Sorry, nothing in cart.
Poster The Head and The Heart Show Summer 2024 Poster Shirt
In Stock
-
5% OFF 2 items get 5% OFF on cart total
-
7% OFF 3 items get 7% OFF on cart total
-
10% OFF 4 items get 10% OFF on cart total
-
15% OFF 5 items get 15% OFF on cart total
Product Description
aking inspiration Poster The Head and The Heart Show Summer 2024 Poster Shirt from the fashion capital of the world for a global event in France was always going to be fraught. A faux pas akin to comparing a cheesymite scroll to a croissant, or neglecting to tell an ally about a new submarine deal. It’s hard not to overstate this: the French team’s uniforms – a chic navy-blue suit and white shirt – were designed by the former Vogue France editor Carine Roitfeld in collaboration with the biggest luxury conglomerate in the world, LVMH. They will be custom-made in Italy by Berluti – a famous tailoring house. By contrast, the Australian blazers, skirts and shorts contain “stretch fabrics” and are made in China. At the uniform unveiling, nine athletes who are hoping to represent Australia in Paris modelled the uniforms, including sprinter Torrie Lewis (the newly crowned fastest woman in the country), Matildas striker Michelle Heyman, men’s rugby sevens captain Nick Malouf and Australia’s first Olympian in breaking (AKA breakdancing), Jeff Dunne.
Poster The Head and The Heart Show Summer 2024 Poster Shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt
When I started to Poster The Head and The Heart Show Summer 2024 Poster Shirt feel sanctimonious about not shopping at Shein, I remembered that the “better” ready-to-wear stores, where I sometimes buy socks and T-shirts, aren’t offering products at a much higher quality – and their factories aren’t necessarily more ethical, either. Even luxury brands sometimes rely on exploited workers to produce their extraordinarily expensive clothes. Overconsumption exists across the price spectrum: Americans buy an average of 68 garments a year and wear each an average of seven times before discarding. We have less money to spend on clothing and quality is more expensive than ever, but clothing prices have stayed the same, thanks to more exploitative labour practices and lower-quality materials masquerading as efficiency and innovation. I can’t justify the desire to consume and collect more dirt-cheap garments than one could ever sustainably wear, but I know the desire to wear just the perfect outfit and the rush of serotonin that comes from buying an exciting new piece of clothing. Many people think of fast fashion as their only option.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.