Saturday, 22 March 2008


The Ethical Brand Leaders.......

Fashion with an ethical twist
by Alyson Walsh

A look at who's who in the ethical fashion business – and why you should support them
This season I'll mostly be wearing green. Once the preserve of a small group of Glastonbury hippies; Peruvian knitwear, multicoloured patchwork leather boots, itchy hemp clothing – ethical fashion has gone mainstream. From politicians to upmarket fashion designers, these days everyone is keen to show their green credentials.

Whether it's through organically grown cotton or manufacturing methods that care for the environment (as well as the workforce), or Fairtrade merchandise that supports workers and farmers, the fashion-conscious have finally found a conscience.

Here we take a behind-the-scenes look at three ethical fashion brands with some key ideas.



Ali Hewson and
Rogan GregoryHigh profile: Edun

When Ali Hewson and her rock-star husband Bono became interested in creating a socially responsible clothing range, they turned to New York designer, Rogan Gregory. The creative force behind the hip label Rogan, and denim brand Loomstate (made from 100% certified organic cotton), Gregory had been designing sustainable clothing for some years. When asked about the advantages of the Bono connection, Rogan diplomatically remarks, 'He is a mentor, a statesmen and an inspiration. We don't count on him for fashion advice, he leaves that to me and Ali.' And so, with the emphasis on trade, not aid – and with Bono sticking to his day job - the socially conscious label Edun was born.

Designed for people 'who appreciate design but also want to know how and where their clothes are made', according to Rogan. The company ethos is to 'give the people we work with the opportunity to market their products and their craftsmanship, and to be seen on a higher fashion level. We also try to elevate their capabilities, to make them competitive with the rest of the world. Edun is a for-profit business, so we give them the opportunity – and hopefully a leg-up in the market.'

This support is much needed, as Hewson points out. 'In 1980 Africa had 6% of world trade; by 2002 this had dropped to just 2%, despite the fact that Africa has 12% of the world's population. If they could regain an additional 1% share of global trade, it would earn $70 billion more exports each year, more than three times what they're receiving in international assistance.'

Now four years old, Edun has well and truly established itself as a fashion player with a conscience. 'We are small but we're loud - and a lot of people are listening to us,' says Rogan. 'Considering the alternative fibres we use, where and who is making the garments… it's not easy, but we are seeing benefits.'

Edun clothes are stocked at Harvey Nichols (020 7235 5000). For more information visit www.edun.ie



People Tree dress,
from AdiliNewcomer: Adili

Translated from Swahili as 'ethical and just', Adili is 'not after throwaway fashion, we're looking for something that's going to be sustainable in your wardrobe,' says CEO Adam Smith. Passionate about the environment, Smith, a qualified accountant and e-commerce expert, founded the website earlier this year with friends Quentin Griffiths, co-founder of ASOS plc, and African-born Christopher Powles, an Oxford Zoology graduate who's deeply involved in conservation. 'This is less about making money, more about doing the right thing, in the right area,' he adds.

Talking enthusiastically, and at top speed, Smith clearly knows his stuff. He discusses child labour in India, the manufacture of silk in Cambodia and the limited supply of organic cotton (at present only 3% of global cotton production is organic). On carbon emissions, Smith states: 'We have to be pragmatic, we're not going for zero carbon but when we do fly goods in, we offset carbon emissions with World Land Trust. Donations so far have been to support reforestation projects in Ecuador.'

Before moving swiftly on to explain how the company has developed a framework of ethical issues against which they evaluate brands before selling them on the website – which now has 43 different brands and is packed with information on ethical fashion, from working conditions to advice on how to recycle your Adili mailing bags.

So does Smith wear ethical clothing himself? 'Yes, I wear stuff from our suppliers – and it's paid for!' he jokes, admitting that this in itself is yet another ethical consideration. 'But what do you do with your existing wardrobe? If you throw it away it goes in a landfill, and some of my clothes are too shabby to give to charity so I'm going to have to wear them for a little while longer.'

For more information visit www.adili.com



Knitted beret from
I Love LowieOne to watch: I love Lowie

Born and brought up in Tasmania, designer Bronwyn Lowenthal, 35, has been involved in environmental issues from an early age. 'The Green party had the balance of power,' she recalls. 'I can remember a huge debate over the damming of rivers on a World Heritage site. I was only 10 years old. The whole school was split, everyone had an opinion.'

Now based in London, Lowenthal is the brains behind Lowie, an 'ethically minded' fashion company producing clothing and accessories, hand-knitted by skilled craftswomen in small villages in eastern China. 'The quality is beautiful,' says Lowenthal. 'We pay our workers a decent price; that way they get to stay with their families and not go to cities to work in a factory. Children don't get left with their grandparents.'

When quizzed on how transporting goods from China affects the size of Lowie's carbon footprint, the eco-friendly Aussie readily admits: 'Only a few countries in the world grow organic cotton – ours comes from Pakistan – so even though it's organic, it creates carbon emissions. And the Chinese are great at knitwear, great craftspeople. I'd love to find the same quality elsewhere and use fewer carbon emissions but you have to forfeit one for the other.'

But this is something the company is working on. With a recently launched range of clothing made from vintage scarves, and a low-carbon range of knitwear, made in the UK, for autumn. 'It's more expensive - a wool beret will cost about £90 - but our customers are prepared to pay more to know that they're buying something that isn't ruining the environment.'

And in keeping with the spirit of the low-carbon range, the well-travelled designer is going to deliver each London order by bike. 'Fortunately the pieces are quite small so I can fit them in my basket!' she laughs. The air in south London may not be as pure as Tasmania but Lowenthal's sticking to her lifelong green principles.

Market Research................

Clare Coulson charts the celebrity-led rise of eco-friendly fashion

Not long ago, ethical fashion had an image problem. No one wanted to wear baggy-bottomed Thai fisherman's trousers or an ecru smock top. Unflattering and unappealing, eco-fashion was best left to eco-warriors.


Bono and his wife, Ali Hewson, have launched their own socially conscious fashion label
But there has been a definite swing over the past year. Ethical consumerism – from buying products made from recycled or renewable sources to supporting companies that adhere to fair trade principles – is on the rise. It is now cool to care.

So cool in fact, that the latest edition of Vogue has devoted 10 pages to ethical clothing. And London Fashion Week, which starts next week, will include an exhibition space dedicated to 13 ethical labels.

But it's the celebrities behind the movement who are really making a difference. They've made ethical consumerism sexy. One is Bono. Last year, along with his wife, Ali Hewson, and designer Rogan Gregory, he launched Edun, a socially conscious fashion label.

Its clothes are made in locally run factories in Africa, South America and India and the company promotes trade rather than aid. The range is brilliantly designed: this autumn there are beautiful Art Nouveau printed silk dresses, elegant tie-neck chiffon blouses, urban skinny jeans and denim trench coats.

This year Bono also launched Project Red, a collaboration between Armani, Amex, Converse, Motorola and Gap. Each brand markets covetable and ecologically sound products under the Red banner; profits are donated to a fund fighting Aids, malaria and TB in Africa.

Project RED's unofficial face is Scarlett Johansson, who appears in October's issue of Vogue wearing Armani's designs for the charity. The actress told the magazine: "We don't have to live in a teepee and wear a hemp skirt to be conscious about what's going on. Maybe somebody thinks, 'It's cool that she's wearing the Red T-shirt, I'll hop over to Gap and pick one up'."

Gap, which launched the T-shirts in the spring ( parkas, hoodies and jeans will follow) isn't the only store turning out fashionable and ethically produced clothes. Last week saw the launch of Adili, a website devoted to the top 25 ethical fashion labels, including Ciel, Patagonia, HUG and People Tree, which has a concession in Topshop, Oxford Circus.

People Tree has given the movement a boost with Trudie Styler as its new face. It has designed T-shirts in conjunction with Action Aid; 10 per cent of profits will go to help raise Fair Trade awareness in Asia, Africa and the Americas.

Small, independent fashion labels have also furrowed the green path. Brighton-based Enamore sells everything from pretty hand-made kimono tops to delicate hemp knickers ( far more appealing than they sound).

Chic shoes can be found at ethical boutiques such as Terra Plana, which designs shoes with recycled materials. And rather than squeezing into jeans made from cotton cultivated with pesticides, consumers can now choose brands such as Loomstate, whose eco-friendly designer jeans are sold at Harvey Nichols and Urban Outfitters.

Larger companies are catching on. Timberland, which sells eco-friendly footwear made with vegetable tanned leather and recycled rubber soles, is launching a reforestation project – it will plant one tree for each pair of boots sold.

And Marks & Spencer, which recently commissioned a survey that found that 78 per cent of shoppers wanted to know more about the way products were made, has just launched its own Fair Trade line.

Tesco, meanwhile, is to sell a range of organic clothing designed by Katherine Hamnett, a long-time crusader for ethical fashion.

Of course, it can be argued that eco-fashion is an oxymoron. How can eco-friendliness fit with so ephemeral an industry? The most significant progress should perhaps come from consumers: buying less, and more ethically, could be the most ecologically sound way to shop.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/fashion/main.jhtml?xml=/fashion/2006/09/13/efethic13.xml

The Brief.............

We are account executives at FashionBrandNature, an agency established by the British Fashion Council in conjunction with the Department of Trade and Industry

Our mission is to encourage brands to move towards Fairtrade and or sustainable standards/

Although this is quite straight forward, it's quite difficult to identify brands who aren't currently operating efficently within this sector. Whether it be through the introduction of environmentally friendly bags or fairtrade cottons, most brands have jumped on this fast, growing trend.