FW
Fashion Resolution to organise Big Clothes Swap on April 25, 2019
Luxembourg group Fashion Revolution will organise a number of events in the next few weeks. The organisation's Fashion Revolution Week will be held from April 22-28, 2019. It will also host the Big Clothes Swap at De Gudde Wellen on April 25, 2019.
Fashion Revolution believes that the only way to transform the industry is to collaborate with everyone involved in producing, selling, and consuming fashion. Calling upon Marie Kondo's famous decluttering method, the organisation describes its clothes swap event as a perfect opportunity to let your neglected clothes spark joy in someone else's wardrobe (and vice versa).
A particular issue that arises when it comes to attempting to act more sustainably and ethically in purchasing clothing is disposing unwanted clothes. Clothes swapping events provide people with the opportunity to get rid of their own clothing and acquire new clothes without directly contributing to the vicious cycle of fast fashion. Consumers donate items they no longer want and in return can take the same amount of items that others have donated free of charge.
The event mainly focuses on men and women's clothing. As all leftover clothes are donated to the Red Cross Luxembourg the next day, anybody hoping to simply donate clothes instead of swap can bring a bag to put to the side for the Red Cross.
Walmart sets sourcing goals
US retail giant Walmart aims at reducing the environmental impact of the textiles and clothing it sells. This includes new goals for sourcing cotton and polyester, a more responsible use of chemicals with a goal of reducing the discharge of priority chemicals from the manufacturing process by 2025. But the main commitment is to source only from suppliers that use the Higg Index Facility Environmental Module (FEM) for products sold in the US.
Walmart was a founder member of the Sustainability Consortium in 2009. Walmart is working with suppliers to improve sustainability across the textile value chain. After a few years operating relatively under the radar when it comes to sustainability in its textile supply chains, Walmart will now turn its attention to three key areas of its textile supply chain in order to improve its overall environmental credentials. Walmart will source 100 per cent more sustainable cotton for products sold in the US, which includes cotton grown in the US, organic, or cotton from other third-party certified unnamed sources. Walmart will also source 50 per cent recycled polyester fibers for its private brand textiles by 2025. The retailer intends to leverage third-party certifications such as Oeko-Tex Standard 100, which tests products for chemical residues on product.
UK wool producers invited for competition
British Wool has launched a competition, called Golden Fleece, designed to showcase the exceptional quality of British wool. Farmers registered with British Wool can enter the competition via British Wool’s network of eleven grading depots. All producers marketing their wool through British Wool are invited to enter. The objective is to highlight the difference that fleece presentation can make in terms of increasing the value of producers’ wool. Qualifying fleece competitions will also be held at 18 agricultural shows across the UK during 2019. Judging for the 2019 Golden Fleece competition will take place across two stages with the eight finalists invited to a presentation ceremony in December.
British Wool collects, grades, sells and promotes wool produced in Britain to international wool textile industry for use in flooring, furnishings and apparel. It is owned by 40,000 sheep farmers in the UK.
This is an important competition for both British Wool and its producers with entries being received the length and breadth of the country. Producers in England are being encouraged to enter their fleeces and showcase the exceptional high quality of British wool. To take home the title of British Wool National Golden Fleece Champion really is the ultimate accolade of superb quality wool for wool producers across the UK.
US, India to host conference to boost mutual textile industry
A one-day conference in Mumbai on April 24, 2019 by the Indo-American Chamber of Commerce, is aimed at creating, developing and sustaining bilateral partnerships in textiles between the US and India. The one-day conference ‘America First and Make in India: Together Achieving $100 billion Trade in Textiles’ will be co-hosted by the US Commercial Service, US Consulate, in Mumbai. The conference will promote joint investments and support favorable trade partnerships. The event will bring together thought leaders, policy makers, textile stalwarts, and academicians to deliberate and create a road map to deepen trade and investments between nations as well as creating a textile ethos and ambience. The objectives of the conference include developing sustainable bilateral trade partnerships between India and US in textiles, identifying key sectors in Indo-American textiles, policy support in making the textile industry competitive, understanding global scenarios and its legalities along with cross border investment opportunities and future trends in the Indo-American textile trade.
Indian companies have been invited to learn and collaborate with US companies and participate in US textile manufacturing opportunities. The Indian textile industry exhibits the rich cultural heritage of India and is now with its newer modern manufacturing systems achieving a wider variety of fabrics, techniques and innovation in producing qualitative textiles. India’s competitive advantage in fiber to fabric, along with its many textile clusters, is seen as being in a position to meet the ever-growing demands of the American textile industry.
Trade between Vietnam and Czech Republic up 16 per cent
Total import-export revenue between Vietnam and Czech Republic was up 16 per cent in 2018 compared to 2017. Two-way trade revenue between the two countries expanded at 10 per cent over recent years.
The Czech Republic is currently a large trading partner of Vietnam in Eastern Europe. Import-export revenue between the two countries has always maintained growth despite economic difficulties in the EU over the past few years. In the first quarter of 2019, total import-export revenue between Vietnam and Czech was down 12 per cent. Of which, Vietnam’s exports to Czech was up 2.4 per cent while Czech’s exports to Vietnam were down 27.6 per cent.
Vietnam’s exports to the Czech Republic include footwear, apparel, seafood, consumer goods, computers and parts, mobile phones, and others. The two sides wish to continue to strengthen diplomatic and economic cooperation for the mutual benefit of both countries. The Czech Republic has put Vietnam on the list of 12 key markets given priority in foreign trade under the Czech international trade strategy for 2012-2020. Vietnam is the only representative from Asean named on the list. One way Vietnamese enterprises hope to promote exports to the Czech Republic is by participating in supply chains of large retail systems in the host country in addition to boosting direct sales to importers and distributors.
Demand for polyester on the rise globally
Polyester has brought about significant changes in how apparel products are made, priced, and distributed. Innovated in 1941, polyester has gone on to dominate the fabric market and has overtaken all other clothing materials, including cotton. It is expected to sell at almost twice the volume of cotton by 2020. Cotton is subjected to natural forces and intense labor requirements. As a result, its availability and production costs fluctuate continuously. Polyester, on the other hand, is a byproduct of petroleum and is entirely manmade, which makes its production more predictable both in terms of availability and cost.
China accounts for 69 per cent of all polyester fiber production globally, and if India and Southeast Asia are added to the equation, these three regions represent 86 per cent of global polyester production.
Producers of active performance sportswear, like those manufacturing cycle, run and ski wear, use polyester as their primary and preferred material for fabrication. One of the main reasons behind the high use of polyester in sportswear is due to sublimation printing. It is the most popular printing technique used by many brands, designers and customers. It’s less messy and easy to transfer. The look and hand feel are much better than any other printing technique out in the market.
Pakistan: Texpo 2019 wraps up orders worth $600 million
As per Federal Commerce Secretary Ahmed Nawaz Sukhera, Pakistan’s biggest textile exhibition, Texpo 2019, attracted $600 million trade through export orders by foreign buyers. Around 363 foreign buyers from more than 50 countries placed orders at the event. Trade agreements worth $600 million were signed and the process is likely to continue. Foreign buyers inked 10 memorandums of understanding (MoUs) with local export houses, besides visiting field and industrial units in Lahore, Sialkot and Faisalabad.
More than 5,000 business-to-business (B2B) meetings were held on the sidelines of Texpo 2019, which are likely to boost the country’s textile and its related exports. Delegations from various countries including Russia, Bahrain, USA, China, Japan, UK, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Czechoslovakia, Nigeria, France, Netherlands and Spain actively took part in the event.
Around 231 exhibitors including new entrants from across Pakistan displayed their products with leading fashion designers and textile houses and retail brands also showcasing their latest collections. Texpo 2019 also featured a Trade Envoys’ Conference on the last day where the stakeholders from the industry and the government exchanged their opinions. The TDAP also organised a two-day seminar, attended by leading exporters from various sectors.
IDEA 2019 Conference pledges to promote nonwovens
Leaders from the global nonwoven associations held a joint strategy meeting at the IDEA 2019 Conference, in Miami Beach, Florida March 26, 2019 to advance coordination on two key issues common to all: free and fair trade in nonwovens, and the growing concern about plastics in the environment and the need for coordinating messaging on the issue. The shared vision of the association leaders is to effectively represent, protect, and actively promote common interests of nonwovens and their related industries throughout the world.
The first step in advancing free and fair trade in nonwovens has been achieved with an updated and uniform nonwoven definition recently approved and published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 9092:2019. The new definition establishes nonwovens without reference to “Textiles” as did the previous definition and introduces the concept of an engineered material.
The group agreed to encourage the adoption and use of this definition in the Harmonised Commodity description and Coding System (HS) to achieve a more relevant classification of all nonwovens and nonwoven articles in tariff classifications.
The group was presented with INDA’s overview of how growing public concern about Plastics in the Environment can impact nonwovens with some guidelines on how to manage the issue. Additionally, EDANA presented the current state of play on the European Union Single Plastics Directive and its development of Extended Producers Responsibility.
Bangladesh to hold 10th edition of Denim Expo in May
The 10th edition of Bangladesh Denim Expo will be held on May 2 and 3, 2019 at the International Convention City Bashundhara, in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The show will offer fashion buyers and international denim insiders a sourcing platform and a hub for meeting colleagues, making new contacts and starting agreements. This edition will host various informative events including roundtables, seminars and talks for discussing and in-depth analysis on the hot topic of “Circularity.”
Beides Bangladeshi businesses, other exhibitors will be from Italy, Turkey, Japan, Pakistan and India, among others. Among the more than 60 exhibitors will be Artistic Milliners, Bossa, Denim Expert Ltd, Garmon Kemin Group, Jeanologia, Kilim Group, Naveena Denim, Officina+39, Orta, Pacific Jeans, Raymond Uco Denim, Soorty Textiles, The Lycra Company, Tonello, US Denim Mills and Vicunha Textil to name a few.
The second edition of Bangladesh Fashionology Summit will be held on May 2, 2019 at the International Convention City Bashundhara. The initiative will inspire the Bangladeshi apparel industry facing the global market’s future challenges. This edition’s theme will be “Digitalisation – The next destination” and will present views and remarks of global experts about how the apparel industry in Bangladesh can evolve thanks to technology. About 25 expert insiders from 13 countries from all over the world will express their opinion within five different sessions of the single-day event. Speakers will include representatives for international embassies and political authorities, and managers from C&A Foundation, H&M, Lectra, Marks & Spencer, Pacific Jeans and Pioneer Denim, etc.
Beams, Levi’s team up for Japanese-indebted reversed denim capsule collection
Japanese retailer Beams and American denim giant Levi’s teamed up for ‘The Inside Out Collection.’ The seasonal capsule includes classic Levi’s pieces, including 501 denim jeans, a western shirt and a trucker jacket, flipped inside-out. The collection also features reversed “guarantee” stamps normally found inside the garment. Each piece is finished with exposed stitching to emphasise the reconstructed nature of the garments.
The exposed construction is most noticeable on the 501 jeans, with the classic cut sporting its trademark selvedge and stamped branding on the outside of the leg where they normally would be on the inside. Other notable pieces from the capsule include an inside-out denim kimono, a nod to Beams’ Japanese heritage and a T-shirt printed with reversed co-branding and replete with external seams.












