The Scotsman

Plant waste fit for a King goes on display

- Naomi Clarke

A range of unique outfits created with plant waste taken from the King’s gardens are set to go on display at Sandringha­m House.

The collection of 26 garments and accessorie­s is part of an ongoing collaborat­ion between designer duo Vin + Omi and Charles after they bonded over their shared passion for sustainabi­lity when they met in 2018.

The exhibition, titled Royal Garden Waste To Fashion’s Future, will be held from March 23 to October 11 in the Ballroom at Sandringha­m in Norfolk.

The collection includes Vin + Omi’s initial experiment­s using butterbur, an invasive Asian bog-loving plant that grows beside the lakes at Sandringha­m.

The plant was later used to create an elegant maxi dress, which is described as a world-first.

Other outfits have been created from plant materials from the royal gardens at Highgrove in Gloucester­shire and the Queen Mother’s Scottish estate, the Castle of Mey in Caithness.

After their meeting in 2018, the King invited Vin + Omi to his Highgrove estate, giving them the opportunit­y to sift through waste from the garden and see what materials they might be able to make from it.

The following year, the designers created a process to turn the nettles they had gathered into a versatile textile.

The material was later made into dresses and outfits for their London fashion show Sting, which was held at the Savoy Hotel.

In the exhibition, the nettle material has been used a number of times, including for a coil dress which is laid on a base of recycled groundshee­t and dyed with fallen rose petals.

The pair have also considered new ways of dyeing using waste plant dyes and have fashioned “hard to recycle” plant pots into jewellery in their work.

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