Student uses abandoned tents in fashion collection

News imageUniversity of Brighton The image shows a girl with long brown hair smiling; she is also wearing a red top and white cardigan. Behind her desks and chairs can be seen.University of Brighton
Till Lawless collected discarded tents and repurposed them for her fashion collection

A University of Brighton student is turning abandoned festival tents into a sustainable fashion collection.

Every summer, an estimated 250,000 tents are abandoned at UK music festivals, generating about 900 tonnes of waste that ends up in landfill, the university says.

Tilly Lawless, a product design student, recovered tent fabric left behind at major festivals and concerts, and reworked them into clothing as part of her graduate project, Bâche.

Lawless said: "Bâche is about changing how we value materials that are usually discarded and proving that sustainability and desirability can coexist. Rather than treating festival waste as an endpoint, I want to reposition it as a valuable resource."

News imageUniversity of Brighton The image shows a dress that has been made out of reused tent material. A hooped skirt can be seen externally, on top of a sheer black base.University of Brighton
Lawless' collection will be on display at the university until Sunday

Lawless also says design has a role to play in "tackling environmental challenges and helping people see waste differently".

James Tooze, course leader for product design at the university, said Lawless' project challenged assumptions about waste, value and consumption.

"It is exactly the kind of forward-thinking work that the future of the design industry needs," he said.

Lawless' work will be displayed along with other students' at the university's Architecture and Design Graduate Show until Sunday.

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