The Star Malaysia

Small-scale clothes making catches on

Rise shows shift in preference­s away from big brands

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LONDON: Claudio Belotti knows he cut the denim that became the jeans Meghan Markle wore on one of her first outings as the fiancée of Britain’s Prince Harry.

That’s because he cuts all of the fabric for Hiut Denim Co, a sevenyear-old company that makes jeans in Cardigan, Wales.

Belotti is a craftsman with 50 years of experience that gives his work a personal touch – something that’s not quite couture but not exactly mass-produced either.

“There’s a story behind each one,” Belotti said.

“You’re paying for the skill.” Customer demand for something unique is helping small companies like Hiut buck the globalisat­ion trend and set up shop in developed countries that had long seen such work disappear.

While internatio­nal brands like H&M and Zara still dominate the clothing market, small manufactur­ers are finding a niche by using technology and skill to bring down costs and targeting well-heeled customers who are willing to pay a little more for clothes that aren’t churned out by the thousands half a world away.

Profits at smaller national clothing firms grew 2% over the last five years, compared with a 25% decline at the top 700 traditiona­l multinatio­nals, according to research by Kantar Consulting.

Their success comes from promoting their small size and individual­ity, said Jaideep Prabhu, a professor of enterprise at Cambridge University’s Judge Business School.

“It’s a different kind of manufactur­ing,” he said.

Laura Lewis-Davies

“They are not the Satanic mills. These are very cool little boutiques.”

Hiut, which makes nothing but jeans, employs 16 people in Cardigan and makes 160 pairs a week.

Women’s styles range from £145 (RM758) to £185 pounds (RM967), men’s go for £150 (RM784) to £235 (RM1,229).

Each is signed by the person who sewed it, known in the company as a “Grand Master.”

By contrast, Primark says it sources products from 1,071 factories in 31 countries and keeps costs down by “buying in vast quantities.”

The most expensive pair of jeans on the company’s website sells for £20 (RM104).

Many of these small manufactur­ers also try to stand out by embracing social issues, from reducing waste to paying a living wage.

Hiut, for example, highlights its efforts to put people back to work in a small town that was devastated when a factory that employed 400 people and made 35,000 pairs of jeans a week shut down.

Underscori­ng the years of craftsmans­hip that go into each pair of jeans, the company offers “free repairs for life.”

This kind of customer service helps form a “personal relationsh­ip” between a brand and the shopper that is valuable, says Anusha Couttigane of Kantar Consulting. And customers notice. Laura Lewis-Davies, a museum worker who from Wales, says she wants to support independen­t businesses when she can and bought a pair of Hiut jeans after seeing a story about Markle’s wearing the brand.

“Well-crafted things bring more joy,” she said.

“I’d rather buy fewer things but know they’re good quality (and) made by people who are working in good conditions for a fair salary.”

The rise of small clothing makers reflects a broader shift in consumer preference­s away from big brands – as evident, say, in the boom in craft beers. In fashion, technology is fuelling the trend.

The Internet provides a cheap way to reach customers, while offthe-shelf artificial intelligen­ce programmes allow companies to accurately forecast demand and order materials so they can make small batches and avoid unwanted stock.

That makes it possible to produce clothes that are more customised.

“Data is the backbone for this and the trigger,” said Achim Berg, a senior partner at McKinsey & Co in Frankfurt who advises fashion and luxury goods companies.

“It’s not custom-made, but it gives

I’d rather buy fewer things but know they’re good quality (and) made by people who are working in good conditions for a fair salary.

the consumer the opportunit­y to be more individual.”

A survey of 500 companies by McKinsey and The Business of Fashion, an influentia­l industry news website, identified personalis­ation as this year’s No.1 trend.

Consumers are willing to hand over personal informatio­n to get more customised products and services, according to a 2016 survey by Salesforce.com, which provides online sales and marketing tools for businesses.

But making clothes on a smaller scale has also gained a moral tinge after scandals about sweatshops, child labour and unsafe working practices hit global brands in recent years.

The 2013 collapse of the Rana Plaza building in Bangladesh, which killed 1,100 and injured 2,500 others, highlighte­d the grim conditions in factories that export to the United States and Europe.

Jenny Holloway, who employs 100 people at Fashion Enter in London, said she’s not interested in making as many garments as possible and selling them as fast as she can.

“I’d like to say we’ve done a massive business plan and we refer to it. We don’t,” Holloway said.

“We sit down and have a cup of tea and we have a chat and we evaluate how things sit with us. How does that client fit our ethics? ... It isn’t about money and making that big buck. It’s about sustainabi­lity.”

 ?? — AP ?? Trendsette­r: Meghan and Harry leaving after a visit to Cardiff Castle in Cardiff, Wales. Hiut Denim Co now has a threemonth waiting list after Markle’s decision to wear Hiut jeans in Wales.
— AP Trendsette­r: Meghan and Harry leaving after a visit to Cardiff Castle in Cardiff, Wales. Hiut Denim Co now has a threemonth waiting list after Markle’s decision to wear Hiut jeans in Wales.

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