Practicing Sustainability: Illuminating ‘Use’ in Wearing Clothes

Main Article Content

Alison Gill
Abby Mellick Lopes
Holly Kaye-Smith

Abstract

Aspects of the ordinary in everyday dressing remain elusive to fashion studies, meaning the life of what Judy Attfield calls ‘design in the lower case’ escapes notice. In this article, the authors assemble a practice-oriented perspective to illuminate ‘wearing’ as an outcome of sets of commonplace and routine practices related to dressing, that wear a garment in and out over time, and enhance the visibility of clothing use. The central example is a research project that tests the theory of loosening the meaning of clean by trialling alternative laundering techniques to understand the transition to sustain-ability, or less resource-intensive competencies in the spectrum of clothing use. The promise of an interdisciplinary conceptual framework that draws from ‘theories of practice’ at the intersection of cultural studies, sociology and design is also tested as appropriate for the analysis of the quotidian realm of wearing and laundering; the analysis is particularly assisted with sustainable design research about the transition toward sustainable ways of living such as the development of ‘slow fashion’.

Article Details

Section
Dressing the Body (Peer Reviewed)
Author Biographies

Alison Gill, Western Sydney University

Alison Gill is a design educator and theorist with specialisations in the user-side of material-culture studies, critical theory and practice-based design research. She lectures in the Visual Communications program in the School of Humanities and Communication Arts, Western Sydney University.

Abby Mellick Lopes, Western Sydney University

Abby Mellick Lopes is a design theorist working in the field of design for sustainability. Her recent research has explored the aesthetic of sustainability and socio-technical change in relation to sanitation, cooling practices and cultures of repair.  She lecturea in the Visual Communications program in the School of Humanities and Communication Arts, Western Sydney University.

Holly Kaye-Smith, Western Sydney University

Holly Kaye Smith is an activist who is passionate about conservation and social change issues. She is undertaking doctoral research in communications, sustainability and social change at Western Sydney University.