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Wednesday, 22 September 2021 13:24

White Milano to be held as a physical trade show

  

The Milanese contemporary fashion trade show White will take place as a physical edition for the first time since the start of the pandemic. The show will take place September 23-26, 2021 in the Tortona area.

As per a Spin Off report, the show will host 290 exhibitors and will be set in an entirely renovated layout, according to a concept that aims to offer special content, entertainment and education. It will feature 18 events, including talks and meetings that will involve key personalities of the Made in Italy fashion scene.

Among the special projects on this edition there will be Secret Rooms, an initiative devised by White’s Bizzi and Beppe Angiolini, owner Sugar stores and counselor, Camera Buyer Italia.

Seven Italian brands will talk about seven inspiring values they consider important to ignite the restart of the fashion system to regain the new generations’ attention.

As part of this initiative, Bizzi and Angiolini, in collaboration with architecture studio Dimorestudio, have created seven emotional rooms presenting the seven founding values. The participating brands of the project are Kiton, Massimo Alba, Aspesi, Incotex, Tagliatore, Finamore and Borsalino and have also interpreted seven of the most important men’s wardrobe pieces to be worn by women underlining how men’s and women’s wardrobes are increasingly interchangeable.

Wednesday, 22 September 2021 13:23

Birkenstock opens first EBO in Gurugram

  

German lifestyle footwear brand Birkenstock opened its first exclusive brand outlet in the National Capital Region at Gurugram’s fashion hub – Ambience Mall. As per a Textile Value Chain report, the new K store follows the successful launch of the brand’s second mono-brand stores in Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu.

Located on the ground floor, Birkenstock Ambience Mall store design embodies the rich history of the brand and incorporates core materials including cork and leather to create a light, bright and naturally comfortable space.

The new store houses the much anticipated Fall/ Winter’21 collection from the brand featuring the most iconic styles like Big Buckle, Zermatt, Arizona, Kyoto and many more in a diverse range of matte colors, minimalist designs. A combination of comfort, function and style, the sense of home and warmth is the central theme of the Fall/ Winter’21 collection that is displayed at the store. As an additional highlight for the festive & holiday season ahead, Birkenstock will also present the Boston and Arizona Big Buckle in a festive avatar: for the first time ever when these classics get reinterpreted in an elegant dark red leather and Arizona and Mayari in luxe velvets in showstopping colors.

  

Textile chemical management specialist Bluesign® Technologies has announced a management and phase-out concept for critical CMR (carcinogenic, mutagenic or toxic to reproduction) solvents.

Bluesign® expects to see a significant reduction in the use and emissions of CMR solvents when the concept is fully implemented by its system partners by the end of 2024.

The company already works with its system partner companies to restrict the use of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) for purposes such as polyurethane coating and laminating.

In addition to its existing approach to hazardous chemicals and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), Bluesign® is now introducing a solvent management and phase-out concept for CMR solvents in cooperation with stakeholders.

CMR substances are chemical substances of specific concern due to the long-term and serious impact they may have on human health.

These substances can be carcinogenic (having the potential to cause cancer), mutagenic (causing DNA mutations), or toxic for reproduction (affecting the fertility of adults).

The CMR solvent phase-out concept applies to all bluesign®® system partner companies manufacturing articles with such solvents.

Wednesday, 22 September 2021 13:20

Premiere Vision Paris takes the hybrid route

  

The current edition of Europe’s main textile and suppliers trade shows Première Vision Paris is being held in a hybrid format in France. The edition features six brands from Texbrasil (Internationalization Program for the Brazilian Textile and Fashion Industry) – the result of a partnership between Abit (Brazilian Textile and Apparel Industry Association) and Apex-Brasil (Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency).

The companies Natural Cotton Color, Savyon and Moltec are participating in the physical and digital versions, while Ecosimple, Oficina Caramelo and Sense Studio will be present only in the virtual edition that is being held from September 20-24, 2021..

The trade show is divided by thematic pavilions, including textiles, accessories, yarn, leather, designers, and smart creations, the latter more focused on technological and sustainable solutions.

The digital version, according to the event itself, will have 1,650 suppliers and more than 40,000 products. In addition, one of the highlights of the tradeshow is the trend analysis, which points out the colors, prints, fabrics, and other novelties to keep an eye on the 22/23 season.

  

Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA) plans to expand capacity as the work orders flow is increasing and the global economies are opening. The association expects garment and textile machinery imports to rise in the current fiscal, says Mohammad Ali Khokhon, President.

Last fiscal, Bangladesh’s garments and textile machinery imports declined by 15.80 percent.

According to Bangladesh Bank data, in the fiscal year 2020-21, Bangladesh imported garment and textile machinery of $609 million against $723.56 million in the previous year.

Imports of textile machinery recorded a 6.72 percent decline to $177.24 million, which was $190 million, reports Textile Today. Garment machinery imports fell by 19.02 percent to $432 million, which was $533 million in the same period a year ago.

However, the overall imports of capital machinery in the fiscal year 2020-21 plunged by 12.39 percent to $3.74 billion, which was $4.27 billion in the last fiscal year.

Exporters faced order cancellation and slower work order inflows. Production capacity remained unutilized. There was no new investment and expansion. As a result, imports of capital machinery declined.

  

China’s secondhand market is on track to hit $62 billion revenues in 2021. The market has attracted investments worth around $900 million in the first half of the current year. About 202 million shoppers in China bought and sold secondhand goods in the first half of 2021 against 183 million last year. As per a Bloomsberg report, China has long had an ambivalent relationship with used goods. In 2011, the market potential became clear when Milan Station Holdings, owner of secondhand luxury shops, went public. Demand for the company’s shares exceeded supply by 2,179 times at its initial public offering, then a Hong Kong record.

China’s technology giants also targeted the market. In 2012 Alibaba Group Holding launched an online flea market that it rebranded as ‘Idle Fish’; JD.com purchased Paipai.com, an online marketplace, and relaunched it as a direct competitor to Alibaba. In 2017, Tencent Holdings invested $200 million in ZhuanZhuan, the used-goods platform of China’s 58.com Inc.

A study estimates, Chinese consumers discard 26 million tons of clothing a year. Much of the waste could be resold. China is now one of the biggest suppliers of used clothing to Africa, and similar surpluses exist for a range of other goods, from phones to sofas to cookware. China’s young consumers are increasingly embracing sustainable brands. They are keen to find good bargains, which helped the secondhand market sell over $48 billon goods in 2020.

Currently, secondhand goods account for only about 5 per cent of China’s overall luxury market, compared to 28 per cent in Japan and 31 per cent in the US.

Wednesday, 22 September 2021 13:16

Wrangles launches sustainable denim line

  

Kontoor Brands-owned American denim brand Wrangler has launched a sustainable denim collection for Fall 2021 in collaboration with Infinited Fiber Company. As per a Fashion Network report, the collection is called Infinited Blue, and includes Wrangler’s signature pieces such as the men’s Western jacket and men’s Western jeans.

The brand has also created Infinna, a new regenerated, recyclable fiber to include in its global denim range for Fall ’21. The premium fiber has been created from textile waste and can be recycled repeatedly. The partnership between Wrangler and Infinited Fiber Company was formed in 2015, when the commercial viability of Infinited Fiber’s technology was first being evaluated and Wrangler began its pursuit of circularity. Wrangler helped Infinited Fiber understand the industry’s technical requirements for the fiber and completing preliminary tests and trials on fabrics made with Infinna.

Wednesday, 22 September 2021 13:14

C.L.A.S.S. to participate in Milan Fashion Week

  

Global platform aiming to make fashion and textile business smarter, C.L.A.S.S. aims to participate in the Milan Fashion Week through two initiatives. The platform will collaborate with Lineapelle, Orietta Pelizzari and D-house by Dyloan to create ‘A New Point of Materials;’ a presentation about the real journey of selected innovative and responsible materials. The initiative will be enriched by talks and in-depth sessions hold at the Fashion Theater.

The first of these talks will be on responsible innovation. It will focus on how responsible innovation has become such a fundamental element for the new generation of successful business. The session will be moderated by Giusy Bettoni, Founder and CEO, C.L.A.S.S. The second session will focus on responsible finance. Speakers at this session will evaluate how new responsible finance strategies and tools are going to integrate and implement social, environment and governance (ESG) criterias inside fashion dynamics in order to improve new growth models.

The session on September 23, 2021 will focus on the role of retailers as the new fashion Sustainability Police. It will evaluate the most suitable terms in the retail, buyer and consumer language, and most trusted areas by consumers.

The White Milan session from September 23 to 26 will showcase the most powerful C.L.A.S.S. Smart Academy projects.

  

US clothing company PVH plans to collaborate with a ready-made garment factory in Alexandria or Minya to launch new projects in Egypt. Navine Gamea, Trade Minister says, the government will provide the company with all required facilities to start its projects in the Egyptian market. As per a Zawya report, these would include allocation of land areas necessary to meet the company's manufacturing needs.

Established in 1881, PVH is one of the largest clothing companies in the US, and owns two of the best-known brands in Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger. The company also licenses brands such as Kenneth Cole New York and Michael Kors. PVH is partly named after Dutch immigrant John Manning Van Heusen, who in 1910 invented a new process that fused cloth on a curve.

  

American Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA) has signed an MoU with the Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) to collaborate on mutual policy areas through joint advocacy and information sharing on industry best practices. The United States and Kenya plan to expand trade and investments between the two countries. The two countries plan to renew the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) that is scheduled to expire in 2025. They also plan to FTA negotiations.

The partnership will scale up business to linkages between KAM and AAFA members and translate to increased trade and investments across borders, says Phyllis Wakiaga, CEO, KAM AAFA represents more than 1,000 world famous name brands in the apparel and footwear space. Meanwhile, KAM represents more than 1,300 members across 14 industries, including Kenya’s Textiles & Apparel and Leather sector, and the Footwear & Leather Goods sector.