Inglês, perguntado por gabrielyx, 9 meses atrás

retire do texto todas as palavras "cognatas"(parecida com o português)



WORLD SPORT BUSINESS VIEWS LIFE PROPERTY TECH SHOWBIZ MOTORS FARMING
IRELAND
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
CLIMATE CHANGE
HOT TOPICS:
HOMELESSNESS
DUDGET 2019
BREXIT
Irish Examiner
The new generation of Irish designers leading a
fashion revolution
Saturday, April 28, 2018 - 12:00 AM
Fashion Revolution Week and the millennials behind it want to break the spell of fast fashion
Carolyn Moore meets the new generation of Irish designers prioritising sustainable style.
When Richard Malone opened London Fashion Week in February, Vogue's Sarah Mower wasn't th
only critic applauding the Irish designer's ongoing commitment to sustainability.
[...] "A new generation that does its ethics by showing exciting fashion."
has been encouragin
"It's something I can be excited by, and customers and stores can be excited by, because I'm
looking at new ways of making things, and the conversation about sustainability is really important
to the design," he says. [...]
[...) “I don't think you can make anything contemporary without considering sustainability. [..]
Realistically, the world doesn't need any more clothes, but if that's what you're going to do, you have
to at least consider sustainability (-)"
[...]
Fashion designer Jennifer Byrne, 26, agrees that segregating sustainable fashion' distorts the
conversation. “It needs to be incorporated into our approach to fashion [..." she says. “ ...) it just need
to be the new way —
that's the only option."
[...]
"Fashion is a medium for people to express themselves and show their creativity and their
personality," [...] “but that shouldn't have to come with a huge environmental or social impact." (..)
[...] Fashion Revolution Week an annual campaign marking the anniversary of the Rana Plaza
factory collapse which killed more than 1,000 [...] workers in Bangladesh [...] -
consumers to take to social media and ask, "Who Made My Clothes?" Byme says [...]: "We need to re
a point where we don't have to ask the question, because we know brands have taken sustainabilit
and ethics into consideration.'
Textile artist and activist Aoife Banks agrees. [...] "At end of the day, it shouldn't be down to the
consumer to make sure someone, somewhere isn't suffering for their fashion choices."
Banks was midway through a fashion degree when, realising how complicit fast fashion was in
the exploitation of women, she decided it was an industry she wanted no part of. [...]
Last year, Banks visited the Rana Plaza site, and met with Bangladeshi garment workers and labous
welfare organisations. (...) as an activist, she's working with Fashion Revolution Week to educate and
inform consumers; "[...] we're becoming more conscious of the impact of our consumer habits."
[...] designer Alanagh Clegg, 24, agrees Fashion Revolution Week "helps amplify the message an
put pressure on big companies" (...) As a teenager immersed in the culture of fast fashion, Clegg
admits sustainability and ethics were never on her agenda. "It wasn't until I went to college that I
began to question why we buy so much," she says,
[...] Alanagh's [...] approach is about buying less and keeping things longer. [...]
[...]
With young designers committed to making changes [...] perhaps there's hope for the future
fashion. [...]


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Respondido por gamesdanilo
8

Resposta:

sport,property,Motors,presidential,election,topics,generation,revolution,april,millennials,style,london,february,critic,aplauding,conversation.

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