Sisters bring unique style to sustainable clothing
IN a fashion industry obsessed with a never-ending conveyor belt of new season styles, Emma Sommerville has designs on a new trend: eternal style.
Together with her sister Kellie, Sommerville has formed Folktribe, a clothing label with a focus on sustainability, environmental awareness, humanitarian values and changing the shopping habits of consumers.
The Bond University master of architecture student said she and Kellie had always been environmentally aware but were inspired to start Folktribe after travelling and seeing the environmental impact of big business, particularly the fashion industry.
“In China they know the (fashion) colour of the seasons way ahead of us because their rivers will run that colour. They’ll know, ‘millennial pink, this is on trend’.”
Folktribe’s fashion focus is on hand-drawn patterns that are designed to be long-lasting, rather than being based around trends. Their garments are created to be worn in different styles, in all seasons, and to be durable, to help reduce people’s overall clothing consumption.
The garments are made from natural fibres and products such as hemp, and are completely compostable. Where needed, they use botanical dyes, alongside coconut buttons and personalised tags made from organic cotton.
The sustainability focus
goes further than just the garments themselves. The company avoids using plastic post bags or individual garment packaging, and uses mainly recycled paper.
The environmental focus of the business had presented some challenges, Ms Sommerville said.
“Because we’re trying to break away from the mainstream, it’s a detriment to sales,” she said. “We’re like, ‘how the hell do we break the mould and do something different, but also become an established brand’?”
To help with this, Ms Sommerville recently began working with Bond University’s entrepreneurship program Transformer to help with marketing and publications.
Sommerville said being a newcomer to the worlds of business and fashion had not necessarily been a bad thing.
“I think it’s a detriment in some ways, not knowing a lot about business and fashion, but I think it’s also kind of good, because we can go, ‘these are our ethics, these are our values, and we’re not wavering on them, this is what we stand for’.
“There’s so many people on the planet that businesses can survive without people ridiculously consuming. It’s (business) is still viable, it’s just how greedy you want it to be.”
Gold Coast entrepreneurs can showcase their own ideas by entering the regional final of global start-up competition Pitch@Palace at Bond University on November 27.