Global Times - Weekend

DRESSED TO THE NINES

The next fashion trend is clothes that don’t exist

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The online metaverse is coming and if we’re going to be spending more time in virtual worlds, there’s one crucial question: What are you going to wear?

“When I first started talking about this, my friends were like, ‘What are you talking about?’” said 27-year-old Daniella Loftus.

“But my 14-year-old cousins understood it immediatel­y.”

For many, the idea of buying clothes that don’t exist is a conceptual leap too far.

But emerging digital fashion stores are tapping into a growing market – not actual clothes but digitally generated outfits that stores simply photoshop onto a customer’s photos or videos to be posted onto Instagram and elsewhere.

Soon they are likely to become a way to dress your avatar when interactin­g in online games and meeting places, all potentiall­y while reclining in sweat pants in your own home.

British influencer Loftus sees so much potential that in September, she gave up her job with a fashion consultanc­y to devote herself full-time to her website, This Outfit Does Not Exist.

Her Instagram shows the potential of virtual clothing that doesn’t need to obey the laws of physics – from a shimmering silver liquid pant suit with tentacles, to a wobbling pink creation with lasers firing out of her bustier.

“Digital is coming to overtake physical. Kids are asking each other: ‘What skin did you have in this game yesterday?’” said Loftus.

Eye-catching

Isabelle Boemeke, a Brazilian model and influencer, is already an avid buyer of digital outfits.

Online, she is known as Isodope and merges high fashion with a serious commitment to clean energy and environmen­tal activism.

Her other-worldly style fits neatly with her message.

“I wanted to do something very eyecatchin­g and bold. If my videos featured me wearing a T-shirt and jeans, they wouldn’t have the same appeal,” Boemeke told AFP.

“Models nowadays have the freedom to share more about their personal lives and personalit­ies. I’m a big nerd and I love expressing myself in different ways through fashion or makeup.”

That’s the demand, so the supply is coming fast.

Outfits on digital fashion store DressX range from $25 hats to strange jellyfish-like dresses for hundreds of dollars.

“Every brand in the future will be on board with digital fashion,” said DressX co-founder Daria Shapovalov­a.

Its own research says 15 percent of customers are doing so for Instagram posts, and almost a quarter found it satisfied their need for a new item of clothing.

“You don’t necessaril­y need physicalit­y to experience the thrill of wearing an extraordin­ary garment,” said Michaela Larosse, of The Fabricant, which sold the first ever digital-only dress in May 2019 for $9,500.

“We will all have a digital self, we’ll have an avatar and you’ll be able to communicat­e something about yourself, who you are, what you’re interested in, through the iteration of your avatar.”

Reducing waste

Environmen­tal concerns are also key to their appeal.

The traditiona­l fashion industry is one of the biggest pollutants and waste generators on the planet – a point made by Extinction Rebellion protesters who stormed the Louis Vuitton catwalk in Paris on Tuesday.

“I know many women who buy an outfit, wear it once for a single photo and never again,” said Boemeke.

“They could reduce consumptio­n and waste by using digital fashion for a few of those posts.”

The pandemic was an obvious accelerato­r for these businesses.

“People were stuck at home with nothing to do. They had nowhere to wear those beautiful clothes,” said Loftus.

She is clear that digital fashion is not yet for everyone – and may never be.

“I don’t know if a lot of the people who do this stuff online actually want to meet people in person. I think that a lot of their needs and desires can be satisfied online,” said Loftus.

It may also prove a great leveler – a way for anti-social people to (almost literally) shed their skin and adopt another.

“You might be an accountant with a wife, kids, and you’re happy being quite mundane in real life, but then the way you want to express yourself in these virtual worlds is totally different,” she said.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? An employee is holding a mobile device with the bonprix App at a press event in the new Bonprix Pilot store in downtown Hamburg, Germany.
Photo: AFP An employee is holding a mobile device with the bonprix App at a press event in the new Bonprix Pilot store in downtown Hamburg, Germany.
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Pilot store in
Germany Under downtown Hamburg, the motto “fashion Bonprix, an connect,” combine Otto Group company, the advantages of wants to the possibilit­ies stationary retail of online shopping. with Photo: AFP
A new Bonprix Pilot store in Germany Under downtown Hamburg, the motto “fashion Bonprix, an connect,” combine Otto Group company, the advantages of wants to the possibilit­ies stationary retail of online shopping. with Photo: AFP

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