4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 30 September 2022
⏱️ 20 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The French designer, known for her embrace of eco-futurism, speaks to BoF founder and editor-in-chief Imran Amed about the evolution of her namesake brand and explains its deeper purpose.
Background:
Designer Marine Serre has long had an affinity for evoking the apocalyptic in her work, a tendency that became particularly resonant during the pandemic. Serre spent lockdown reflecting on her time in the fashion industry and asking how it can change. Now, she has pledged to use her brand and influence to break the fast fashion cycle and build sustainable supply chains.
On this week’s BoF Podcast, we revisit Serre’s conversation with BoF’s Imran Amed discussing the evolution of her eponymous sustainability-focused brand for the post-pandemic world.
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0:00.0 | Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. Welcome to the |
0:07.9 | B.OF podcast. It's Friday, September 30th. Here at Paris Fashion Week, Marine Sarah is one of the |
0:14.7 | young designers who has caught the industry's attention, not just for her designs, but also the way |
0:19.9 | she questions the fashion industry. |
0:22.5 | Last year, in an episode of the BOF show, I had the opportunity to chat with Marines |
0:26.6 | surrounded by her deadstock fabric to understand the way she thinks the fashion industry |
0:31.6 | needs to change. This was one of the most powerful conversations I've had with a young designer |
0:36.5 | who thinks deeply and meaningfully about the purpose of fashion and how we can make the industry better. |
0:42.8 | Here's Maureen Sair on the BOF podcast. |
0:47.3 | What is this room? |
0:49.0 | So this is an upcycled room where we have basically all the stock of fabric where we are making |
0:55.2 | garment from regenerated fabric. So all this is made is like we take this from |
1:01.6 | warehouses where they don't use these pieces so most of them they are vintage so |
1:07.1 | you can see like waste. Yeah it's all waste and already used garments. |
1:12.6 | Here you have like pullover. |
1:15.6 | We made one dress out of pullover like two seasons ago. |
1:19.6 | And so where do you buy it? |
1:21.6 | Like do they just sell it in bulk? |
1:22.6 | Yeah, like actually this is already a selected part of it. |
1:26.6 | Yeah. So they have like tones and tones and tones of garment. |
1:29.9 | When you enter into this place, you realize also how fashion industry have been like producing so much the last 50 years. |
1:38.1 | So basically this is our past. |
... |
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