Fashionscapes

“Andrew Morgan has the ability to make films that seem to be about fashion but are in fact deft examinations of global development, inequality and systemic failure, i.e. the stuff we leave to leaders to ignore on our behalf. In his hands these chewy issues have cultural resonance and become accessible. The upshot is a whole new bank of activists empowered to look for solutions. To me, this is active film making.”

LUCY SIEGLE, JOURNALIST AND ACTIVIST, CO-EXECUTIVE PRODUCER, THE TRUE COST

Fashionscapes is a collection of films by Andrew Morgan.

One of several films from the Fashionscapes website is about the circular economy and whether the fashion industry can ever really achieve that.

The latest episode of Fashionscapes uncovers how fashion’s big chance to embrace circularity and escape a destructive take-make-and-waste model is being undermined by greenwash and oil, and why circular fashion is worth fighting for.

Andrew Morgan (award winning director of The True Cost) and Eco-Age founder and creative director Livia Firth, release Fashionscapes: A Circular Economy, the fifth in the investigative short documentary series available on Eco-Age TV and Fashionscapes.co.uk.

After traveling the world exploring supply chains and the biggest issues facing the fashion industry today, Livia Firth takes a deep dive into the circular economy to find out more about the industry’s latest buzz word and attempt to become fully circular.

Fashionscapes: A Circular Economy reveals a faux circular economy that dominates the industry and how instead of significant change and transition to a more socially and environmentally just industry, circularity is in the process of being coopted.

Fashion’s circular economy which is valued at potentially five trillion dollars [source: Vogue Business] promises to at once decarbonize and solve fashion’s overproduction problem. Not surprisingly ideas and messaging from the circular economy have been taken up enthusiastically by brands and retailers. But as Livia and Andrew find out in the course of their interviews with experts on ecosystems, production and circular economy, the circular economy as it applies to fashion is in big danger.

The film warns how circular economy is in danger of being hijacked and fashion could lose the opportunity to change with millions of global citizens who love the industry unaware that they are trapped in a linear economy and that they are complicit in a system of “over production for over consumption” driven by the models of production like fast fashion.

With a staggering 100 billion garments produced per year, the stakes could not be higher.

Fashionscapes: A Circular Economy sees Morgan and Firth gather the brightest visionaries for a conversation on how to bypass the lies and transform the way we make clothes and begin to build a truly circular economy.

One of the biggest misconceptions around a truly circular economy is that plastic is infinitely recyclable and ever-growing power struggle between synthetic and natural fibres. The film explores how consumers are often misinformed on the environmental impacts of man-made fibers, through interviews with experts such as Veronica Bates Kassatly and Australian woolgrower, Charles Massy who reveal how claims are often not even backed up by data or evidence.

As in all the Fashionscapes episodes, central to Morgan and Firth’s investigation is exposing how there is little to no mention of the people behind the industry when environmental impacts or sustainability is spoken about and the catastrophic impact on them – like in the closing moving chapter of Kantamanto in Ghana.


“We need to deepen our storytelling of one specific kind of story Namely a story than can allow us to imagine a future filled with possibility. The kind of story that can elbow its way in front of dystopian visions. When I say we need to become better story tellers, I mean that we need to become wiling and skillful tellers of visionary stories of how things turn out ok and work back from there”— Livia Firth

“This film was incredibly special to create, as over the years as we’ve travelled, documented and campaigned about the issues in the global fashion industry, we’ve heard the same refrain from big businesses about reaching a magical place where we have a circular economy and it being the solution, says Andrew Morgan.

“This idea has been used to allow big corporations to put a recycling bin in a store for example whilst continuing to use supply chains that wreak havoc on the natural world and the phrase has been used as a marketing tool and to encourage greenwashing. It is a privilege to have spoken to people who are being affected firsthand and those who are pioneering incredible solutions to tackle this”.

Comments