is mycelium, which is the root structure of mushrooms, which has been getting a lot of press all over the world. It’s a super interesting material because you can direct mycelium roots to grow into forms. Or you could grow it as a sheet if you wanted. The interesting thing about that is you're not digging it out of the forest, you're growing it in a lab, so this becomes a whole new generation of materials. There are companies getting a lot of funding right now to do this. We show them at the Expo and interestingly they are into leather alternatives but also food. Which means there is this really interesting parallel when you look at that material source, between OK, it's taken out of agricultural space and is grown in labs, it can provide food and it can also provide a material. It’s such an amazing thought. Then of course there is algae. Algae comes under a bio fabricated material because it can be converted to create bioplastics, biopolymers. This is an amazing yarn that is on the cusp of being commercial, that we will be showing and is also made from algae. We are also seeing algae dyes, there's a huge proliferation of technology in that area, but again it's a food source too. There's a lot of research going into its availability in the EU for a food source, so again we've got that food and fibre thing going on and it strikes me as a really sensible way to think about the balance of food and fibre, even if you're growing things traditionally, is really important. Cotton farmers need to rotate crops with food crops in order to keep the soil healthy. It's all this similar sort of thinking.

 

D: After all we need to feed the growing population.

 

A: Exactly. We're at this really, really critical time and making the right decisions about how we manage our natural systems, agricultural land versus factory land or whatever is crucial.

The other Bio Fabricated material categories are yeasts and bacteria. With bacteria we've had dyes. Yeasts are used almost like a factory, a bio factory. We've been doing that for thousands of years. We make bread with yeast, we brew beer. Now we are seeing brewed protein using yeasts to deliver a protein structure. Spiber are a Japanese company using a brewed system to generate a fine fibre that is been replicated by isolating the gene of spider silk.

 

D: Better the genes of the spider, rather than the spider itself.

 

A: Well, you couldn't possibly harvest it. Although I know that there was there was in the V&A the most beautiful cloak made from a particular genus of spider from somewhere in Asia, that does produce miles and miles and miles of this stuff. It's a golden spider a very particular spider and they had managed to harvest something like 300,000 metres of this yarn and then managed to weave this one off heirloom piece, its priceless, but it took them something like 15 years to achieve. If you’re going to harvest from Nature then that's what you're talking about. Whereas the guys from Spiber can be lab growing this fibre very quickly. That's our bio fabricated materials base. In innovations we show, innovations in recycling or innovations in traceability for example. We're seeing that coming through now, particularly because of coming EU legislation, that will enable the embedding of a tracker in a fibre and that business is going to be huge. At The Sustainable Angle we’ve been tracking a lot of those technologies that are being commercially embedded right now but are not proliferated through the market yet. Any company that's doing something that ensures traceability or provides an added benefit from a sustainability perspective, we will show that. We then group them into themes on the tables. 

 


D: You mentioned feedstocks a little while ago. What do you mean by feedstocks?

 

A: I created a thinking system for us to help. Often when people come into the Expo they get a bit overwhelmed and ask which is the most sustainable material. But it doesn't work like that. It's about what you want that material for? Where in the world you are, where in the world your material is from. What does it take from nature, from communities, it's a multitude of different considerations. The first thing we always talk about after purpose, is that as a designer, you need to understand why you're using the material for something. That sounds odd, but actually not a lot of people do it? The next thing is provenance, what's the material it made of? Where did it come from? Who grew it? With all of these important questions so you're actually determining where it's come from.

 

A feedstock is essentially; if you're creating a man-made material, you need to take some raw material, that is the feedstock. Then you put it through a process and that's your next sustainability question. We talk in feedstock terms when it's something like a viscose type material. A viscose type material will be a wood feedstock, so then you ask the question what wood is it? Is it bamboo? Is it beech? Is it eucalyptus? There are many different types of wood stock you could use and from many places in the world. This is your real first question, what is that feedstock? For example, you can, for a viscose feedstock, put a partial wood and partial reclaimed old T-shirts and jeans into it. To do that they chemically dissolve the wood feed stock, then they extrude it into a fine fibre. That category we call artificial, it's like a natural feedstock, but it's been converted.

 

D: Does that mean you can also use waste?

 

A: You can, a lot of companies are doing that now because they're recognising what’s coming out when they extrude the fibre, and once they've broken it down with chemicals, it’s still pure cellulose. It's just that it's been dissolved. It's not really synthetic, because when we talk about synthetics, we mean fibres made from Petro chemicals, but this is not, it's made from a tree, or bamboo or it could even be dissolved cotton, or as I said earlier it can a portion, which a lot of companies are doing now, by taking waste like jeans or shredded T-shirts that are not good for anything else, which then adds to the cellulose component and it means that they're trying to drive a higher reclaimed feedstock rather than cutting the forest down. In this area, and particularly with Canopy Planet and particularly with the agricultural waste I was talking about before, is that normally agricultural waste gets burned on the field, and obviously that is a big problem. Now they're saying, OK, take a second harvest and reclaim that wheat straw, rye straw or whatever the waste is and let's get it into that system as a feedstock for a regenerated fibre.

 

D: Thank you it's good to have a clarification on what on what that means. Because not everybody, knows where fabric comes from or how it’s made. You're super knowledgeable about fabric, but most don’t know what the worst fabrics or best fabrics are or the role of fibre and sustainability or the fact that there are toxic fibres and the fact that a lot, or most of our clothing is made from plastic which against our skin and it is disrupting our hormones and the link that has to the climate crisis we're living in at the moment.

 

A: When we talk about the pessimism, every year we take the data from Textile Exchange on global fibre demand, and every time there are still people who are really surprised when we publish that pie chart. Two thirds of all textiles on this planet are made of Petro chemicals, two thirds. And I think that around 54% of that is polyester, that's the most prevalent one. All the nylons and acrylics make that up too, but the most prevalent is polyester. The latest figure is 54% and that material is polyethylene terephthalate, PT. That is exactly the same polymer as single use water bottles and most people don't get that connection. It’s in their gym leggings or their polyester dress and they don't realise it.

 

D: And when we are washing it, it is shredding straight into the water system and straight into the ocean and straight into us.

 

A: I read this really interesting quote, scientists estimated that each one of us walks around currently, right now, with a credit card sized piece of plastic in us. I compiled a report based on a lot of reports around this, tackling that exact question. Questioning the sort of effects this will have down the line of living with on a plastic planet. Have taken these decades, almost 50 years, for it to really get to a crisis point in every water stream and in the air, it's not a problem we are necessarily going to solve, but I think it's a problem that we can go a long way to mitigating through technology. We have the technological know-how to do any number of things. It's more about the will and it's more about the critical mass of the will that’s affecting it. This is a real ‘oh shit moment.’ ‘Oh shit, look what we did’ and we know that the fashion industry is a huge contributor to that along with other industries. At The Sustainable Angle we ask where's our place? What can we do? What is happening now that we can all sign up to and get on with? As an organisation we do show recycled polyester. We do not show virgin polyester, ban that, stop making it. But in the meantime we've got a shit load of stuff to clean up. We can't just ignore it, it's out there and is clogging everything up and of course the chemical offshoot from that are there too. All the toxins that that material category is treated with, from dyes to the finishings to make it for example, fire retardant all of these chemicals. It’s a lot, but I think EU legislation is tipping in the right direction, it’s switching people on to the idea. It's making them realise, if I've got it in my collection now, I don't want it in there in another seasons time. Where am I going to when I ditch this material? What we've got to do is bring the demand right down. But unfortunately, the demand is going up for polyester. So, it's about getting as many players as possible to contribute to bringing the demand down in the first place. Then if you are using it, you’re buying it from recycled programmes that are cleaning up pollution specifically, from both land and sea. Those are the ones we give priority to saying, OK, what's the story about, where do you get this PET from? Where did it come from? Did it clean up a beach somewhere? Did you take it off the mountain side? Can you prove it? Have you got the traceability to show us? The people that are committed that usually have, and it’s all bona fide and GRS certified. They can say it's from this location, we've got it traced, and they're very proud of that fact. Usually the people that can be bothered to do that like the, Seaquals, Econyls and Parleys of this world. Their whole reason for being was to address the pollution and to do something about it. So those are the materials that we are prioritising right now. I'd love to not have any Petro chemicals in the collection, but we’re just not at that stage right now. We've got to prioritise the people who are doing the best they can and also be on the lookout for the technologies and the innovations that will help us to mitigate that problem. It’s a tough one.

 


 

D: How do we systems change? Slow fashion, slow fabric manufacture?

 

A: All of those things. It's really interesting because we have a triangular systems thinking that we called the Bioarchy which is speaking to us all as consumers, because let's face it, even if we're working with the industry and manufacturing clothes we are also consuming them. So trying to get people to think about and valuing what they already have and repair what they already have. Getting people to think about what's in their clothes if you are going to buy new. What are your choices, do you know what's in your clothes? Have a think about it. Don't buy from a brand or from somewhere that can't be transparent. The big elephant in the room, and obviously when you’ve been party to so many sustainability discussions is of course the overproduction, because we see can from the incredible BBC programme that was that was made, these mountains of clothes clogging up Accra and the Atacama Desert and these are only 2 of the locations on the planet. Of course, we need to deploy creativity to figure out how we slow that. Of course, we are still gonna make new stuff, we know that. But how do we slow that system down so we're making the most out of a smaller amount of stuff, that's the thing. I think fast fashion has been that model. Back in the 70s, things cost pro rata way more than they do now.

 

D: And you only got new clothes maybe twice a year on special occasions.

 

A: Yes it was like wow, I'm going to get a new Christmas party frock. For my daughter too, she would get a birthday dress and it was a big thing. It was saved up for, so you could get a really nice one, it was an event. Even after she couldn't fit in them anymore, I used to keep them because liked looking at them and eventually would pass them down to friends for their kids. But you're right, that thing has been completely dispensed with in a very short space of time. When I think about when I moved away from being a designer in the industry, that was at the point at which production was really starting to speed up. Clothes were becoming cheaper year on year on year. Anybody who walked into a shop would think well a T-shirt is only £3 now I’ll have three of them or I’ll have one in every colour. Whereas that previous thinking was, I will choose my favourite colour, I will only buy what I need. But now because they are so cheap I can buy multiples. Or buy 2 get the 3rd free. And that's also throughout our food system. Why are you telling me I can have 3 bags of salad when I only came in for one and the other two are going to be thrown out. I heard that at the moment the UK is throwing away 30% of its weekly food food shop. I don’t do that, but that’s horrific. And the same thing has rolled over to clothing, that same waste, it's the same consumerist mindset.

 

D: It means you don't respect your clothing, you don't respect your food, you don't respect where it’s come from, the resources it’s taken to create it or the impact on the planet, nature, people and everyone involved in the supply chain.

 

A: Even to this day when we're talking about Viscose, or we’re talking about feedstocks and trees you'll still get junior designers say ‘they make Viscose out of trees?’ then look puzzled and say ‘how do they do that?’ Then of course they learn the whole process, because it never occurred to them find out before. When you think about think about it, you've got to cut a tree down, you've gotta chip it up, and all the other processes it’s got to go through before it becomes a thread and woven into fabric. Or cotton picking, cotton collecting, ginning, all these things that has to go through too, before weaving it, knitting it, turning it into a T-shirt, have it manufactured and shipped halfway across the other side of the world. How can a T-shirt cost the same as a sandwich?

 

D: It can’t, it shouldn't ever.

 

A: It’s lunacy, because every single one of those loads and loads and loads of stages back throughout supply chain, none of those people involved in that are making a living wage. It is still a form of slavery. Most people buying that cloth at the other end, the young designers, the designers and sourcing chains, that's not something they have any knowledge or understanding of. So when they start to think, you cut down a tree to mash it up to make a fibre it creates change. Apparently, the fashion industry is responsible for the felling of well over 200 million trees a year. Canopy Planet’s message is don’t buy Viscose unless it's from an FSE certified regrown forest. Otherwise let's think about making our clothes out of something else, something more creatively useful with the resources that are little bit more achievable.

 


D: So that one day many, many years from now when it eventually ends up in landfill it will actually replenish the soil rather than destroy.

 

A: The whole system is crazyily mad. There have been many calls and it makes utter common sense to rein it in. But it's also a really tough one because that is about, changing culture and that's a tougher thing. We are privately speaking with B2B and sometimes pop up in B2C places like Earth Fest which is connected with the Camden Council initiative. Every now and again we'll do a bit of B2C but we're mainly speaking to a B2B audience. Our place in really influencing cultural change is within companies. We don't have enough of an outreach to really influence the shift in culture that really has to radically take place in order to take us back to what we were talking about earlier, where you bought a new winter coat and you might replace that once every three years or five years. My mums and grandmothers generation, they would do that every 10 years.

 

D: Or you borrow your granny's coat and go to university with it?

 

A: I wore totally vintage when I was a student. How do we make that shift again that is a real nut to crack. I know Dilys (Williams) department do a lot of work in this area. Cultural sustainability is really important to them in that you've got to have all of the mechanisms working together, which is why they do work with education, with industry, with politicians.

 

I don't think things have changed much. If you start doing research on different consumer groups, what they say about sustainability and what they value. They often come back with very encouraging statistics about Gen Z's, 68% of them said they would pay more. Interestingly, though these statistics don't travel through to actual figures of spending. So although they'll say, if you're asking in a qualitative interview situation, ‘Yeah, yeah, I'm really into sustainability and I always look for this and I buy bar soap instead of liquid. They'll say all of this, but then it's not being transferred.

 

D: They are probably buying from Shien, Claire (Press) posted recently about their profits.

 

A: I think that even if some, Gen Z are saying, this is what I value, this is what I do. Maybe they are also falling prey to greenwashing too. If for instance BooHoo say we've got a new sustainability collection you may think ‘oh, that's great, I'm gonna buy from that’. But are lacking the critical ability to know what that actually means. Or they are having the wool pulled over their eyes. It's difficult and I don't know what the answer to it is, but clearly the bedrock of it all is to take a deep breath, slow down, think about how we can be creative with what we've got or if we're making new product, then design into it several life times of use. Make that happen, think about how you can make that happen. Do you use technology to make sure this happens; do you have a different method of communication with your consumer to encourage them share this product? We've given you a QR code so that you will be able to track it through its life. Then you're also, through the use of technology enabling; once it's no longer fit for wear, you're enabling it to be recycled and you're making that a cool thing. You’re making that thing that your customer wants to track? You can be friends with your coat, even when it's not in your wardrobe anymore or when someone else doesn’t want it. Then it's gone through another cycle because it's been exchanged again and gone on somewhere else. If someone said to me, on your phone, if you are going to let this garment out of your house, you can still see where it's gone, like it's your child, it would be so fabulous to see its journey. Maybe now your coat is in Berlin being worn by someone else. And she's going to pass it along to her sister and then she's gonna hire it out somewhere else. Then somebody took it to a repair shop in Copenhagen and had moth holes repaired in it. Knowing that journey would be so good.

 

D: That would also create a community with other people that own your clothing and suddenly you've got a connection with them.

 

A: Then when it’s come back from the repair in Copenhagen you could say I would love to welcome this garment back into my wardrobe. Then as you say you create new communities, new friendships, new stories about clothing. We do have the technology to do that kind of thing. It’s about each time your coat, or whatever it is, has a another layer to its story and it becomes more valuable. As a business idea imagine if you could say I wore this piece that was owned and worn by say Clare Press. She wore it to a book launch and I got to hire or own it myself, then you pass it on so every time the garment goes through it’s different lives it becomes cooler and cooler because of the stories which are attached to it. Let’s face it that’s what fashion does, making everyone adore the big brands, or the piece that Jackie Onassis wore, all of these stories are what embed value in our fashion, this is so cool because it was worn on the red carpet by whoever.

 

D: Let’s create new fashion stories.

 

A: That should be something, lets create new stories in fashion to encourage minimising product.

 


 

D: I was going to ask you how you see the future, but that would be a good way to see the future.

 

A: That would be part of it. I think the future is many, many stories to be had. What nature does, that is the one thing we're always saying with the boards we create for Future Fabrics Expo, refashioning our relationship with nature, this is what we need to do. Think about where our fibres and stuff come from in Nature. There's that, plus there’s also this whole world of new materials that we have been talking about. There are a multitude of different things because what nature does, is nature diversifies. And if we're gonna learn from nature that word diversifying, that is what we must do. As a word we've used it as a banner since 2017. We have other keywords like restore, regenerate, repair, circulate, key buzzwords that will always keep popping up in all our communications and diversify is one. Diversify the fibre basket because if you put all your eggs in one basket that's not good and you're bound to fail. Particularly with what we've done with the global fibre basket where it's primarily Petro chemicals or cotton. With cotton, all of that, apart from 1% is farmed really badly. So we have put all our eggs into 2 very toxic fibre baskets. We need to spread the risk and think about a sense of place, think about diversification, what’s appropriate, do like nature does, it goes with the flow, and as humans we don’t tend to do that. When humans see something that’s successful, we just want more of the same and to grow it out of all proportion.

 

D: That's consumerism though, isn't it?

 

A: That's consumerism, plus our ability to invent technologies that enable us to do that. Whereas what we really need to do is to revert back to smaller is better. Less is more. Not giant companies, but lots of little networks, all working collaboratively rather than great heaving monoliths.

 

D: That would also create diversity, again within cultures, because it would allow the rise of individual creativity within each country again. Which was there when we were kids but it's not there anymore. You talk about mono fabrics, it feels like mono fashion now too because wherever you go in the world, there's the same chain store selling the same stuff they're selling in London, Paris or New York. That diversity is lost there too.

 

A: Absolutely. I keep saying this to my students, but they don’t know what I’m talking about. I used to love travelling because if you went to Paris or Florence, when you came back, your friends would ask ‘what did you bring back?’ Because there was this sense that where you'd been, that you couldn't get that amazing cheese or that wine, or this brand of shoes back home that you could only get it in Florence. This homogenisation and this idea that everything just looks the same everywhere in the world is so sad. That’s the lack of diversification and uniqueness from a sense of place as well.  

 

 

Links

 

Web               The Sustainable Angle

                         

                       Future Fabrics Expo 

 

Instagram       Amanda Johnston

 

                       The Sustainable Angle 

 

                         

LinkedIn         Amanda Johnston 

 

                      The Sustainable Angle 

 

 

 


Tuesday, 14 May 2024

Alice Timms - Founder The Styling Bank

Start where you are. If we all did this we could create a positive wave of change. Every single one of us has our own unique understanding of something we could do differently that would intimately make the world a better place for us now and for future generations. This is precisely what Alice is creating with The Styling Bank. I first heard what Alice was doing when she was part of a panel speaking to photographers as part of an Ad Green event and felt that what she was building was very powerful and new way of addressing the very real issue of wastefulness within advertising and photography production.

A stylists job is to bring all the clothing and props to a shoot. Shopping for everything beforehand and returning after. Setting up The Styling Bank was Alice’s response to the wastefulness she was seeing as part of that process and to reduce and reuse what most likely would have otherwise ended up in landfill. 

 


 

D: Alice, I'm really interested in people's journey through life and career and how we get to where we are today, the influences that have shaped us as we as we grow. To start with I'd like to ask where did you grow up, Alice? 

 

A: In Penzance in Cornwall. 

 

D: A beautiful part of the world. Were there any fashion influences in your formative years?

 

A: Definitely, I have four older sisters, and most of them are into clothes. I was always following them around trying to try on what they had. Mum was also very much into fashion; she makes clothes and is a designer. She wrote design books when I was a child. She designed knitwear, then moved on to designing cross stitch and tapestry kits for magazines, and then created several books about it in the 1990s. The sister, next in age above me, was a model and when she came home to Cornwall from London was very glamorous. I was in awe of her and wanted to wear her shiny PVC trousers and silver shirts, just wow, all her sparkly things. In Cornwall availability to the latest fashion was limited. The Clothes Show, was my favourite programme and that’s where I first saw the possibility of a career as an image consultant, but I had no idea how that was going to happen or how to get there. Career’s advice in school, in the 90s, meant sitting at a computer and it telling you, well, you could be a librarian or you could be a teacher. Teacher always came up for me. But I'm from a family of teachers and that didn't appeal to me. I love being creative and I really loved making and creating things. At uni I studied fashion design, then bit by bit worked towards styling. Now you can study styling but back then the only options were the arts or fashion design, they were the closest courses I could find. 

 


 

D: So, your ultimate goal even through your fashion degree was to be a stylist? 

 

A: My fashion model sister discouraged me saying ‘I don't know how you're going to manage to do it. It's so difficult to make money from styling because fashion magazines don't pay you very much and you have to beg, borrow and steal to pull styling for a shoot together.’ 

I did my foundation art course at Falmouth. At that point I still wasn't sure what I wanted to do or what direction to take. All I knew was that I loved working with art, design and photography they were all big passions of mine. At the end of my foundation year I had to choose a degree course and found that very difficult. I wanted to make sculpture, I loved fine art and photography so decided I could combine all of these in fashion, because clothing is like sculpting on the body. It's something you can wear and I thought that I might be able to earn a living doing it. Cornwall is a massive artists community and I know it shouldn’t be a driver, but I was very aware of how hard it is to make a living as an artist. Even now if I could have another parallel career it would be as an artist. 

Within fashion I love textiles, the making and the design elements, not only the clothes themselves. Creating a fabric that is like an art piece it’s that that led me to study fashion and textiles at Winchester for my degree. 

 

D: Do you find it has stood you in good stead for what you are doing now? 

 

A: Yes I do. During the course a stylist came in and gave us a lecture and it confirmed what my sister had told me by saying ‘it's so hard you have to beg borrow and steal. You have to be really determined, really dedicated.’ I thought, ‘wow how am I ever going to do this?’ At the time the course really steered you towards working for designers and being a designer. They didn’t encourage us in other directions or let us know that there were a lot of other careers out there based on our fashion degree, which meant that after graduation I started working for fashion designers. I interned for Alexander McQueen and then for John Rocha in Dublin. Really amazing places to get experience, but actually I hated it. I hated the atmosphere. I hated the environment. And it wasn't paid, we were making couture garments and were working for free. I had to fund my own accommodation, food, transport. Eventually Alexander McQueen, when he merged with the Gucci group paid me a tiny bit money for a travel card every week and a bit of food money, a couple of quid each day for lunch, so I had to work in the evenings to support that. To fund the unpaid work I was doing during the day in the design studios, I would work at The Groucho Club until 3:00am. The studio let me come in late, so I'd come in at 10am finish at 5pm and go straight to work at The Groucho 4 nights a week. I did that for about six months and completely burnt out, I couldn’t do it anymore, so I packed up and went travelling. 

 

D: Where did you go? 

 

A: Mostly Asia. I had a small inheritance that allowed me to travel for six months around Southeast Asia. That gave me such a different view on the world, it was really amazing. You see people with virtually nothing and they seem happier than people who work in the rat race in big cities. Plus experiencing all the textiles and all the textures, it's so beautiful being there. I learned a lot about myself and how to be more self-reliant which was really important to do that at that point. On my return and because of the connections I made working at the Groucho Club, because that's how I met the designers, you could write to them and you would never hear back, but chat to them when they were relaxed and drinking and asking that way, opens doors. I met some really lovely people and lots of stylists doing that. It’s how I met the first people I assisted with styling.


 

 

D: How long did you assist before freelancing on your own?

 

A: I worked with lots of different stylists for a few years, costume stylists, interior stylists, fashion, celebrity stylists, on big editorials, preparing celebrities for events, an interior stylist gave me a really good insight into props and set dressing, a really good costume stylist called Mr Gammon trained me really well on preparation. He had a big store of clothes and we would go through his rails first and fill in any gaps from elsewhere. Everything he did was commercial but we would also create and make costumes for him. I also worked with Anna Foster, who started ELV Denim, for a few years when she was styling, she was lovely. At the time she was a celebrity stylist and worked for i-D Magazine. She gave me a great insight into; (this was right at the beginning of the sustainable fashion movement) that what we'd stereotypically known as fashion, had a new way of thinking, and direction and how we should be more mindful of brands and the usage of fast fashion. At the time I still didn't really understand quite the impact fast fashion was having on people and the planet. Also, right then I was trying to make money, I was living on people's sofas at one point, I was trying to survive while doing this job.  But I was influenced by the way these stylists worked and had really good training. 

 

D: Sounds like Mr Gammon had a really good ethic for the clothes. 

 

A: Which was really great at that time. I feel lucky that I assisted people that really influenced that and that I was exposed to different ways of working other than wastefulness. It is difficult because with a lot of editorial styling, you borrow the clothes and then take them back. Which doesn't seem harmful. 

When I started working with my own clients, it was right at the beginning of online fashion and I realised that now I could, with a click of a button buy in all these clothes and have them delivered. As an assistant I had spent years schlepping around shops, buying suitcases and suitcases of clothing and trailing them back with me. It was amazing to have everything delivered to your doorstep, it made it all so easy. Then after the shoot I could return it all the same way and still be within budget. It made me look great to clients as I would turn up with bags and bags full of clothes and they could choose whatever they wanted on set. 

I am a bit of an over prepper because when I was assisting, I was told, ‘it's never going to be enough. They're going to want something you don't have.’ Even though you’ve been given a really strict, very specific brief, on set out of the blue you'll be asked for say a lace hat or a silver swimsuit when the brief was a 100% a red swimsuit. Or they’ll say ‘I want a kaftan’ why would I have ever thought to bring that? You never mentioned it before. So you have to think outside the box and as a result you end up bringing much more than you need, but from experience you know could potentially work if something else isn't working, or maybe the model isn’t the size they said they were. There are all sorts of factors that you have to try and second guess and prepare for. Which means you bring so much stuff you don't need, but kind of do, just in case. Online shopping helped with that because you could easily buy and return everything. 

However, with time I became much more aware of the practises involved when working that way and was increasingly seeing what you were expected to bring to shoots, then all the waste it created. That’s when it started feeling wrong and didn't sit well with me. It really felt awful.

 


D: Its interesting how things filter in isn't it? The learning that when you send things back, the reality is that the retailers don't even try to sell them again. 

 

A: Exactly that, because I believed it was the same as when you go into a shop and the merchandise goes back on the shop floor and is bought by somebody else, that that was what was happening online too but it’s not the case. It took me years to understand that. I had no idea what online shops were doing, and I believe that’s what most people think when they return their clothes, but it’s not, the returns go straight to landfill here or overseas. Once I realised the scale of the problem it triggered all those feelings of this is ridiculous, why are we buying so much stuff? That’s when I started looking into it further and looking for change. 

 

D: Was the need for change something you were always interested in? You could have carried on regardless in this direction, buying and returning, what created that drive for change? 

 

A: I realise now, looking back; dad’s an engineer and builder and when I was growing up he was insulating houses but he also designed and made amazing computer programmes too. His programmes were all about, how to save energy bills and insulate your home, how to fix and keep. Which meant we were very mindful at home, no waste. Fixing things was instilled as a child. New things were rare, we would be told ‘you’ve got something you can use already’ or ‘use your sisters things.’ I grew up wearing second hand clothing or mum made them and we repaired clothing and objects, we made do with what we had. It wasn't until later when mum started earning her own money that she started buying me things. All of which meant I was very aware that you shouldn't waste things and that you should try to make them last. 

 

Later on I realised the frivolousness of buying what you want and throwing it away in this disposable culture. I guess all this waste took me back to that childhood understanding and that throw away culture is really not OK. Then you start asking, that happens when you put things in the rubbish bin where does it go? We don't really think about it. It's so easy, so convenient for us to do it that, we don't think, or give it too much attention. I think I started becoming more aware through, social media plus all the amazing work Fashion Revolution have been doing. It wasn’t only one thing that triggered the understanding but when I did start realising the scale of what was happening in fast fashion and the damage it was causing, that changed my outlook. 

 

During lockdown I did of course with Future Learn which was really really fascinating. It gave me so much more knowledge, it sparked and resonated with me so strongly that it made me hungry for more information. 

 

There had been a group of us stylists asking ‘how do we make what we do less wasteful?’ To be fair, I have always kept a store of my own things. After a shoot you have lots leftover. Quite often the client wants it and that's fine, I send them a bag of stinky clothes and then they do what they want with it. But more often than not they don't care what happens next. So I wash it and keep it. Then time next time I go on a shoot, I bring it with me and have built up a store of clothing that I knew would be needed. It also helped cut down on what I was buying and meant that I could buy nicer things for the next shoot. At that point it didn't occur to me to monetise this, I just brought everything along to help with the budget, because budgets are always tight. 

Later I realised, I've got all these things sitting around. Why don't I share them with other stylists? 

 


 

D: That brings us nicely to you setting up The Styling Bank? Can you tell us about it? When did you set it up, what you do and what your aims are?

 

A: As a stylist we do our job on set, we deal with the producer or the director, but we don't really deal with other stylists. Which means you don't know what another stylist practises are or how they get the job done. However, I am in a unique position because I do both props and wardrobe styling and I am lucky enough to regularly work side by side with other stylists. If I am styling props there will be a different stylist for wardrobe. Because of this I started building a network of stylists and an understanding of how different people work. Some people have, like me, a collection of things that they’ve gathered over the years and bring to shoots. Others have no storage space at all and get rid of everything at the end of every shoot, and I found that really interesting and created the thought ‘what if we could create a network of stylists where we could all share with each other.’ A few of us got together and decided it would be amazing if we had some sort of coworking space where we could have everything together in one place and we could go there to work, a hub where we could all access this type of clothing store. We started looking at spaces but it was too costly to set up and develop. Then COVID hit and suddenly we all had so much spare time. My husband is a photographer and I thought, you know what, instead of all my clothing sitting around in boxes and every time I do a shoot, pulling it out of bag, photographing it and sticking it on a mood board, let's photograph all the stock and build it onto a website. Then it’s much easier for me to put onto mood boards, and also means I can share it with other people online and it won't cost me very much to set up, that's how it started. Starting small meant I could see how I could build and how it was going to work, as a test. I also wanted to show other people how this could be a different way of working. Although it started back in 2020 it's really only been running properly for about 2 years.

 

D: How's it going? 

 

A: I keep thinking it's quite slow, but then I look at where I was a year ago and can see that it's come so far. It's not been as popular with other stylists as I would like it to be. I think it's quite difficult to change people's habits and it is still so easy to buy stuff online and send it back. 

 

Maybe the thought of travelling somewhere, that might not have the right thing is a barrier. That's why I try and keep everything online. Because I get a lot of donations, I have to photograph everything then upload it, so it can be a struggle keeping on top of that. Which means the available stock isn't always completely up to date. But it is going well and it's improving all the time, it's still a work in progress. 

 


 

D: I guess the more you market and the more people get to understand what you are doing, it will become more popular. There is ever more talk around the climate emergency and what we need to do now for our future generations, our children our grandchildren who will be the ones dealing with the fallout of all of this mess, that mindset change will improve the business. 

 

A: Exactly. Right now though I am also a full-time stylist and I’m busy as a stylist, which is great, and I now hire a lot of the stuff to myself to use on shoots. But The Styling Bank is a whole job in itself. Marketing, managing the website and managing the physical store. I manage it all as best I can between jobs, but it's a little bit tricky running both things full time. I'm also a mum and I have a dog too. But it is going well and I have to keep reminding myself that, as it can sometimes feel like I’m climbing a mountain. 

 

D: At a recent Association of Photographers event we were both at, you had lots of other photographers around you who may not have heard about what you are doing, and the panellists were advocating for you and what you are doing which was brilliant. With time the work you are doing will be more and more on people's radar. 

 

A: I've had so much industry support which is so good, and I've had a lot of mentoring and encouragement from a lot of people which is great, because people really do want things to change. I’ve had quite a lot of stylists come by, but when they're looking for something very specific that I might not have it can be frustrating as I don’t have enough space to store everything they may need, and my collection is based on donations. So part of what I'm trying to develop is an information hub and information resource to advise on where best to send you to find those other things you need. Not only pre shoot, but post shoot, so that when we do have to buy things we can be more aware and mindful of where we source from in terms of the human and environmental impact of the manufacturing but then also the best way to repurpose them after use too. 

 

I have been collaborating with AD Green on helping them with carbon calculator for styling and recently created a case study with them which is publicly on their site, as a way to share my processes, and how I am developing what I do, the pros and cons. What I have found to be good in the approach and what I have found difficult. I will publish more of these on my own site to help show what is possible as part of that information sharing. Then people can see what I'm struggling with, which must be common for them too. Then when more people share their information and processes it will make sourcing easier for everyone. I'm at a certain age now where I don't want to do this forever and there are a lot of amazing up and coming talent that can really benefit from all the mistakes I've made and hopefully learn from that. 

 

 


D: Of course, as you build The Styling Bank, it will allow you to sidestep over there and maybe with time enable you to employ other people too. 

 

A: If I could grow it and do that, it would be amazing. I've started hosting events, one recently was a visible mending event, to show people how easy it is to make things last longer by reusing what we already own. I've been trying to drive the visible mending approach within advertising too, to make it more normal, instead of everything in commercials looking new, crisp and shiny. We could have patches and things that have been mended, to normalise it, like we do with keep cups and reusable water bottles. Let's make jumpers that have been mended with beautiful patches and visible mending normal. 

 

D: Celebrate the length of the life of our clothes. 

 

A: The more people see that kind of thing, the more normalised it becomes and it would encourage learning and asking how ‘do I customise my own garments?’ 

So, my intention is to do more events like that, that will hopefully target the advertising industry and people I know within the industry, to encourage them, but obviously at the same time still be open to anyone who wants to come along and learn. 

 

Part of what I love from having set up The Styling Bank is that I am meeting so many inspirational people, it's given me visibility and an access to things that I maybe wouldn't have known about or have had access to before I set it up, which has been incredible, not only for the planet, but for me personally. I have increased my learning and understanding and the network of people that I'm working with and am surrounded by. It's a real privilege to be able to meet such amazing people and to see what other people are doing is very inspiring. 

 


 

D: What drives you, do you think? 

 

A: You know what, I have two children, and I know this probably sounds quite cliched, but it's really brings home, the thinking of what we are leaving behind. I would love to think that I'm leaving something behind for my children that they can be proud of. But not only that, that it's also something I can do to help create change and to make their lives better and for those of their children. I feel that many voices make change happen, even one person can make a difference. I really believe that. Being aware of the next generation and thinking, what state are we leaving the planet in for them that’s what drives me. I see them and their friends and think, wow, when I was growing up, we didn't have these worries. Look at the worries they've got on their shoulders, that is scary, and that really brings it home to me.

 

 D: I did a bit of research recently and a stat I found fascinating was that the population has grown, since the 1920s from 2 billion to 8 billion. In 100 years that’s a rise of 6 billion people on the planet. There are more of us than ever before dependant on Earths resources. We must use the earth to feed people. We can’t afford to be constantly growing clothing. Recent figures have shown that we have enough, existing garments to clothe the next six generations. Six generations equates to about another 120 years. 

 

A: My daughter because she's a teenager now, often wants new things, my response is check to see if you can find it on Vinted first. Let's check on eBay, let’s check on Thrift. What do you need? How badly do you need it? 

 


 

D: I think the teenage years are the most difficult years, because you want to look like your friends, to be like your friends, to fit in. Then by the time you reach your 20s you want to be more individual again. 

 

A: Also, they have pocket money, but not a large budget, so they tend to go for the really cheap brands because that’s what they can afford with their pocket money. To be fair, I was completely guilty of that when I was younger too, because I couldn't afford anything more. I used to second hand shop and vintage shop, that my favourite thing as a teenager. I went round all the local charity shops. I would spray boots silver and cut off things and make things. I remember making a dress out of dad's windsurfing sail because it had some clear perspex in it. It didn't occur to me that that he was still using it…but it made a great dress. 

 

That’s what I was up to as a teenager because we didn't have access to shops or online shopping. So I would get quite creative.

 

D: Did you learn sewing skills from your mum? 

 

A: Yes I learnt from mum bit by bit. I don’t know where else I got information from back then. The people in old haberdashery shops were generally quite helpful. 

 

D: For the future what would you like for The Styling Bank?

 

A: I would love to make it more of a resource and information hub as well as a physical resource, to share, keep expanding the sharing of information and obviously to build on what I've got. 

There are a few other places now where you can get clothes, but what I've done is always about recycling, I don't buy new things, it’s donations. If I feel I really do need to buy a few things, I try Vinted or somewhere like that first to fill some gaps. Otherwise it's really about sharing that’s there. The main thing so far has been that it has shown others how things can be done differently to inspire change, that's been my main goal, and to lead by example, showing how we can do things better? 

I’ve also been studying to increase my knowledge in Sustainability and how to help affect change further up the chain in the industry I work in. I’ve been inspired by the work the purpose disruptors are doing so I recently completed a Creative direction course and I’m currently studying a certified course to be a IEMA Practitioner Member (PIEMA).

Practitioner membership is regarded as the benchmark for environmental professionals driving change and delivering on sustainability goals in their organisations, projects, products and services, which I intend to use to further not only for The Styling Bank but to contribute my experience and knowledge from working in the Ad Industry for so many years to become a creative sustainability consultant. 

 

Links

 

Web               Alice Timms      

                      The Styling Bank

 

Instagram      This Is Alice's World

                      The Styling Bank

   

LinkedIn        Alice Timms  

 

 

 

 

 


 

 


 

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