London (CNN) -- The red carpet is fashion's grandest
stage where stars line up to see and be seen. But who you are wearing
is as important as who you are.
If Livia Firth, wife of
Academy Award-winning actor Colin, gets her way, the kind of fabric you
are wearing will be just as essential.
Now in its third year, the Green Carpet Challenge
was established to persuade top designers to dress the world's most
famous faces in clothing that is ecologically friendly and socially
responsible.
"First of all, you want
to wear something that is made with non-toxic materials and dyes and
also that it's made by people who are happy fundamentally," Firth says.
She has worn yarn made
from recycled plastic bottles to the Golden Globes, material from
repurposed thrift store finds for the Oscars and discarded fabric to
meet Queen Elizabeth II.
Now she is persuading
some of the biggest names in film and fashion to follow suit including
designer and film director Tom Ford, Hollywood legend Meryl Streep and
rising star Michael Fassbender.
"A designer will create a
gown for an actress anyway. So what we do is to work with the designers
to switch the fabric to eco-alternatives," Firth said.
One of Firth's own "green
carpet" triumphs was an emerald green gown made of upcycled fabric
created from scratch by British designer Henrietta Ludgate who produces her designs out of a small workshop/showroom in London.
"We source from mills in
Scotland and England. We upcycle fabrics and we produce everything
locally. It's zero clothes miles," Ludgate said.
Sourcing fabrics this
way allows Ludgate to oversee every step of the production process which
she says leads to a superior product but not perhaps superior profits.
"People buy for design rather than sustainability. When they find out about it, I'm hoping that they will buy more!"
But fashion journalist Lucy Siegle would like to see people buying less.
She started the Green
Carpet Challenge with Firth in 2009 in the hope it would encourage
people to try new things with uncommon materials and clothes already in
existence.
"Innovation, as it's
told by mainstream fashion, is about wearing the latest look from the
latest celebrity or whatever," Siegle said.
"Ironically, we are
working with celebrities, but we're showing that it's not just about
imitating a trend. It's actually about techniques, about tailoring and
heritage fabrics. It's about the narrative of a piece," she added.
It's a trend that Livia Firth hopes will continue.
"Next year we hope to have a dedicated lane at the Oscars for the Green Carpet Challenge people," Firth said.
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