The Star Malaysia

Skin is not in anymore

As more fashion brands go fur-free, animal rights groups target the leather industry.

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Paris: Is this the beginning of the end for fur?

With more and more fashion houses going fur-free, San Francisco banning fur sales in the city and British MPs considerin­g outlawing all imports of pelts after Brexit, the signs do not seem good for the industry.

After decades of hard-hitting campaignin­g against fur, animal rights activists believe they scent victory.

Last week, Donna Karan and DKNY became the latest in a lood of luxury brands to say they were planning to go fur free, following similar announceme­nts by Gucci, Versace, Furla, Michael Kors, Armani and Hugo Boss in recent months.

US-based animal rights group Peta (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), which is famous for its spectacula­r anti-fur protests, declared that “2018 is the year that everyone is saying goodbye to fur”.

“Times are changing and the end of fur farming is within reach!” it told its 687,000 Instagram followers.

The British-based Humane Society Internatio­nal said the tide turned when Gucci declared it was going fur-free in October. Another hammer blow came this month when Donatella Versace said that “I don’t want to kill animals to make fashion. It doesn’t feel right.” “Such influentia­l brands turning their backs on cruel fur makes the few designers like Fendi and Burberry who are still peddling fur look increasing­ly out of touch and isolated,” said the society’s president Kitty Block.

Fendi’s Karl Lagerfeld shows little sign of second thoughts, however, and has said he will use real fur as long as “people eat meat and wear leather”.

But Peta, which also campaigns for veganism, has warned the leather industry that is also in its sights, saying: “You are next ...”

Of the big designers, Stella McCartney, a vegetarian and animal rights activist herself, has pushed the ethical envelope the furthest, refusing to use fur, leather or feathers.

But vegans want to go further still, with a ban on all animal products, which for some also means wool.

But the fur industry is not taking this lying down and has become much more vocal in its bid to counter animal rights groups’ social media campaigns.

The Internatio­nal Fur Federation took Gucci to task when it went furfree, asking if it “really wanted to choke the world with fake plastic fur ...”

Philippe Beaulieu, of the French fur federation claimed fur-free was a marketing gimmick “trying to surf on emotion” to please millennial­s.

Fake fur, he said, was the real danger to the environmen­t.

“Brands who stop fur push synthetic fur which comes from plastic, a byproduct of the petrol industry, with all the pollution and harm to the planet that that entails.”

In contrast, fur is natural and more and more durable and traceable, he said.

Arnaud Brunois, of the Faux Fur Institute, which he set up to counter the IFF, disputes this.

He insisted that “from an ecological point of view it was better to use a waste product from oil... than farm 150 million of animals then skin them and finally treat the pelts with chemicals.”

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 ?? — Reuters ?? Unleashing their fur-y: Models holding placards as they demonstrat­e against the use of fur and leather in clothings at a protest organised by Peta at London Fashion Week Spring/ Summer 2017 in London.
— Reuters Unleashing their fur-y: Models holding placards as they demonstrat­e against the use of fur and leather in clothings at a protest organised by Peta at London Fashion Week Spring/ Summer 2017 in London.
 ?? — AFP ?? War on fur: . The fur fight continues with some brands not willing to give up on the fashionabl­e threads.
— AFP War on fur: . The fur fight continues with some brands not willing to give up on the fashionabl­e threads.

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