The Crown Of Fashion
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Britain’s royals are providing support and commitment to a wealth of life-enhancing initiatives
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Sophie, Countess of Wessex, in conversation with designer Christopher Kane, Suzy Menkes, and model Felicity Hayward at the reception to celebrate 10 years of the London College of Fashion's "Better Lives" project
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When
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, made a surprise appearance at the Fashion
Awards 2018 to present an accolade to her favourite designer – Clare
Waight Keller of Givenchy – it was yet another signal that British
royals are back in fashion.
Not since Princess Diana became a
style icon a quarter of a century ago has there been such a commitment
by the Royal Family to the panoply of style.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, presents the British Designer of the Year Womenswear Award 2018 to Clare Waight Keller of Givenchy
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It was no coincidence that the British Emerging Talent
Womenswear Award went to Richard Quinn, who had Queen Elizabeth ll
sitting on the front row at his Autumn/Winter 2018 show – the first time
the 92-year-old sovereign had ever been to a fashion presentation.
In
February, the Duchess of Cambridge, whose husband William is second in
line to the throne, supported fashion from the Commonwealth, a cluster
of former colonial nations dear to Her Majesty’s heart. Fifty-three
different countries showcased designers and artisans who participated in
the inaugural Commonwealth Fashion Exchange. Also present was the
Countess of Wessex, married to Edward, Prince Charles’s younger brother.
The Duchess of Cambridge and the Countess of Wessex tour the Commonwealth Fashion Exchange exhibition
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For the last five years Sophie Wessex has been quietly
working as patron of the London College of Fashion, and at the end of
November she hosted a celebration at Buckingham Palace to mark 10 years
of “Better Lives” – a visionary attempt to drive change within the
college.
The idea of current Head of the London College of
Fashion, Professor Frances Corner, has been to present a fashion degree
as so much more than needle and thread – although those tools were used
to commemorate a very special historic event. Students were asked to
hand-embroider handkerchiefs to mark 100 years since the Suffragettes
were imprisoned for demanding equal voting rights to men – and used
their needlework to make a statement for their cause.
Sophie, Countess of Wessex, welcomes guests at a Buckingham Palace reception to celebrate 10 years of the London College of Fashion's "Better Lives" project
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Sophie Wessex brought that story up to date. “The London
College of Fashion is outward facing, and it takes its responsibilities
very seriously,” she said. “For those of you who are looking for
seamstresses, we create an opportunity in women’s prisons to give the
inmates the chance to come out with a genuine job opportunity, having
trained in prison.”
“And that’s just one example,” she
continued. “Sustainable fashion as a subject is becoming more prevalent
and the college is taking it very seriously, making sure that the
students are aware and understand it.”
Professor Corner explained that the London College of Fashion has a raft of programmes that enrich the basic teaching typical to modern schools. By supporting an initiative to develop the traditions, skills, and knowledge of the residents of the Za’atari refugee camp in Jordan – in order for them to create a livelihood from art and fashion – the scheme not only supports the largest camp for Syrian refugees in the Middle East, but also teaches its students more about global economic challenges.
Professor Helen Storey, the social artist and designer who is Za’atari’s first Artist in Residence, said of the camp: “Working in equality with the Syrian people and the organisations on the ground has given a new purpose to the way I work and live my life. In a displaced life, everything changes. It summons the previously unimaginable out of people – forms of courage and creativity that I have never witnessed before.”
Sophie, Countess of Wessex, with Professor Frances Corner, Artist in Residence at the Za'atari Refugee Camp in Jordan, which the London College of Fashion is supporting with a programme to help its residents develop and market their design and fabrication skills
For the Countess of Wessex and Frances Corner, the
excitement is to bring the “Better Lives” initiative to the new building
for the London College of Fashion, which was established in 1906 as a
University of the Arts – before women gained the right to vote. Now the
college, whose student body is 85 per cent female, will move from its
current six sites to one new educational and cultural destination in The
Queen Elizabeth Park in Stratford, East London, next to the new
Victoria and Albert Museum.
“We have demonstrated the power and
positivity of fashion in tackling and addressing equality, social
mobility, diversity and sustainability,” Professor Corner said. “Through
our ‘Better Lives’ agenda, we have redefined the purpose of fashion,
putting sustainability and social responsibility at the heart of what we
do.”
This idea of changing the fashion industry from the inside
out is not too dissimilar to the way the British monarchy has developed
over the last 25 years. From observer to participant and from royalty
to reality, a whole new world has developed in the British fashion
industry.
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