Condé Nast launches a sustainable fashion glossary

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Condé Nast has partnered with the Centre for Sustainable Fashion (CSF)
at London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London (UAL) to launch
a sustainable fashion glossary, which will be an authoritative global
resource for understanding sustainable fashion and the fashion industry’s
role in the climate emergency.

The glossary forms part of the company’s commitment to becoming a voice
for change and is designed to strengthen and develop sustainability
literacy by providing guidance on key sustainability terms and emerging
topics.

The easy-to-use guide, which has had input from Vogue editors and
reviewed by a network of academics and sustainability researchers from
around the world, aims to offer “world-leading research and educational
practices” and will be updated on an annual basis to reflect innovations
and the evolving environmental, social, cultural and economic debate and
new discoveries and practices within it.

The digital resource, described as a “living document” is open to all
and available at Condenast.com, and has been divided into categories which
relate to sustainability in fashion: its cultures, materials, production,
buying habits and care practices, and features more than 250 terms, which
have been fully referenced for further reading.

There are four key themes: climate emergency; environmental impacts of
fashion;
social, cultural and economic impacts of fashion; and key elements of
fashion and
sustainability, plus 10 sub-themes that cover aspects of fashion and
sustainability. The glossary also allows the user to search by A-Z.

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Sustainability fashion glossary featuring more than 250 terms launched
by Condé Nast

Wolfgang Blau, global chief operating officer and president,
international, Condé Nast, said in a statement: “To raise awareness for the
global climate crisis is crucial, but it is now equally important to move
the global climate debate forward and to focus on possible solutions.

“For that debate about how to make fashion more sustainable, our
industry needs a shared language and a set of scientifically curated
definitions we can all refer to. We will keep updating the Glossary with
the help of our academic partners.”

The glossary was developed as Vogue editors-in-chief identified the need
for stronger editorial guidelines and educational resources for coverage on
sustainable fashion, so they can report on issues of climate change and
educating readers on how to live more sustainable lives.

This comes as a recent survey found that 3 in 4 Vogue readers reported
that the environmental impact of fashion was important to them, while 2 in
3 people believe that sustainability has become even more important in the
past year.

Dilys Williams, professor of fashion design for sustainability and
director of Centre for Sustainable Fashion, added: “What we stand up in,
should reflect what we stand up for. It’s time to question whether we are
being well represented, as well as whether we are well presented. We can
create a new era of beauty and style borne out of an understanding and
intimate connection with our most precious asset; the earth, the greatest
designer the world has ever known.

“By working with the world’s leading fashion editors-in-chief at Vogue,
we have been able to develop a vital glossary of terms, a trusted reference
point, regarding fashion as a means to exemplify our interdependence with
nature and each other.”

Image: courtesy of Condé Nast

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