Living lace

The clothing industry is one of the largest contributors to the earth’s pollution. Fashion fads go out of style just as quickly as they start trending, resulting in tons of textile waste being dumped into landfills, discarded carelessly and floating in our oceans. Fast fashion is rapidly diminishing...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Teoh, Abital Ruth Hui Jin
Other Authors: Galina Mihaleva
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70981
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author Teoh, Abital Ruth Hui Jin
author2 Galina Mihaleva
author_facet Galina Mihaleva
Teoh, Abital Ruth Hui Jin
author_sort Teoh, Abital Ruth Hui Jin
collection NTU
description The clothing industry is one of the largest contributors to the earth’s pollution. Fashion fads go out of style just as quickly as they start trending, resulting in tons of textile waste being dumped into landfills, discarded carelessly and floating in our oceans. Fast fashion is rapidly diminishing how we value clothing, the environment and ourselves. There is an urgent need to seek eco-friendly alternative materials and methods of production that are sustainable. While many have turned to growing bacteria cultures, straining soy waste and pressing dried fungi, I have approached this issue with a living material that will continue to grow with the wearer. Living Lace is a bespoke wearable that explores our symbiotic relationship with nature by integrating fauna into fabric, creating a dynamic organic lace that transforms and evolves with time. Instead of deteriorating like conventional materials, Living Lace is an example of additive aging; it grows with the wearer. How the plant embroidery changes size, shape and colour is a direct reflection of how we take care of ourselves and, in turn, our environment.
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spelling ntu-10356/709812019-12-10T11:28:11Z Living lace Teoh, Abital Ruth Hui Jin Galina Mihaleva School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Design::Product The clothing industry is one of the largest contributors to the earth’s pollution. Fashion fads go out of style just as quickly as they start trending, resulting in tons of textile waste being dumped into landfills, discarded carelessly and floating in our oceans. Fast fashion is rapidly diminishing how we value clothing, the environment and ourselves. There is an urgent need to seek eco-friendly alternative materials and methods of production that are sustainable. While many have turned to growing bacteria cultures, straining soy waste and pressing dried fungi, I have approached this issue with a living material that will continue to grow with the wearer. Living Lace is a bespoke wearable that explores our symbiotic relationship with nature by integrating fauna into fabric, creating a dynamic organic lace that transforms and evolves with time. Instead of deteriorating like conventional materials, Living Lace is an example of additive aging; it grows with the wearer. How the plant embroidery changes size, shape and colour is a direct reflection of how we take care of ourselves and, in turn, our environment. Bachelor of Fine Arts 2017-05-12T06:18:15Z 2017-05-12T06:18:15Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70981 en Nanyang Technological University 30 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Design::Product
Teoh, Abital Ruth Hui Jin
Living lace
title Living lace
title_full Living lace
title_fullStr Living lace
title_full_unstemmed Living lace
title_short Living lace
title_sort living lace
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Design::Product
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70981
work_keys_str_mv AT teohabitalruthhuijin livinglace