Sustainable Fashion in a Time of Climate Change, with Tiffanie Darke

Event Category
Lecture/Panel
Event Type
Open to the Public
Event Location
Members' Room
Event Price
free of charge

Tiffanie Darke, author of the new What to Wear and Why: Your Guilt-Free Guide to Sustainable Fashion, talks fashion and sustainability with [TK other panelists in alphabetical order] and historian and curator Elizabeth Way.

Reportedly, the clothing industry produces 80 billion garments a year, employs 15 percent of the world's population, exploits labor, and seriously pollutes the environment. However, we as consumers have the power to make a difference with the clothing choices we make. In What to Wear and Why, top fashion writer turned sustainability activist Tiffanie Darke sheds light on the unsustainable practices and immense environmental impact of the fashion industry and presents a compelling argument for why transformative change is urgently needed.

Tiffanie Darke has spent her career in fashion as an editor, journalist, author, creative director, brand strategist, campaigner, and, most recently, shopkeeper. She has worked for the Daily Telegraph, the Express, and Sunday Times Style and was editor in chief of Harrods. She is an alumna of the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership and a member of the Oxford University Climate Action Network. She works with more than seventy fashion brands on sustainability and is based in London.

Elizabeth Way is an Associate Curator at the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT), as well as a fashion historian whose personal research focuses on the intersection of Black American culture and fashion. Her most recent project is the FIT exhibit Fresh, Fly, Fabulous: 50 Years of Hip Hop Style. She is the author of Black Designers in American Fashion and co-author of Ann Lowe: American Couturier.