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Twyg Sustainable Fashion Awards 2022 Finalists Announced

by | Nov 11, 2022

The annual Twyg Sustainable Fashion Awards strive to celebrate and support designers, creators, thought-leaders, and innovators who use best practices to help change fashion. The fourth annual edition of the Twyg Sustainable Fashion Awards will be held on Thursday, 17 November.

In anticipation of the ceremony, meet the finalists from each of the nine awards categories, chosen by our esteemed judging panel (Changemaker winner is chosen from the winners of these categories):

Student Award presented by Levi’s®

This award is given to a student whose work challenges the status quo of fashion in creative and innovative ways. It specifically seeks out student designers who engage with environmental and social issues.

Fashion Students Archive

Fashion Students Archive

Maryam Agherdien uses her brand, Fashion Students Archive, as a space to continuously increase her knowledge and improve her upcycling techniques. She strives to be someone who always creates in the most ethical and environmentally conscious manner and her brand incorporates this by transforming textile waste into beautiful garments intended to last a lifetime.

Artfits

Artfits

Megan Art created her brand, Artfit, three years ago. The name speaks to the intention of the brand – combining fashion and art with innovation through patterns and sustainability by not buying new fabrics. Megan is an advocate for fair fashion and believes that a crucial part of sustainability is acknowledging people and understanding your responsibility as a designer.

Aidan Peters

Aiden Peters

This year, fashion student, Aidan Peters, honed in on sustainable practice by creating an upcycled denim two-piece while interning. Searching for practical ways to address fashion’s waste crisis, Aidan embarked on this upcycling journey to turn old, forgotten denim jeans into a reimagined form that gave the fabric a second lease on life and a luxury wear result.

Accessory Award

In recognition of the craftsmanship of sustainable accessories, this award is given to the brand or designer who implements ethical labour practices, limits the use and waste of toxic chemicals as well as utilising sustainable materials.

St Reign

St Reign

St Reign is a slow fashion, minimalist brand offering handcrafted made-to-order leather bags. Each bag is cut and made by hand from beginning to end. They believe in the merging of craft and design and aim to preserve age-old leather crafting techniques, like the saddle stitch, used by skilled artisans.

PICHULIK

Pichulik

PICHULIK is an ethical jewellery and accessories atelier. Rooted in Africa, and inspired by ancient traditions, mythology, and cultures around the world, PICHULIK uses the language of African artistry and ornamentation to create sculptural accessories that celebrate empowering feminine narratives. Each piece is a talisman, handcrafted from repurposed rope, and combined with cast brass elements, precious stones, and unexpected organic materials, to create distinctive, sculptural forms.

Hamethop

Hamethop SS22 2

Hamethop is a fashion and accessories brand that explores ideas of contemporary art, time, architecture, and place with stylish adornments. Their statement bags and garments hold stories that extend far beyond exterior beauty. They believe that sustainable production begins with centring the people in their supply chain.

Innovative Design and Materials Award presented by POLO South Africa

This award recognises the designer whose innovation reduces fashion’s impact, through minimising textile waste, reconstruction techniques, or other innovative techniques. Designers should also have a commitment to using sustainable fabrics.

VIVIERS Studio

VIVIERS Studio

VIVIERS is a concept clothing brand that is numbered in limited editions and can be made to measure. VIVIERS celebrates the senses and individuality. While priding themselves in sustainable practice, their collections are made by artisans in Johannesburg at VIVIERS Studio and breathe the spirit of the city, whilst attempting to redefine luxury.

Rethread

Rethread

Rethread is a contemporary sustainable clothing brand. Their offering is made up of 3 categories: Upcycled, ‘Sustainably Made’ (garments made locally, in small quantities (between 10 – 30 per style), and Preloved/Vintage garments. Their main focus is upcycling and finding innovative ways to use waste as a resource.

Droomer

Droomer

Droomer has become a space for experiments in social sculpture, public storytelling, and collaborative meaning-making. Central to their concept of sustainability is the idea that for objects to step out of the blind apathetic consumerism, they need to be imbued with meaning, magic, history, and the sacred. Every Droomer garment, is made to connect to a story, resurface a forgotten history, or create a connective aesthetic that brings people closer to the sacred.

Trans-seasonal Award

The Trans-seasonal Award celebrates the brand, collection or garment that transcends seasons and trends. Through versatility and multi-functionality, these designs are timeless and made to last. Judges also looked for committed to the preservation of garments after sale in repair services.

The BAM Collective

The BAM Collective

The BAM Collective is a clothing brand that aims to take a joyous, spirited approach to South African luxury fashion. People are the most important part of their business – hence the name “collective”. Employees are provided with safe, stress-free working environments, paid above-average wages, and offered continuous business training. Garments are made-to-measure to ensure the perfect fit and minimise returns and waste.

Sama Sama

Sama Sama

Sama Sama creates consciously designed clothing, to allow movement, unrestricted and with compassion for your body. They focus on using good quality natural fabrics or knits, that last forever and “just get better with age”. They are big believers in collaboration, looking to local artists, photographers, and fellow designers, to create unique designs with a shared vision and ethos.

Lesiba Mabitsela Studio

Lesiba Mabitsela

Lesiba Mabitsela Studio is a clothing brand, creative entity, and design house that was established to promote an authentic and contemporary African identity. Guided by a decolonial approach to design and the spirit of Botho, Lesiba Mabitsela asks the question, “what would we have looked like had we not been colonised?” The outcome is a series of limited edition avant-garde apparel runs and a criss-cross of contemporary artistic flair. Their transformable garments accommodate many body shapes and sizes.

African Renaissance Designs

African Renaissance

African Renaissance Designs is a culturally conscious brand that celebrates Southern African cultures and traditions. The brand often draws inspiration from attire worn by women in different tribes.

Nicholas Coutts Award

This award is in honour of the late Nicholas Coutts, who explored traditional craft in his beautiful designs. This award, then, recognises the designer whose use of artisanal craft celebrates slow, ethical and sustainable production of fashion.

Fikile Zamagcino Sokhulu

Fikile Sokhulu

Fikile Zamagcino Sokhulu is a young South African brand that aims to strike the ideal balance between style, simplicity, and sustainability. Her designs are based on the idea that every garment tells a story. Fikile Zamagcino Sokhulu creates clothing in small batches, with durable fabrics, and tries to prioritise natural fibres wherever possible.

Leandi Mulder

Leandi Mulder

With a deep-rooted connection and understanding of natural fibres and textiles, Leandi Mulder focuses on designing thoughtful, hand-crafted, sustainable designs. Leandi believes that sustainability in fashion requires a holistic and cohesive integration of practices that consider all living beings and environments that act with and within the process. She respects all stages of the value chain: growing, nurturing, harvesting, distributing, design and manufacturing.

Laaniraani

Laaniraani

Laaniraani’s designs are a fusion of art and fashion with sustainability at their heart. Each unique piece is lovingly handmade in Shamyra Moodley’s home studio with reclaimed T-shirt yarn and donated vintage fabric. The brand pays homage to classical craftsmanship by working with a small, highly skilled team of artisans to create one-of-a-kind, made-to-order, sustainable pieces. Through their up-skilling programme, they create sustainable employment opportunities for local women by teaching them the art of weaving, beading and hand embroidery.

Retail Award

This award is awarded to the retailer or retailing initiative that practices and promotes a sustainable consumption of fashion, such as swap-shops, rental or retailing of sustainably manufactured items.

Petit Fox

Petit Fox

Petit Fox is pioneering the circular economy concept in the online kids and maternity clothing sector at a national level. Through buying and selling secondhand clothes for children, Petit Fox aims to make high quality children’s clothes more affordable as well as kinder to the planet. It uses local suppliers and couriers as well as plastic-free packaging to lower the service’s carbon footprint. Petit Fox hopes to destigmatise secondhand clothes.

Merchants on Long

Merchants on Long

South African concept store Merchants on Long celebrates and promotes the best of what the African continent has to offer when it comes to fashion. Opened in 2010, the store has evolved into an international platform for both emerging and established brands from around the continent. Offering a curation of diverse African design, Merchants on Long celebrates luxury and handmade brands that are all sourced and made in Africa.

WISI-Oi Marketplace

Wisi-oi Marketplace

WISI-Oi stands for “Wear It. Sell It. Own It”, and is pronounced wee see-owe-eye. It is a peer-to-peer resale marketplace where you can sell new and gently-worn clothes and shop preloved fashion. They are not only on a mission to extend the lifespan of existing garments, but also to empower people to make money from clothes they no longer wear.

Influencer Award

This award recognises the personality or influencer that has produced content over the last 12 months to promote slow fashion. By using fashion communication, the influencer could also intersect with issues of inclusivity and environmental issues to spark important conversations while supporting circular fashion practices.

BHUMEHL

Bhumehl

Bhungane Mehlomakulu creates stylish and fun upcycled garments using waste materials. Through his garments and line of tote bags, Bhungane’s work also aims to amplify powerful messages relating to anti-racism, anti-sexism, diversity, homophobia, and inclusivity.

Khensani Mohlatlole

Khensani Mohlatlole

Khensani Mohlatlole is a widely respected voice when it comes to critical discussions about the intersection of fashion and sustainability. Khensani writes and creates video content around ethics, sustainability, history, and cultural conservation through fashion. Her striking sense of personal style and the sewing processes she shares while creating her unique adornments are captivating and showcase low-waste practices. She aims to offer practical solutions to contemporary issues.

Xzavier Zulu

Xzavier Zulu

Xzavier Zulu is a respected and prominent voice in fashion and sustainability circles in South Africa. Denim became his material of choice, because of the accessibility he had to it through thrifting in Johannesburg’s inner city. His work with upcycling democratises sustainability and aims to show that there are many accessible ways to create a positive impact.

CMT or Manufacturer Award

This award is presented to a ‘Cut Make Trim’ or manufacturer that is environmentally and socially conscious and demonstrates ethical practices as well as a commitment to reducing environmental impact.

Woodstock Laundry

Woodstock Laundry

Woodstock Laundry is a small tight-knit business made up of a diverse group of talented individuals who don’t have genetic ties but consider one another as family. Their vision is to create a global South African loungewear brand out of ethically sourced fabrics and timeless comfortable garments that families want to wear all of the time. They want to reinvigorate the local clothing manufacturing industry.

Gerber and Co.

Gerber and Co

Started in 2017, Gerber & Co. has created a vertical supply chain, with garments made from hand-sheered, 100% organic Namaqualand Merino Wool. The final offering is trans seasonal wardrobe essentials made from high-quality fibres. People and community are two of the biggest focusses at Gerber and Co. Wool is 100% biodegradable and their offcut wool is used to plant fruits on their farm, improving the quality of the Namaqualand soil.

Sparrow Society

Sparrow Society

Sparrow Society is a women’s empowerment brand working to create as much economic opportunity for women as possible to subvert gender-based violence and other social inequalities that people who identify as women face. They are in the business of creating options – real options – options for a better future, a safer future, and a more empowered future.

Textile Makers or Mills Award

As the production of local fabrics is integral to sustainability, this award seeks to reward as well as encourage the production of preferred textiles including that use natural, regenerative and recycled fibres and non-toxic dyes.

Adele’s Mohair

Adeles Mohair

Comfort and practicality are prioritised in the design of Adele’s Mohair products. The aim to produce designer knitting yarns, accessories and home textiles that can be washed and worn multiple times, is at the centre of their designs. Natural fibres of mohair (from Angora goats) and Merino wool (from sheep) are locally sourced and of the finest quality. They recycle all their yarns and waste and have 4 distinct recycled yarns that they sell. They also offer a repairs service on all items.

ZURI and IMANI

ZURI and IMANI

ZURI and IMANI is a surface pattern and textile design studio renowned for its original and exclusive pattern print designs and colours. The design studio’s portfolio includes our core products – a collection of coats, with complementary products scarves, as well as textiles. To eliminate waste, the studio only prints what is needed for production which also allows them to conserve water and energy.

Without our sponsors and partners this annual project would not be possible. We are grateful to the following brands and organisations for their support.

  • Country Road
  • Levis South Africa
  • Polo South Africa
  • SKYY Vodka
  • Mount Nelson, a Belmond hotel
  • Curbon
  • PETCO
  • Hotel Verde
  • Goethe Institute
  • Electric South
  • British Council
  • Cape Heritage Hotel
  • Eco Standard South Africa
  • Spier
  • Sunday Times Lifestyle

 

  • The winners will be announced on 17 November 2022 at an invite-only event in Cape Town.
  • Cover image: Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels
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Our work is in line with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals 12, which aims to ensure sustainable consumption and production. Read More