Patou Pioneers Sustainable Luxury: A Groundbreaking Partnership with Fairly Made

Setting the Standard: Patou and Fairly Made Redefine Transparency in Luxury Fashion. In a groundbreaking move towards sustainability and transparency, luxury brand Patou has become the first in its category to collaborate with green tech startup Fairly Made®. This visionary partnership marks a significant stride in the fashion industry’s quest for ethical practices, showcasing Patou’s … Read more

The Modern Artisan project: How artisans can train on small batch luxury production and heritage craftsmanship skills

 

 

The Modern Artisan is a unique partnership between YOOX NET-A-PORTER and The Prince’s Foundation, the educational charity established by HRH The Prince of Wales, designed to create a sustainable luxury capsule collection of menswear and womenswear as part of a new training initiative to strengthen textile skills training.

@The Prince’s Foundation x @YOOX NET-A-PORTER

The Prince’s Foundation and YOOX NET-A-PORTER present new intake of trainee artisans for second edition of The Modern Artisan at launch event in Milan.

The Prince’s Foundation and YOOX NET-A-PORTER unveil the new artisans in training for the second edition of the responsible luxury training programme, The Modern Artisan project.

Selected from a competitive pool of applications, this year’s programme will bring together eight artisans, four British fashion and textiles graduates, along with four Italian graduates from the leading Italian design school, Politecnico di Milano. The trainee artisans will embark on a collaborative ten-month paid training programme, with design training guided by experts from YOOX NET-A-PORTER and industry mentors, and training on small batch luxury production and heritage craftsmanship skills to help build capacity in the UK delivered by The Prince’s Foundation.

The training programme, which commenced in September, focuses on responsible design and sustainable luxury textile craftsmanship. Together, YOOX NET-A- PORTER and The Prince’s Foundation will support the eight trainee artisans through the end-to-end process of designing, handcrafting and bringing to a market on a global scale a luxury collection with sustainability at its heart. The resulting womenswear capsule collection will debut to customers on NET-A-PORTER and YOOX in late Summer 2022. Profits from the sale of the collection will be donated to The Prince’s Foundation to support the charity in developing and delivering training programmes that will help preserve traditional textile skills.

The artisans are starting the programme by undertaking a four-month period of immersive design training guided by industry experts at YOOX NET-A PORTER headquarters in London and Milan for the British and Italian groups respectively. As they are supported through the design process, trainees will have the opportunity to explore designing for sustainability and circularity, including the application of data insights for customer relevance and to prioritise longevity of their final collection.

In January, the eight artisans will come together at The Prince’s Foundation’s Dumfries House headquarters in East Ayrshire, Scotland, where they will undertake six months of intensive training in luxury small batch production and gain the skills to handcraft the collection to the highest of standards.

Over the course of the programme, trainees will benefit from industry visits in the UK and Italy. Throughout the programme, they will receive ongoing mentorship from YOOX NET-A-PORTER, The Prince’s Foundation and brand partners, initial brand mentors include Gabriela Hearst, Giuliva Heritage, Nanushka, VIN + OMI, Johnstons of Elgin, Tiziano Guardini, Flavia La Rocca and ZEROBARRACENTO.

“We were absolutely delighted to gain places on The Modern Artisan programme. Our whole team feels so privileged to be part of such an exciting project. The collaboration across borders has opened us up to so many fresh ideas and ways of working. We have learnt so much already and look forward to all the opportunities the programme will bring. The future of our industry will be defined by the next generation of talent, so we are delighted to partner again with The Prince’s Foundation to support an ambitious group of graduates across Italy and the UK for the second edition of The Modern Artisan. The hands-on skills, experience, knowledge, perspectives and contacts that they are building will serve them well for years as they develop long-term careers and drive forward the sustainable solutions that will revolutionise fashion and luxury. Reflecting a shared heritage of innovation and craftsmanship in the UK and Italy, our YOOX NET-A- PORTER teams in Milan and London, in partnership with The Prince’s Foundation in Scotland, will support this group as together they define what it means to be a Modern Artisan in today’s evolving world. We cannot wait to see what they produce. ” – Geoffroy Lefebvre, YOOX NET-A-PORTER Chief Executive Officer.

“The first edition of The Modern Artisan project culminated with the launch of the YOOX NET-A-PORTER for The Prince’s Foundation collection in November 2020, which sold around the world and attracted global media attention for the artisans at the very beginning of their career. Since graduating from the programme, all the trainee artisans from the UK and Italy have used the experience as a springboard to secure employment in the industry or start their own fashion and manufacturing businesses. We are very much looking forward to working with this year’s intake of talented artisans and seeing where the project takes them. ” – Jacqueline Farrell, Education Director for The Prince’s Foundation.

The eight trainee artisans are:

  • Emma Rose Atherton, 28, from the Wirral in North West England. Emma is a graduate of the University of Chester and launched her own size-inclusive label at London Fashion Week.
  • Adam Benbarek, 21 from Turin, a graduate of Politecnico di Milano. Adam is passionate about art and literature, where he finds most of the inspiration for his designs.
  • Emily Dey, 23, from Middlesbrough. Emily is a recent graduate of Teesside University, and since graduating put her sewing skills to good use volunteering at a local charity to upcycle clothes.
  • Francesca Garrone, 22 from Turin, a graduate of Politecnico di Milano. Francesca hopes to one day build her own brand using only discarded materials.
  • Merie Macdonald, 49, from South Lanarkshire in Scotland. Merie has recently retrained and completed a HND in Fashion Technology at Cardonald College in Glasgow, having previously held various positions across the fashion sector including accessories designing.
  • Isabelle Pennington-Edmead, 24, from Cheshire. Isabelle is a graduate of Nottingham Trent University and Manchester School of Art, and during the pandemic volunteered to sew PPE for the NHS in her spare time.
  • Arianna Safayi, 22 from Perugia, a graduate of Politecnico di Milano. Following the programme she hopes to be able to use fashion to spark conversation on themes she deeply cares about such as sustainability, diversity and inclusion.
  • Zhenqi Weng, 26, from Milan. Zhenqi studied pattern making at the Istituto di Moda Burgo Milano and fashion design at Politecnico di Milano. He was born in China and moved to Italy at the age of 7, where he began to develop an interest in fashion and tailoring.
    photo source @YOOX NET-A-PORTER GROUP

Very Personal Care for Exceptional Hair. Hair as an intimate signature of identity

A New Promise of “Very Personal Care for Exceptional Hair.” Already seen as THE luxury hair care brand, today the brand is going even further, or perhaps we should say “closer” towards a more individualized experience.

toni-garrn-in-kerastases-new-campaign-very-personal-care-for-exceptional-hair

Hair is an intimate expression of one’s identity, revealing moods and emotions. Because women today see their hair as a constant statement style of their personality, professional luxury haircare brand Kérastase worked hand-in-hand with legendary portrait photographer Peter Lindbergh to capture this new focus of personalization. Through his lens, new brand heroines are revealed. Three, strong, engaged women: activists and supermodels c and photographer, writer, and stylist Margaret Zhang, illustrate the “Very Personal Care for Exceptional Hair” concept.

“I think that hair is an extension of your personality”, says Margaret Zhang. “Your hair says even more about your personality and your character than your clothes do.”

“Hair needs to be taken care of in the most special and healthy way. That is what ‘very personal care’ means to me,” says Toni Garrn. “I truly believe that Kérastase gives women beautiful, healthy hair, which is why I’m genuinely excited to be working with them.”

This new visual campaign is the starting point of the brand’s reinvention to support the new “very personal care” mission.

Cameron-Russell

“Very Personal Care for Exceptional Hair,” defines a new standard of excellence where bespoke is the new luxury and the art of personalization is the Kérastase signature,” explains Kérastase, unveiling new details about its personalization projects. The brand is offering more personalized, exclusive services including the opening of Kérastase Institutes in major world capitals, destination travel retail boutiques in key airports. Through innovative, hyper-segmented product launches, backed by Advanced Research expertise, the hair beauty powerhouse is addressing the micro-needs of diverse, sophisticated customers. The company also announced a completely redesigned and more responsible product packaging. A lighter, more elegant silhouette reflects the modernity of the consumers as well the brand’s commitment to responsible luxury, saving an estimated 45 tons of plastic per year on the restyled cap alone.

As a dedicated partner to hairdressers since its creation in 1964, Kérastase’s in-salon hair diagnostic, ultra-personalized products and sensorial rituals are exclusively available in just 1% of the world’s salons.

Margaret-Zhang

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vu_kvCpXoGw