Fashion

Fashion SMEs awarded 1.2 million pounds to support sustainable growth

Ten of the UK fashion industry’s innovative and sustainable small to
medium enterprises, including Ananas Anam, the company that has created an
innovative natural textile made from pineapple leaf fibre, and accessories
brand Elvis and Kresse, have been awarded more than 1.2 million pounds by
the Business of Fashion, Textiles and Technology (BFTT).

The funding initiative is led by University of the Arts London,
including London College of Fashion, Central Saint Martins, and Chelsea
College of Arts, alongside Queen Mary University and Loughborough
University as part of the AHRC Creative Industries Clusters Programme
(CICP), funded by the UK Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund and offers a
comprehensive support package that enables SMEs to drive forward
sustainability-driven innovation and represents a new model of investment
for the sector.

The aim of the Creative Industries Clusters Programme is to boost
productivity via creative research and development, backing businesses to
“create good jobs and increase the earning power of people throughout the
UK with investment in skills, industries and infrastructure” and the latest
round of funding worth 1.2 million pounds was specifically to help fashion
SMEs support sustainable growth and innovation.

Funding will be given to 10 businesses: Ananas Anam, Anna Glover,
AwayToMars, Blackhorse Lane Ateliers, Chip[S] Board, Doppelhaus, Elvis and
Kresse, Segura, Tengri, and Tibor.

The 10 were selected from more than 80 applications, with 13 making the
shortlist and provided with one-to-one mentoring, business workshops and
training to help develop their initial concepts into fully-fledged business
plans. The shortlisted businesses then had to pitch their idea to a panel
of industry and academic experts, who then selected the final with ten
businesses.

In addition to funding, each fashion SME will receive a comprehensive
package of support, including mentoring from leading academics across the
partnership, hands-on specialist creative and technical support as well as
ongoing project management and strategic business support from across the
Business of Fashion, Textiles and Technology team.

Fashion brands including AwayToMars, Elvis and Kresse and Ananas Anam
awarded crucial funding to explore sustainable innovations

The awarded projects cover a range of sub-sectors and research and
development areas: bio-material development to non-woven textiles; a global
design crowdsourcing platform; sustainable surface finishing processes;
on-shoring of state-of-the-art sustainable manufacturing; novel digital
solutions to increase transparency and improve sustainability in the
sector.

The projects, which all focus on specific research and development
challenges, with each running for 12 – 18 months depending on the
complexity of the proposition.

The funding will allow Ananas Anam, the company behind Piñatex, an
innovative natural textile made from pineapple leaf fibre to work with the
Centre for Circular Design at Chelsea College of Arts (UAL) to expand
potential applications for the bio-based non-woven material by developing
new sustainable embellishments and other value-added processes to improve
its functionality and aesthetic qualities, while AwayToMars, the innovative
collaboration platform that utilises crowdsource creativity and helps
designers introduce their work to the world and lets them hear what the
world has to say will work with the Digital Anthropology Lab at London
College of Fashion (UAL) to explore new technologies to enhance the
experience and brand value delivered by AwayToMar’s co-creation platform to
its growing global community of over 15,000 members.

Other projects will include Blackhorse Lane Ateliers, the innovative
community-based manufacturer producing high end crafted denim garments in
East London, working on setting up a state-of-the-art research and
development facility to develop sustainable laundering and finishing
techniques and enable the emergence of a new and unique ‘London’
denim-washing aesthetic inspired by the principles of the circular economy.

While Elvis and Kresse, which utilises materials that would otherwise go
to landfill into luxury accessories, will work with the Materials
Engineering Department at Queen Mary University of London to develop a
circular business model for metal hardware in the luxury sector by hacking
the industrial aluminium recycling process through the design and
open-sourcing of a small scale and environmentally sound alternative, and
London-based design house Tengri, which specialising in rare cloths,
clothing and home interiors will work with the London College of Fashion to
explore and codify existing UK heritage manufacturing techniques and new
technologies that could be applicable to the creation of non-wovens out of
yarn bio-waste.

Professor Jane Harris, Business of Fashion, Textiles and Technology
programme director said in a statement: “Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
are critical to the economy and critical to the creative sector in
particular, making up over 95 percent of creative businesses in the UK. The
Business of Fashion, Textiles and Technology SME Research and Development
Programme seeks to highlight the value and impact SMEs can have in our
sector and on the economy, when provided with the right type of financial
support and research expertise.

“This initiative is intended to creatively and technically address the
challenge of maintaining growth in the crucial early years of business,
whilst also providing support for much-needed innovation, and sustainable
growth, especially in these challenging and rapidly changing times. The
diversity of projects selected are indicative of the breadth of innovation
potential in the fashion sector. The dynamism they naturally bring as SMEs,
and the bespoke academic expertise provided by BFTT is a perfect mix to
deliver industry-changing innovation which cements a vision for a more
sustainable fashion system which supports growth here in the UK and around
the world.”

The Business of Fashion, Textiles and Technology is a five-year
industry-led project, which focusses on delivering innovation within the
entire fashion and textile supply chain.

Main image: courtesy of Elvis and Kresse

All other images: courtesy of Ananas Anam UK Ltd – photograph by AdShot;
Blackhorse Lane Ateliers

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