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Näytetään kirjoitukset heinäkuulta 2022.

Murrii Quu Couture’s new collection to hit the Melbourne Fashion Week runway

Accidental fashion designer Cheryl Creed and her label Murrii Quu Couture will be heading to Melbourne Fashion Week, off the back of being nominated for a National Indigenous Fashion Award.

A Gunggari, Pitta-Pitta, Bindal, Kannhy and Quandamooka woman, Ms Creed is nominated for a NIFA alongside Briana Enoch of Jarawee and Denni Francisco of Ngali x Warmun Art Centre.Often dubbed the accidental fashion designer, Creed’s beginnings in fashion began when she participated in the Regional Indigenous Fashion Textile Show in Queensland as a model.

Creed said it was after the runway when the organisers asked who would like to present their collection next year, when her hand went up.“Their response was alright see you next year with the collection on the runway,” she said.“And I thought ‘there you go Cheryl, what are you going to do now’.“But the door had opened and I guess that was my key, it was my next career move and my next journey.”

Since then, Murrii Quu Couture collections has only gone from strength to strength, showcasing collections the BrisAsia Festival earlier this year and Milan Fashion Week in 2021.This year however, Creed will be showing her a new collection on Country at the Modest Fashion Runway at Melbourne Fashion Week in October, with a brand new collection.“It’ll be a brand new, unseen collection,” Creed said.“It’s going to be a bit over the top because I really want to celebrate this year.

As for what her new collection will look like, Creed said it’ll be like stepping back into time.“It’ll be a bit of a step back into nostalgia,” she said.“Think the 1960s, like a step back in time. It’s a timeless collection.”Creed’s inspiration to create high-end couture pieces came from the noticeable gap in the industry.“I think before we were catering towards what mainstream expected of us as designers to keep in that lane of being Indigenous,” she said.“I’ve always liked the glamour part…I noticed we didn’t have those outfits for those events and I thought this is where I’m going.“I was thinking broadly in terms of who’s going to wear my designs, where they’re going to be worn, and that the area that we weren’t seeing you know the Logies, and the Emmys.

“There are these major superstars and I wanted to dress them.”This is the second time Creed has been nominated for a NIFA, but the excitement is still there.“It’s always exciting to be acknowledged for the hard work that you do,” she said.“I appreciate the judges who see the worth in my work.”The winners will be announced on Larrakia Country (Darwin) on August 3 during the Darwin Aboriginal Art Fair.Read more at:red formal dresses | formal dresses perth


Fashion Brands Need a Cultural Transformation, and Collabs Aren’t the Cure-All  1

Fashion and culture have an age-old relationship, but one that could probably benefit from an overhaul.

Particularly as the post-George Floyd era has ushered in a necessary demand for a cultural sensitivity too many had been lacking before.

Today, according to Roberto Ramos, founder and chief executive officer of cultural innovation consultancy The Ideatelier, and former Doneger Group senior vice president, “It’s about what role culture can play, but just a healthier, organic relationship with culture from the outside [of the organization] but from the inside as well.”

Trend forecasting has always looked to the world beyond for insight as to what’s happening, but the cultural transformation Ramos prescribes for fashion could see those keen to move in the right direction make changes starting with how they seek inspiration.

Where the few were once scoping and driving the trends, that cultural “tunnel vision” of sorts, he said, “tends to be a very culturally appropriating way of tapping into culture.”

Now companies need to look at culture — just as they need to look at their workforces, their product and their marketing — in a much more diverse way.

“It’s about how to pay more attention to the outlier, how to go in and have these types of conversations. How to create systems that really embrace diversity, different sort of cultures,” Ramos said. “Because if you don’t have that from the very beginning, then you’re really starting at a deficit because then these products are not designed to reflect the new global domestic emerging majority.”

Brands must become “listening brands,” according to Ramos, and they need to listen to more than just what their customer wants in terms of product or sustainability, but to listen and hear what that diverse consumer is saying is important to them and why. To do so, however, will require some self-reflection and solidifying a brand identity, not just running “all over the place” in an often-messy attempt to quickly latch on to what’s new and now.

“Obviously, brands differ in their emotional intelligence around which they play with culture. There are those that are true culture creators [and there are others among which] there’s a lot of insecurity. And you see that manifest in terms of these extreme collaborations, trying to co-opt. And a lot of that is fine, we can’t judge because it’s a period of extreme resurgence of uncertainty, and creative chaos is part of it, but fashion can do better in terms of going beyond the surface level,” Ramos said.

Today’s consumers, he said, (particularly the younger ones) are resourceful, they’re rethinking ownership, they’re shirking big establishment, hungry for a new form of leadership and intersectional identities have necessitated a fluidity that will come with more than just ungendered dressing. All of it is upending the long-held notion of trend.

“The idea of what is a trend, it is so much more fluid and that’s why it becomes less about colors and fabrics and more about what are those conversations [being had],” Ramos said. “That’s why brands need to have a better system to embrace culture, starting from how they hire to how they get inspired to the processes, and what that would look like in terms of trend inspiration and design.

“In order to get this right, you need to leverage the power of culture from the outside but more importantly from the inside,” he added. “The types of decisions you make, how you show empathy, how you show courage, will resonate for a long time.”

That means looking at cultural transformation holistically. That is what The Ideatelier advises its brand and retail clients — Target a recent one among them — to do, from commitments to hiring across cultures, to ensuring cultural diversity is part of the brand DNA and reimagining cultural and trend forecasting to lead with a global perspective, and hearing from that global population directly.

How? Through cultural immersion sessions, Ramos said. It’s truly attempting to get inside a culture rather than peering at it from a very distant outside and self-determining what’s compelling. It’s talking to influencers and artists, reading literature and listening to podcasts the community connects with, it’s looking individually at the Black experience, the Asian experience, the Latine experience and the nuances within each. It’s participating in the cultural conversations and what’s specific to the groups engaged in them. He calls it the “house party approach,” where brands and retailers are active guests at the house party, taking it all in.

“The goal is helping clients in that expedited journey of what’s happening in culture, what are the opportunities in terms of creative concepts, product concepts, categories, where there’s an under-indexing of these groups, etc.,” he said. “And then with a lot of them, once we have that product, to tell that full story from a marketing perspective.”

As far as what is happening in culture right now, The Ideatelier sees an overarching sociocultural shift it’s calling “Hyperflux.”

It’s defined by flexibility, adaptiveness, “deep personalization,” a blending between soft/hard, art/science or what Ramos calls, “a shapeshifting balance of extremes.” As fashion, it’s journeywear, which has all the comforts of athleisure but all the panache of high fashion.

“This shift is all around the drastic tectonic shifts we’re seeing across sociocultural structures and the individual’s relationship,” he said. “There continues to be a strong anti-establishment sentiment. A post-pandemic chaotic state of euphoria to make up for lost time is launching an aesthetic code that is carefree, over the top and futuristic. There is an unapologetic vibe at work and it is broad in how it draws inspiration. The result is an extreme mashup and sense of experimentation.”

That experimentation among the young consuming public could easily be one of the things that contributed to the fall/winter 2022-23 couture’s season of nakedness, since the runway — couture not exempt — is often more likely today to follow what’s happening in the world than lead it. But by the same token, and nodding to the mashup Ramos speaks of, that nakedness was also countered on the runways by heavier velvets, layered looks and a more demure aesthetic, styles that serve to protect more than reveal.

Owing largely to COVID-19, people are endeavoring to both duck the banality that claimed the better part of the last two years and simultaneously protect themselves from a world with too much of everything happening at once, which is the other side of what The Ideatelier sees in Hyperflux.

“We see a hunger for systems and designs that protect us and augment us,” Ramos said (hence the at least perceived ‘safety’ of the metaverse and all the augmentation that comes with it). “We see the continued blending of technology with softer emotive systems resulting in tech that feels softer, more interpersonal and with designs that become aesthetic extensions. Think of the new aesthetics of the ear-pods or the increasingly sleek and playful aesthetic of phone, home voice systems, etc.”

It’s a creative chaos of sorts, Ramos said. And these days there’s little choice but to embrace it.

“It’s all about embracing the uncertainty and contradictions of this highly charged era, giving the individual a creative outlet to express themselves,” he said. “We see this in the wondrous experimentation in personal design and style. Existing trends around this are the Y2K obsession of mashups and play, the emerging Indiesleaze trends taking strong cues from the underground club scene, along with futuristic, dystopian styles.” (Read: Demna’s fall 2022 couture collection for Balenciaga).

Brands and retailers that embrace the necessary cultural transformation boldly, intentionally, will lead in the post-pandemic world, according to Ramos.

“What we’re experiencing is the biggest reset of the century,” he said. “This will create the urgency for bold change.”Read more at:formal dresses online australia | short formal dresses


How my love of fashion got mixed up with an eating disorder  1

Fashion is my one true love; it’s been there for me when I felt like I had nothing else. Growing up, my love of fashion was nurtured by those around me, in particular, my mum’s family. My granny and aunties are all big fashion lovers, and they spotted that same passion in me.

My aunty was much the same – the three of us could go on all day and night about our shared love of all things feminine and beautiful (although I now realise fashion is so much more than this). As I grew up, and access to the internet became a household staple, I spent more and more time scrolling through fashion pages.

I watched runways, pinned a million pictures on Pinterest, and made endless mood boards of my favourite sartorial looks. When it comes to fashion, there are so many aspects about it that I love, but I’m the first to admit the industry is problematic.

Behind the shiny exterior of fashion shows and clothing labels, there is toxic and dangerous rhetoric that preys on peoples’ vulnerabilities. All throughout my childhood and adolescence, I was blindly absorbing every message that the fashion industry impressed upon me.

Sometimes, the message was overt – think of those magazines in petrol stations or supermarket lines showing ‘unflattering’ images of celebrities or an article about how someone lost however many kilos to fit into a dress.

But usually, the messages were designed to be covert: it was the clothing websites that only went up to a size 12, or the fashion influencer sharing what they eat in a day. Every picture I liked or reposted, every runway I watched and every model I followed all led me to the same conclusion: that I must shrink myself in order to be truly fashionable.

As I absorbed all this fashion content, something else began bubbling under the surface. I started avoiding certain foods and would spend hours eating my dinner each night. I was always feeling anxious about eating and it was clear that something was wrong.

With hindsight (and after years of treatment), I now know that I was suffering from an eating disorder, but 12-year-old me didn’t realise there was a problem. As I grew older and became even more anxious, my tendency to manage my feelings through food was solidified.

Soon, the messages I was receiving from Instagram, Pinterest and beyond started to consume me. Food became a source of guilt, and each mouthful was eaten with a slimmer body in mind.

During my teenage years, I ran a little blog on Instagram and Blogger. It was just a tiny fashion page with schoolmates, family and online friends following me, but it was my favourite thing to do. I would take outfit pictures wherever I went and did collaborations and gifted posts with small Australian brands.

I always received lovely feedback about my outfits and my sense of style, and it felt like the one place I belonged. But no matter how much I accomplished through my blog, or how many compliments or positive messages I received, nothing could penetrate the self-hating thoughts swirling around in my head.

I had curated a perfect little world, all through an Instagram page and a blog. My life looked happy and light. It was an endless scroll of op shop finds, flat-lays and smoothie bowls (very 2014) all disguising my inner turmoil.

I never received anything but love in both my home and school environments, but I was so consumed with self-hatred that the negative thoughts about my appearance heavily outweighed the positive ones I received from those around me.

As a young adult on the other side of eating disorder recovery who now works in fashion, I have a few insights to share. Being free of these toxic behaviours is liberating, but it doesn’t mean the thoughts don’t come up.

Constant comparison is something I have to watch out for – working as an assistant in fashion, I’m often dressing models and working behind the scenes on photoshoots. Dressing the bodies I once coveted can be triggering, and intrusive thoughts and the tendency to compare do pop up, but I now have the tools to work through them.

I’ve gained resilience and now feel powerful enough to stand up to these old beliefs. The main way I do this is through practising positive self-talk and self-love. I’m not trying to make it sound easy, because it’s been a long and difficult path, with plenty of trips, stumbles and straight-up falls.

But I think I’ve learned to lean into the discomfort because that’s where all the growth comes from. Now, I treat myself as I would anyone I love, because I finally love myself too.Read more at:formal dresses sydney | formal dresses brisbane


The National Indigenous Fashion Awards have announced their talented 2022 nominees

FOLLOWING THE STIMULATING runways of both the Indigenous Fashion Projects (IFP) and First Nations Fashion and Design show at Afterpay Australian Fashion Week, the National Indigenous Fashion Awards have announced their talented 2022 nominees.

Since 2020, the prestigious event has celebrated the creativity, diversity and expressive design qualities of some of the country’s best First Nations designers.

The joint partnership between the Darwin Aboriginal Art Fair Foundation (DAAFF) and Indigenous Fashion Projects — also supported by the Northern Territory Government — aims to globally showcase both creatives based in our urban and regional cities but also those in the farthest-reaching remote communities.

The NIFA’s also contribute to the promotion of fashion design as a career with mentoring and networking opportunities available.

DAAFF Artistic Director and proud Eastern Arrernte visual artist, Shilo McNamee called the event a unique opportunity for the Australian and international fashion community to connect with the world’s oldest living cultures.

“The NIFA recognises excellence across multiple award categories and provide opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander creatives to gain attention and receive mentoring support, so they can not only build capacity, but thrive in the industry,” McNamee said.

Awards are recognised across six categories including the ‘Traditional Adornment Award,’ which honours designers who have created items or pieces of clothing considered “traditional cultural regalia,” as well as the ‘Wearable Art Award’ and ‘Textile Design Award.’

In continuing their support, Country Road will present the NIFA Fashion Design Award — which’ll see the winner gain a year-long mentorship program with the iconic Australian fashion brand.

“The award winner will receive a 12-month mentorship with Country Road, allowing them to connect with leaders in the fashion industry, access in-depth insights into Country Road’s retail operations and receive consulting on the needs of their brand,” Brand Community and Impact Manager at Country Road, Fabia Pryor said.

Notable nominees include Laura Thompson of Clothing the Gaps, Briana Enoch of Jarawee and 2021’s Indigenous Designer Of The Year Fashion Laureate nominees — Denni Francisco and Ngali x Warmum Art and Lillardia Briggs-Housten.

Industry experts judging the awards include founder and creative director of Kira Models, Perina Drummond, design manager of women’s wear at Country Road, Jacklyn Rivera, headof marketing and communications at the Australian Fashion Council, Pru-Ellen Thomas and the founder of #ausindigenousfashion on Instagram & Facebook, Yatu Widders-Hunt.Read more at:formal dresses perth | white formal dresses


Former Tennessee swimmer launches fashion label  1

For millions of people, getting dressed or undressed is not a complex task. However, for thousands of others, it can seem like an impossible challenge.

That’s an issue one former Vol is tackling.

This adaptive fashion line has been years in the making for Mary Cayten Brakefields.

“So there are some special aspects in our clothes that make them more accessible,” said Brakefields as she describes her first clothing line. “First, our fabrics are all stretchy. so they’ve got a great stretch and return in them. they’re super soft and comfortable. and all of the pockets on our skirts, they have internal, external access and so you can thread any of your devices through there. then they have a clip strip that you can attach to your device to keep it nice and secure inside of your pocket.”

The former Tennessee Vol has always dreamt of creating a fashion label with her mom, Stephanie. Though it wasn’t until her time at UT, that she discovered in what industry.

“Being at UT was the absolute best. and being on the swim team was absolutely incredible. Being a VOLeader was the most incredible experience I could have possibly imagined,” said Brakefields.

The experience that changed everything for Brakefields was a conversation she had with two male adaptive athletes in Ecuador during a VOLeaders trip.

“We were having lunch and they started telling me about how frustrating it was trying to get dressed in the morning. so their experience really was eye-opening wow, there is so much missing from the fashion industry and there are so many people that are not being served well by the industry. and so maybe we can change that,” said Brakefields.

Her mission became increasingly personal her sophomore year when Brakefields was diagnosed with a genetic mutation.

One day after swim training, she passed out and convulsed on the floor of the locker room. An array of ailments would follow including, concussions, and infections. For two years she was in and out of the hospital. Eventually, doctors diagnosed her with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and dysautonomia.

This diagnosis caused her to frequently faint and endure convulsions. She reveals that it also attacks her collagen which directly impacts all of her bodily functions and day-to-day life. It also interrupted her swimming career with the Vols.

But she didn’t let this deter her from her love of fashion and serving those with disabilities.

“I was going through all of these medical experiences at the same time that I was learning and continually being reminded of you’re so much more than your sport, you know, you have something to offer.”

In addition to her clothing line, a big part of her label is jewelry and its easy functionality.

“We’ve got our different head options here. so we’ve got our traditional post that is the coral and then we have our little rectangle provides so that is great for if you have limited mobility or if you have a caregiver is putting on your earrings for you so much easier than trying to get the little post into a little hole so we’re trying to make accessible accessories as much as possible.”

During her time with VOLeaders they worked with people with disabilities and there she learned the power of representation.

“It’s so important,” said Brakefields. “And just representation and different bodies and different people being shown in an industry that has historically been less representative of a lot of people. it just has so much potential for good and it’s just really exciting. and so yeah, I’m just so excited to see where the industry is going and we’re excited to help maybe shape it a little bit.”Read more at:white formal dress australia | red formal dresses australia


Iris van Herpen

If anyone is ready for the metaverse, and the expressive, out-of-this-world outfits virtual fashion will afford us, it’s Iris van Herpen. Over the past 15 years, the Dutch designer has carved out a niche as fashion’s most future-facing designer, redefining the olde worlde charm of couture to show how technology can and will transform the way we dress. Consider the fact that she began experimenting with 3-D printed clothing way back in 2009—and that almost all of her designs today begin life as computer models, making her uniquely placed to outfit virtual events. “All of the 3-D prints that we’re doing are digitally designed first, so all those looks are basically already ready for the metaverse,” she explained at a preview. “Couture is where my heart is. For me, technology is a tool that makes it possible to bring the craftsmanship forward.”

Looking forward has always been Van Herpen’s gift. Though this fall 2022 collection marks her 15th anniversary, she was never going to trot out a retrospective of her favorite archive pieces. “I thought about it for about three seconds,” she laughed. “And then I realized—no! I want to look forward. I’ve always done that. The collection is very future-oriented, inspired by post-humanism, by transforming identities, the metaverse, but also hyperreality, where digital reality and physical reality are becoming indistinguishable.”

Naturally, to look forward, one has to look back—to the eighth century and Ovid’s Metamorphoses in this case. “Those poems are so timeless,” said Van Herpen. “We are still facing those same questions: Who are we beyond our physical bodies? Where are we going as human beings?” Inspired predominantly by three poems, those of Daphne, Arachne and Narcissus, she designed 16 physical looks and three digital looks to be worn by avatars for her show at the Élysée Montmartre. The only snag? A last-minute outbreak of COVID-19 among members of the technical team who were set to operate mixed-reality headsets for the audience meant the digital part of the show couldn’t go ahead.

No matter. The audience was entranced initially by a skeleton sculpture by Casey Curran depicting the nymph Daphne in the center of the runway, surrounded by gold laurel leaves suspended from the ceiling, her organza spine undulating in the breeze. As for the show: Van Herpen’s intricately constructed pieces, many of which blend hand-executed couture techniques with 3-D printed panels and innovative sustainable materials, were mind-boggling to behold. The opening look, for instance, comprised a biodegradable fabric made of banana leaf blended with raw silk which formed the sinuous Grecian draping. A chocolate-brown jumpsuit that rippled as model Cindy Bruna walked was made from a 3-D printed fiber based on the shells of cocoa beans, which was combined with upcycled organza.

What will the next 15 years bring? An exhibition at Paris’s Musée des Arts Décoratifs is on the 2023 agenda. But Van Herpen is mainly excited about the prospect of “mixed reality, where the digital and physical can go together.” She continued: “I don’t believe in replacing the physical beauty that we’re creating—that’s why I want the digital looks to be an extension of the physical looks. They need the same soul, the same intricacy, the same craftsmanship.” Will her clients embrace couture 2.0? “All of my clients are basically art clients,” she smiled. “The more time people will be in the metaverse, and the more they go to openings and happenings in the metaverse, the more they will want to wear something beautiful as well. It’s still in the early phase, but it will come.”Read more at:www.formaldressau.com | long evening dresses