Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief
Showing posts with label london college of fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label london college of fashion. Show all posts

Friday, 16 September 2016

God in Fashion


What has God got to do with fashion? In the video above Revd Peterson Feital explores how the Bible references clothing, what God would do differently if He was in charge of London Fashion Week and how Christians working in fashion are brought together through prayer.

Drawing upon his Christian beliefs and own intimate experience of the fashion industry, Simon Ward, formerly CEO of the British Fashion Council, recently launched The Character of Fashion, his powerful new book which investigates what the fashion industry can learn from God in order to change how it views the world and operates.

Some of the themes discussed in the book include not only how people can utilise their faith to better support each other in the workplace and create new and imaginative designs; but also how Christian values can tackle such contemporary and controversial issues as body image, the over-sexualisation of young models and the working conditions of low paid clothing manufacturers.

The first book in a series that has been dubbed ‘Multi-Talented God’, The Character of Fashion was launched at Simon Ward’s local church, St Sepulchre’s in Holborn, to coincide with London Fashion Week, which he had previously organised for many years in his role on the British Fashion Council.

Can faithful shoppers be shoppers of faith? How does religion relate to fashion? Can spirituality have style? Should the fashion industry respond to people who want to express their faith and spirituality through their clothes?

Artscom Centenary Professor of Cultural Studies Professor Reina Lewis, London College of Fashion brings together fashion designers and consumers, bloggers and journalists, educators and entrepreneurs, politicians and activists in a timely appraisal of these issues. With participants from secular and religious communities, Faith and Fashion provides an open forum for discussions about the opportunities - and the challenges - of melding religion with fashion.

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After The Fire - High Fashion.

Saturday, 6 June 2015

Modest Fashion: Styling Bodies, Mediating Faith

Increasing numbers of women are engaging in the development and discussion of modest dressing; a movement matched by a growing media and popular demand for intelligent commentary about the topic. Modest Fashion: Styling Bodies, Mediating Faith edited by Reina Lewis, Artscom Centenary Professor of Cultural Studies, London College of Fashion, set out to meet that need. 

As a trend, modest dressing is spreading across the world, yet it is rarely viewed as 'fashion'. Studying consumers and producers, retailers and bloggers, Modest Fashion provides an up to the minute account of the art of dressing modestly - and fashionably. Leading scholars in the area, along with journalists, fashion designers, entrepreneurs and bloggers discuss the emergence of a niche market for modest fashion among and between Jewish, Christian and Muslim faith groups as well as secular dressers. Crossing creeds and cultures, analysing commentary alongside commerce, the book probes the personal and the political as well as religious, aesthetic and economic implications of contemporary dress practices and the debates that surround them.

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Violent Femmes - I Held Her In My Arms.

Friday, 14 June 2013

Faith and fashion

With global brands finally waking up to the power of the Islamic clothing market, valued at close to $100 billion, fashion is about to join food and finance as the third ‘F’ in Islamic branding.

As part of a new series of events at London College of Fashion on the theme of Faith and Fashion, and contributing to Shubbak: A window on contemporary Arab culture, Professor Reina Lewis talks to Emirati designer Rabia Zargarpur in a timely evaluation of the importance of fashion in cultural as well as commercial exchanges (Arab design on the international modest fashion market).

Founded in the aftermath of 9/11 to provide ‘conservative chic’ for the growing numbers of young Muslim women turning to the hijab, Rabia Z was launched in 2007, a trailblazer in the growing market for modest fashion. Putting Arab Arab fashion in the frame of British Muslim style will be renowned hijab fashion blogger Jana Kossaibati of hijabstyle.co.uk. Now a senior player on the blogosphere, Jana has been advising women in Britain and around the world about new trends in Muslim and modest fashion since 2007. Film maker Soniya Kirpalani will provide the inside scoop on the Gulf fashion industry. Sharing evidence from her film DoBuy-The Fabric of Faith, Soniya will explore the opportunities and challenges for Gulf designers in local and international markets within the wider frame of Arab dress politics.

Tuesday 25 June 2013, 18:00-19:00, followed by a reception. RSVP essential: faithandfashion@fashion.arts.ac.uk. London College of Fashion, 20 John Prince's Street, London, W1G 0BJ.
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David Bowie - Fashion.

Friday, 5 August 2011

Modest Fashion (2)

The project summary for the Modest Dressing research project is now available to download. This project researched the growing internet retail market for modest clothing among women of the three Abrahamic faiths: Islam, Christianity and Judaism. The summary can be downloaded from the bottom of Modest Dressing project home page here: http://www.fashion.arts.ac.uk/research/projects-collaborations/modest-dressing/.

A project symposium was held at the London College of Fashion in June 2011, and you can read more about it and listen to podcasts of the papers and discussion by clicking here.

Reina Lewis will also be bringing out an edited book of papers based on the project research and the project symposium later next year. She writes that, "Researching modest fashion has been absolutely fascinating, and I hope you enjoy the results as much as we enjoyed producing them."

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Duke Special: Slip Of A Girl.