220
Fashion Jobs
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Estée Lauder Companies is Looking For an Execution Planner to be Part of Our Nordic Supply Chain Team
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
SMASHBOX
The Estée Lauder Companies is Looking For a Nordic Product Manager (Maternity Cover)
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Key Account Manager - Premium Beauty Products
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
ESTÉE LAUDER
Earned/Owned Media Senior Manager to Lead a Team of Eight People in Our Nordic Affiliate
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
NAME IT
Buying Responsible, Outerwear
Permanent · BRANDE
BEST SELLER
Tech Lead - Whs Analytics
Permanent · AARHUS
SAMSOE
Business Controller (Sql And Data Analytics Specialist)
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Estée Lauder Companies is Looking For an Execution Planner to be Part of Our Nordic Supply Chain Team
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
BESTSELLER
Sales Manager
Permanent · BRANDE
KERING EYEWEAR
Kering Eyewear - Lindberg Junior Trade Marketing Manager
Permanent · AARHUS
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Key Account Manager
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Key Account Manager
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
VILA
Art Director, Graphic Team
Permanent · SKANDERBORG
ONLY
Retail Planner
Permanent · BRANDE
ESTÉE LAUDER
Earned/Owned Media Senior Manager to Lead a Team of Eight People in Our Nordic Affiliate
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
ZIZZI
Financial Controller
Permanent · BILLUND
SMASHBOX
The Estée Lauder Companies is Looking For a Nordic Product Manager (Maternity Cover)
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
JACK & JONES
Junior Planner
Permanent · BRANDE
JDY
Key Account Manager
Permanent · BRANDE
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Key Account Manager - Premium Beauty Products
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
BEST SELLER
Site Reliability Engineer Tech Lead For Hybrid Computing Platform
Permanent · BRANDE
NOISY MAY
Sales & Product Manager
Permanent · AARHUS
By
AFP
Published
Jan 22, 2009
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Putting the planet in your underpants

By
AFP
Published
Jan 22, 2009

PARIS, Jan 22, 2009 (AFP) - "If you don't know what's in your knickers, should you be wearing them?" asks a short film showing at Paris' lingerie show this week, the globe's premier underwear event.


The Salon International de la Lingerie in Paris - Photo : AFP

After foods, cosmetics and street-clothes, the shift to organic has finally hit lingerie -- the cutting edge of female seduction that cannot stand the slightest compromise on style.

"Green is out of the closet," said Karine Lebreton of trendspotters Promostyl. "Green is glam."

Long seen as frumpy, dowdy and dull, green-friendly lingerie is hitting shop-shelves in the form of sexy satin or silk bras and briefs, and other lacy bits and pieces.

"People think eco is hemp or granola-looking," said British designer Jenny White of lingerie firm Eco-Boudoir.

"We make eco sexy," said the founder of the two-year-old firm that sells to top department stores such as Harvey Nichols, John Lewis and Le Bon Marche.

Her eye-catching undies, featuring sultry reds and blacks, ranged from tiny briefs to structured bras and spicy eyemasks -- in organic silk, organic cotton, bamboo or lenpur, a new textile fibre made from white fir wood pulp.

"People should know what's in their knickers because the textile industry is one of the most polluting in the world," said White, who produced the campaign film at the lingerie fair highlighting the ugly side of undies and viewable at www.morethanprettyknickers.com

-- There was no seductive ethical lingerie --

A pair of pants, it says, produces 18 kilos (39 pounds) of CO2E, the standard measure of carbon footprint, while 20,000 litres (quarts) of water are used to produce every kilo (2.2 pounds) of cotton.

"I care about the planet," said 32-year-old White. "I eat organic food, I use organic cosmetics, I wanted to set up a company without trashing the planet. We are running out of water, running out of oil. We have no choice. I want to wear things that are ethical and beautiful."

But of all fashion, lingerie is the most difficult to make, often requiring some 30 different bits of fabric. So no wonder manufacturers have hesitated on adding to the sale price by going more expensively organic.

"I think all manufactures are beginning to do what is necessary to marry their style with organic considerations," said Jina Luciani at just-established French firm Occidente.

"Now we have organic cotton but also organic satin and lace, and we're looking at organic elastic, said Luciani, who said her 100-percent fair trade underwear and loungewear aimed at cosmopolitan-thinking women who cared about the planet but wanted to be chic.

"There was no seductive ethical lingerie available for such women," she said. "Yet organic fabrics are soft and comfortable on the skin."

So is eco underwear here to stay, and will it hit the mainstream?

"This is more than just a niche market," said Florence Peyrichou, the lingerie specialist at trendspotters Promostyl.

"After all these years of flourish, excess, extravagance and bling-bling, people want a return to simplicity, softness and natural well-being."

"Because lingerie is so close to the skin, people are looking for something soft, this is a trend that will grow with time."by Claire Rosemberg

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.