Fashion

Runway To High Street: Collage Style


The F/W 2021 runways witnessed many designers patching together
fabrics to produce garments in an exuberant and eclectic clash of
color, print and pattern. This ‘collage style’ worked well for all manner
of items, including dresses, coats and separates. Designers and brands
including Etro, Chloe, Marine Serre and Dolce & Gabbana embraced this
aesthetic as the ultimate in bohemian chic.

Using recycled clothing to create high fashion

It’s a trend that can be traced back to the early nineties when
Grunge fashion was at its height. In 1991 the young African designer,
Lamine Kouyaté, founded a label he called Xuly.Bët Kouyaté had the visionary idea of
using recycled clothing to create high fashion, reshaping found
garments by cutting, stitching and making modifications that ranged
from subtle re-shaping to complete transformations. He turned dresses
into skirts, skirts into bags, stockings into halter-tops and most
famously, sweaters stitched together to create dresses. Often he would
leave threads hanging at the end of stitching, their red color often
emphasizing the process of transformation from discarded garment to
designer statement. It’s a style that Kouyaté uses to this day.

xulyBET / Catwalk Pictures

Off the runways, as more and more designers seek out ways to become
sustainable, piecing together recycled garments is a great way to
achieve this goal while staying on trend.
Fast-forward to Fall 2021 and collage-style fashion can be found in
many stores.

Based in New York, Rentrayage, is a recently founded business that
is fully committed to sustainable practices and circular systems. As
their website states, they believe that:
“Every piece of clothing, old, used, vintage or new has value, beauty
and purpose. Everything we make is born from existing materials or has
the ability to be reborn. All materials we use can be returned to the
earth and accepted back into our ecological systems”.

Rentrayage / Catwalk Pictures
Rentrayage / Catwalk Pictures

At British company Ragyard it’s a similar story. They seek out
unique items, which they reimagine and recycle. Instead of making new
clothes from scratch, they reduce waste and give pre-loved pieces a
new life. Attaching large embroidered peacock appliques to the sleeves
of vintage camouflage jackets and sweatshirts is a signature Ragyard
style. Dresses and skirts are pieced together using recycled denim
shirts, reworked t-shirts and other materials. Vintage Levis are
decorated with sportswear patches and pre-worn track pants get
bedazzled with diamante studs.

LVMH Prize finalist, Conner Ives garnered the attention of the
fashion world even before his graduation from London’s Central Saint
Martins. He has tapped into his own version of collage style, through
the use of dead-stock or vintage garments, many of them t-shirts.

Looking at some of the collections being shown for Pre-Fall 2022,
collage style will be shown on the runways for yet another season.



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