If the official presentation for a major fashion house’s newest collection happens online with no social media influencers on the front row to post about it or celebrities in attendance to be photographed outside the venue, did the show really happen at all?
A modified version of the classic “If a tree falls in the woods…” proverb which so decreased Bart Simpson to rapturous, empty-headed enlightenment back in 1990, this is a question which conventional wisdom had – until recently – seemingly not felt the need to address. Everything, after all, was in its place: recognized designs of what a fashion Week and, subsequently, a fashion show ought to look like seemed sustainable enough, even as the influencer economy at large seemed to be sleepwalking into the era of its inevitable decline.
Yet here we are, in the second month of 2021, just over a year into a global pandemic which has challenged – and, in some cases, completely and absolutely destroyed – so numerous of the customs and protocols we had considered to be unassailable. Coincidentally, we also find ourselves in the midst of what is, by all accounts, the first fully-digital mainstream fashion Week – slightly less than a year because the Fall/Winter 2020 fashion Week in Milan which notoriously became something of a superspreader event.
Image through Flaunter
Of course, it’s not a coincidence at all. The two things are, very obviously, connected: while attempts at socially-distanced fashion Week events were held back in September, the transition to online-only presentations this year is clearly a reaction to the difficulties and failings of those events. In short: we tried. Now, it turns out, we need to try something else.
That being said, the two aren’t so entwined that one can’t – or shouldn’t – exist without the other. and so it begs the question: when the COVID-19 pandemic does draw to an eventual end – and I think “when” rather than “if” is probably a healthier method to this for the sake of everyone’s dwindling mental health – does the age of the digital fashion Week necessarily have to die with it?
Image through London fashion Week
The much more progressive answer, of course, is “No. cu siguranta nu.” There are, very clearly, plenty of reasons to keep fashion Week firmly rooted in the realms of the URL for the foreseeable future, with only the bare bones of in-person facilities in place, which have nothing to make with coronavirus specifically. And, of those reasons, the most convincing and many pressing – as it tends to be – is environmental impact.
A report by the fashion tech company ODRE, released what now feels like a lifetime ago, back in 2020, puts the annual carbon footprint of fashion Week into head-spinning perspective. As the sustainability agency Eco Age conveniently and soberingly summarises in their review of the dossier: “the industry emits 241,000 tonnes of CO2 a year just from travel costs connected with the quarterly fashion months.” That is, they note, “equivalent to the annual emissions of a small country, or the electrical power used by 42,000 houses for a whole year,” or – as Alden Wicker composed for a piece on The Cut, aptly titled fashion Week Is Not sustainable – “enough to power Times Square for 58 years.”
Let that sink in. Okay? Bine. now consider that those numbers don’t even take models, influencers or press into account – only purchasers and designers; the bare minimum. The real carbon cost of fashion Week over the course of a year is, it’s safe to assume, considerably higher.
The industry emits 241,000 tonnes of CO2 a year just from travel costs connected with the quarterly fashion months.
Which leads us, conveniently, to another point of interest in terms of taking a progressive method to the industry: fostering inclusivity within, motivating the even more transparency of, and – as an end goal – the democratisation of Fashion.
Digital fashion Week is, necessarily, considerably less exclusive than its in-person counterpart: the only real gatekeeper to experiencing these presentations on the same level as journalists, influencers or celebrities – who, yes, may still have gotten goody bags and fancy invitations because sustainability is a much bigger issue than just travel – is a working Internet connection. While presentations have been live streaming now for some time, it has always been at many a second-tier experience: you could view the action from behind a screen, but you knew that there were people on front row and elsewhere in the room doing much more than just enjoying – that there were people, those on the inside, living it in all its multi-dimensional sensuous glory and with no delays or glitches. There are no bandwidth issues when you’re sitting next to the runway.
These are, to my mind at least, fairly convincing arguments. but they’re arguments as to why digital fashion Week could or ought to stick around post-COVID as part of radschimbări icice în cadrul industriei.
În ceea ce privește dacă vor fi sau nu – bine, acum – acesta este un alt lucru în întregime și o întrebare mult mai complicată. Săptămâna modei, până la urmă, este un micro-industrie și microeconomie proprii: există trai, în special în sectoarele ospitalității și călătoriilor, care pot fi făcute sau rupte de o săptămână de modă de succes. Oricine a fost la oricare dintre evenimentele majore vă poate spune cum este să încercați să rezervați un hotel sau un restaurant atunci când moda coboară pe un oraș în masă, iar oamenii – oameni din afara complexului industriei – care se bazează pe acea creștere economică ar trebui Să nu fii o victime uitată.
Imagine prin Louis Vuitton
Cu toate acestea, mai mult decât atât, așa cum Virgil Abloh a lămurit în timpul prezentării colecției sale de îmbrăcăminte pentru bărbați toamna/iarna 2021 pentru Louis Vuitton, moda – cu o capitală „F” – contează pe conceptul de insideri vs. străini și se mândrește cu exclusivitatea și pe exclusivitate Păstrare. Această atitudine, cu mult mai mult decât orice altceva, va împiedica evenimentele Digital Fashion Week să devină norma pe măsură ce relocăm înainte – sau, mai degrabă, ca anumite elemente ale industriei încearcă să oprească această mișcare înainte să facă orice schimbare semnificativă.
Deși nimic nu este sigur, două lucruri par mai clare acum ca niciodată. În primul rând, doar o dată când această atitudine este înrădăcinată, probabil că vom vedea orice perturbare concretă a status quo -ului. Și în al doilea rând, mulți mai importanți, cât de esențială este această perturbare.
Imagine prin ID -ul evidențiat