18 episodes

We hear a lot about ethical fashion, but what does this mean in practice?

In this interview series, you'll hear from Australian fashion experts about how sustainability and diversity are shaping our local fashion industry.

Critical Fashion Studies Podcast Critical Fashion Studies Research Group

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 10 Ratings

We hear a lot about ethical fashion, but what does this mean in practice?

In this interview series, you'll hear from Australian fashion experts about how sustainability and diversity are shaping our local fashion industry.

    Bonus Episode: Cross-Cultural Exchange with Môi Điên’s Tom Trandt

    Bonus Episode: Cross-Cultural Exchange with Môi Điên’s Tom Trandt

    Australia’s connections with Vietnam are many and varied, not least of all in relation to fashion. Vietnam is the second largest garment exporter in the world; a place with a long history of fashion creativity, innovation, tradition, and local trade.



    Australians have long benefited from talented Vietnamese garment makers. So, how are the connections between fashion designers and creatives in Australia and Vietnam being celebrated and supported today?



    Today’s guest is Tom Trandt, founder of Môi Điên Studio in Saigon, Vietnam. Last year, Tom was one of four Vietnamese designers to participate in a RMIT-led cross-cultural craft and design exchange called đây đó (here/there).



    The collaborative project, which brought together designers, artists and creative craft practitioners from Australia and Vietnam, promotes contemporary design practice while sustaining traditional forms of art and craft. It opened opportunities for cultural, economic and knowledge exchange between makers and designers from the two countries.



    Harriette spoke to Tom about his practice and his experiences participating in the đây đó (here/there) project.



    Show notes:

    Môi Điên Studio on Instagram

    Môi Điên Studio’s website

    The đây đó (here/there) project

    Episode one of the Critical Fashion Studies Podcast

    • 27 min
    Reinvigorating Australia’s Knitwear Industry with Kirri-Mae Sampson

    Reinvigorating Australia’s Knitwear Industry with Kirri-Mae Sampson

    Australia is famous for some of the best wool in the world. However, even though we produce one quarter of the world’s wool, 98% of it is exported before it’s turned into clothing. The lack of milling, weaving, and knitting capacity in Australia means that very little knitwear is actually made here. But this wasn’t always the case. 



    What are small manufacturers doing to reinvigorate the Australian knitwear industry?

     

    Today, Harriette is talking to to Kirri-Mae Sampson, co-founder of HATCH + make, a circular design, development, and manufacturing facility producing premium knitwear in Victoria’s Yarra Valley. HATCH + make is innovative both in its implementation of a circular economy framework—which ensures as little waste as possible—and its commitment to local, regenerative production techniques. 

     

    Show notes

    HATCH + make website

    HATCH + make on Instagram

    The Dancing Daisies blanket

    • 34 min
    Celebrating Sustainable Fashion with Josephine Rout

    Celebrating Sustainable Fashion with Josephine Rout

    Sustainability is one of the most pressing issues facing contemporary fashion. This is particularly true for emerging designers, who hold the demands and opportunities of sustainable practice in especially sharp focus.   



    So how is the innovative work of these pioneering young designers being celebrated?  



    Today, Harriette talks to Josephine Rout, the new Senior Curator at the National Wool Museum in Geelong. For her first project in this position, Josephine is leading the We the Makers Sustainable Fashion Prize, which supports authentic design, material consciousness and sustainable, ethical practice.



    Show notes

    We the Makers Sustainable Fashion Prize

    The National Wool Museum on Instagram

    • 35 min
    Building an Emerging Indigenous Fashion Brand with Juanita Page

    Building an Emerging Indigenous Fashion Brand with Juanita Page

    The School of Fashion and Textiles at Melbourne’s RMIT University welcomes hundreds of new students every year. Students who are passionate about fashion and want to join the excitement of an industry on the cutting edge of design, technology, and digital innovation.



    But what do these students do when they finish their degrees and head out into the world?



    In today’s episode, Harriette speaks to Juanita Page, an RMIT alumnus and proud Gooreng Gooreng and South Sea Islander woman. After graduating with a Bachelor of Fashion Technology degree in 2017, Juanita founded the slow fashion menswear brand JOSEPH & JAMES. Today, they’ll be talking about finding your feet in Australia’s fashion industry.



    Shownotes

    JOSEPH & JAMES on Instagram

    JOSEPH & JAMES online shop

    • 29 min
    Melbourne-Made Footwear with Myra Spencer

    Melbourne-Made Footwear with Myra Spencer

    Last year, the Australian Made initiative organised a show in partnership with the Melbourne Fashion Festival. The models paraded the Cranbourne Royal Botanical Gardens dressed entirely in locally made garments. However, they were conspicuously barefooted.  

     

    Very few shoes are actually made here. A skills shortage and lack of machinery means that most local designers manufacture their shoes abroad or import leather pre-cut. This means they’re not licensed to carry the iconic Australian Made logo — a green triangle with a yellow kangaroo.   

     

    But are there really no Australian-made shoes?  

     

    In today’s episode, Harriette speaks to Post Sole Studio co-founder Myra Spencer about making shoes locally. Post Sole Studio is based in Abbotsford, where Myra, her co-founder Breeze Powell, and their small team design and make footwear, which they call “a manifestation of their love of shoemaking.” 

     

    Show notes 

    Post Sole Studio online shop 

    Post Sole Studio on Instagram 

    The Melbourne Now exhibition at the NGV 

    • 27 min
    Made-to-Measure Tailoring for Diverse Bodies with Emily Nolan

    Made-to-Measure Tailoring for Diverse Bodies with Emily Nolan

    In 2016, cultural historian Christopher Breward wrote “The suit is a complex, enduring vessel of meaning whose form raises questions about identity that continue to challenge us today.”   

     

    How is the history of traditionally masculine suiting being reimagined for a new audience?    

     

    In today’s episode, Harriette speaks to E Nolan founder Emily Nolan about her made-to-measure label that caters to women and gender-diverse people.   

     

    Show notes: 

    The E Nolan website 

    E Nolan on Instagram 

    The Melbourne Now exhibition at the NGV 

    • 32 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
10 Ratings

10 Ratings

Nafski ,

Excellent Podcast

Interesting guests and topics in a well produced podcast that deserves more attention!

Top Podcasts In Arts

Poetry Unbound
On Being Studios
What The ELLE?
ELLE Australia
Nothing To Wear
Mamamia Podcasts
You Beauty
Mamamia Podcasts
99% Invisible
Roman Mars
The Moth
The Moth