The Sunday Guardian

Recycling bin: How fashion is facing a sustainabi­lity challenge

- ANDREW GRIFFIN

Since strutting bare chested down the runway last year, an 80-year-old man is being dubbed as China’s hottest grandpa.

Actor Wang Deshun has featured in films such as The Forbidden Kingdown and Warriors of Heaven and Earth and made his catwalk debut at Chinese Fashion Week, where he stole the show by storming shirtless down the runway with a seriously toned physique and long grey hair.A picture of good health, Mr Wang is flouting China’s concerns of a rapidly ageing society with the mentality that getting older should never be used as an excuse for giving up.

It’s a topic he speaks passionate­ly about online, saying in one popular video: “Many people started noticing me after a catwalk show… But do you know what? To prepare for this day, I’ve been getting ready for 60 years.”

Born in Shenyang in northeast China, he became a theatrical actor at 24, started learning English at 44 and set up his own pantomime troupe at 49. After moving to Beijing, Mr Wang hit his first gym at 50 and never looked back.

He makes clear that even in our golden years, we must continue to challenge ourselves and refrain from thinking it’s ever too late to achieve our dreams.

“Believe me, potential can be explored. When you think it’s too late, be careful you don’t let that become your excuse for giving up. No one can keep you from success except yourself.”

So next time you feel a senior moment coming on or groan as you bend, remember his words: “When it’s time to shine, be the brightest”. THE INDEPENDEN­T Climate change is likely to change every part of our lives. And that isn’t just the expected things — the changes happening in our environmen­t are going to lead us to change everything, down to the very clothes we wear.

The extreme weather likely to result from the warming of the environmen­t is likely to bring its own clothing challenges and concerns. But others are changing their clothes to try and limit the effects of that warming, too.

That sustainabl­e movement in clothing has most recently been highlighte­d by Cheap Monday, which has launched a collection called “C/O Cheap Monday”. In doing so it is aiming to highlight the challenge of sustainabl­e clothing — and the sheer amount of clothes that are thrown away.

The company is doing so by taking old and unneeded clothes and re-fashioning them into new clothes that can be sold over again. The collection is similar to Cheap Monday’s usual look — mostly modern denim — but all of it comes through re-used textiles, made up of jeans as well as bomber jackets and tees.

Sustainabl­e clothing might once have conjured to mind hemp shirts and sandals. But a range of other companies are working to try and make it the bare minimum for selling clothes, not a particular fashion choice or style.

The company also will allow people to deposit their old and unwanted clothes in its shops, giving people money off for doing so and then using those textiles to make new collection­s.

Cheap Monday said that it had made the move because of an awareness about the damage being done to the Earth – and the sheer amount of clothes that find their way into landfills.

“We are ever conscious about the Earth’s dwindling resources and have been working for some time to become increasing­ly sustainabl­e, actively looking at ways to close the loop and become a fully fledged member of the circular economy,” said Nadia Kokni, global marketing director at Cheap Monday. “We are taking our first steps but have high hopes to be fully sustainabl­e in our denim and apparel collection by FW2018.

“We have started by working with organic and sustainabl­e cotton as well as exploring how to work with pre-existing textiles and upcycle or re-use materials. Our C/O Cheap Monday capsule is something we conceived to highlight the fact that upcycling and re-using materials is one of the most sustainabl­e ways to ‘create’ and be part of the circular economy.”

“There are a number of reasons combined that has enabled the issue of sustainabi­lity to take its rightful place at the top of the agenda for many people not least technology, the political environmen­t and the ease at which people can access and share informatio­n,” said Ms Kokni.

In some ways, it just wouldn’t have been possible to make such a collection before now.

“Technology also has its place in driving the changes in the fashion industry; there are a number of innovation­s in progress that will enable us to consider how best to use what was previ- ously considered ‘waste’ in increasing­ly relevant ways and into great quality fabrics & textiles – something that was not possible 20 or so years ago,” she said.

And much of it is a recognitio­n that customers require not just sustainabi­lity but openness from the companies they’re buying from. Committing to sustainabl­e clothing isn’t just a good deed; it’s good business.

“There is also a demand for transparen­cy, people want to know more about what they are buying and they will voice an opinion if they have concerns or are not convinced,” Ms Kokni said. “Millenial audiences are at the forefront of this movement, driving a shift in consciousn­ess and enagagemen­t about issues such as sustainabi­lity and social and corporate responsibi­lity.”

Soon, sustainabl­e clothes won’t be one part of Cheap Monday’s collection. The whole thing will be, and that same move is likely to be taken by other brands that look to make their ranges more green. THE INDEPENDEN­T

“We have started by working with organic and sustainabl­e cotton as well as exploring how to work with pre-existing textiles and upcycle or reuse materials.”

 ??  ?? The company takes old and unneeded clothes and re-fashions them into new clothes.
The company takes old and unneeded clothes and re-fashions them into new clothes.

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