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This time there was It’s A Bad Day To Be My Liver T-shirt no big set, just a brown rug, white walls, some oversized framed photographs and cantilevered leather-and-chrome chairs lining the room. Christy Turlington, in a monochromatic greige shirt, tie, trousers and overcoat, opened to the sounds of Billy Joel’s Just the Way You Are. The collection, too, was in a subtler, pared-back mode, mostly in a palette of taupe, featuring nubby knits and coats over liquid-y maxi skirts or swishy sequined trousers. Glittering body-hugging gowns came topped with cowboys hats, while other models wore sharply tailored tuxedos or patinated leather ensembles that hinted at life on the ranch, albeit a very glamorous version of it. “The woman I design for has a beauty that comes from an inner confidence,” he said in the accompanying show notes. “She’ll throw a hand-tailored jacket over a glamorous evening dress. She believes in quiet sophistication not defined by time or trends. My Fall/Holiday 2024 Collection is inspired by that woman, her sense of timelessness, her individuality – a style that is for ever.”
It’s A Bad Day To Be My Liver T-shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt
I’m excited for It’s A Bad Day To Be My Liver T-shirt new legislation. France, as ever, is leading the way with money-back schemes for those who repair clothes and punchy proposals to tax fast fashion brands. I’m also excited for more conscious consumerism: there has been a groundswell of understanding in recent years that fashion should not be an all-you-can-eat buffet, that consumption has consequences and there is such a thing as too much. The Rule of Five campaign [which Darke pioneered], along with no-buy and 30-wear challenges are attracting increasingly large audiences. Although there is still so much work to be done around workers’ pay and conditions, as well as the biggest issue of how to tackle overproduction, I’m excited about the work on regenerative textile production. Brands like Ōshadi, in India, are leading the way with new supply chains that work in harmony with nature. Their latest Seed-to-Sew collection is made with cotton grown in rotation with other crops to promote biodiversity and draw carbon into the soil. The fact that there are brands successfully reworking the way our clothes are grown and made gives me hope.
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