Fashion Industry Studies graduate student, Camila Cordeiro Valle, offers a glimpse into the future of fashion with her current exhibit in the Design Innovation Hub’s MuseLab.
Valle’s “Exploring 3D Print Waste in Fashion” is a graduate student thesis that seeks to challenge industry standards. Elegant garments dot the room as part of a timeline that takes the viewer on a journey of initial curiosity to full-scale application of 3D print waste in textile design and co-creation.
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“I went to the DI Hub and was like, ‘Hey, what do you have that’s trash?’” Valle said. “I started collecting a bunch of materials and I just started playing with it.”
After initial experimentation, Valle hosted a series of workshops at DI where she taught others how to use the would-be-wasted filament on items like tote bags and t-shirts. These workshops, she said, were invaluable to her creative process.
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“A lot of times in the industry, we just think that we need to do stuff by ourselves and that's not how we evolve as a society,” Valle said.
The fashion industry is one of the most polluting industries and the transition to sustainable materials will prove to be a challenge for the designers of today. By getting a head start with experimentation of biodegradable materials such as PLA filament, Valle said she hopes to broaden the approach to sustainability.
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“It’s not an option to be sustainable anymore,” she said. “It’s a tool as a designer.”
Visit the "Exploring 3D Print Waste in Fashion" exhibit in the DI HUB though Friday, March 10 located in the MuseLab (2nd floor, Room 231).