As part of our Ethical Textiles project Gawthorpe Textiles Collection collaborated with the University of Central Lancashire Fashion department to run a Re: Fashion Challenge with a group of young people from across East Lancashire.
The project aimed to introduce skills in making, mending, and upcycling and promote the ethos of sustainability and zero waste.
The Re: Fashion Challenge took place across one week in August at Victoria Mill, the UCLan campus in Burnley. We worked with four young fashion designers who acted as mentors for a group of young people from across East Lancashire. Each mentor worked with a team of two young people and developed a collection from second-hand clothes, dead stock, discarded and recycled materials. The week culminated in a professional photoshoot where some of the young people and mentors modelled their collections.
Each team developed a theme – Punk Princess, Botanical Bin Liners, Gomibako and The Great Outdoors. They all worked incredibly hard, and the work created in such a short time was stunning in its creativity and originality. The work was so good it was hard to separate them out and choose a winner. We are grateful to our team of judges for the time and care they took to go through the information and images in the judging pack to make their choice. The judges were Nic Corrigan, fashion knitwear designer, of Whitehall Studios, Rizwanna Matador, modest fashion designer from Cover Me Collection, Ashley Sutcliffe, Gawthorpe Textiles Collection trustee, and designer from Live Like The Boy, Charlotte Steels, Director, Gawthorpe Textiles Collection, and Sarah Lloyd, Head of Design at Panaz Textiles.
The winners were announced at an event held at the Lawrence Hotel in Padiham on November 18th. Participants, mentors, judges, and guests enjoyed looking at an exhibition of the finished collections and images from the photoshoot and we launched our Re: Fashion Zine – a publication about the project. Congratulations to the winning team, the Botanical Bin Liners – Eira Odlin Bates and Dainy Casper, led by their mentor, Allison Orr. They each received a fashion book and Eira and Dainy won gift vouchers worth £25. Each of the other participants in the competition received a £10 voucher. Thanks go to Panaz Textiles for sponsoring the prizes.
Photographs and the full story of the project can be seen in our Re: Fashion Zine which can be downloaded here: