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Wabash
10-07-2007, 01:41 PM
Rachel Wells
October 7, 2007


LEADING international fashion designers and industry experts say unpredictable and typically warmer weather worldwide is wreaking havoc on the industry.

It is forcing fashion houses to ditch traditional seasonal collections for transeasonal garments that may lead to a drastic overhaul of fashion show schedules and retail delivery dates.

"The whole fashion system will have to change," Beppe Modenese, founder of Milan Fashion Week, told The New York Times last week.

"The fashion system must adapt to the reality that there is no strong difference between summer and winter any more… You can't have everyone showing four times a year to present the same thing. People are not prepared to invest in these clothes that, from one season to the other, use the same fabrics at the same weight."

Mr Modenese's comments came as New York fashion retailers blamed a prolonged "Indian summer" for poor autumn sales. Who needs a woollen pea coat when it is 30 degrees-plus?

So worried are some fashion houses about the impact climate change is having on the way we dress and shop, they are calling in the climate experts.

The Wall Street Journal reported last month that American retail giant Liz Claiborne Inc had enlisted a New York climatologist to speak to 30 of its executives on topics ranging from the types of fabrics they should be using to the timing of retail deliveries and seasonal markdowns.

Other US fashion retailer giants, including Target and Kohl's, have also started using climate experts to plan their collections and schedule end-of-season sales. And from January, Target will sell swimwear year-round.

Closer to home, fashion designers say they are increasingly designing transeasonal collections using lighter- weight fabrics for a more temperate climate and readjusting their in-store delivery dates in line with the unpredictable seasons.

"There's really no such thing as defined autumn/winter and spring/summer collections any more," says Margaret Porritt, of Melbourne fashion label Feathers.

"A lot of my garments are more transeasonal and rather than dropping them into store twice a year like I used to, I tend to move things in and out of store every couple of weeks, depending on the weather."

Things were different when she started the business 35 years ago.

"Back then winter went into store in mid-January and summer in mid-June and that was it. There was nothing in between. I also used a lot more heavier wools and made great big heavy coats. I can't do that anymore; it just doesn't get cold enough, even here in Melbourne. They just don't sell."

Mrs Porritt says she now uses cashmere and cotton blends instead of heavy wools. "It's all about lightweight garments that you can wear all year round and layering now… and it's something I think we are only going to see more of."

If Mrs Porritt is correct, woollen pea coats could join polar bears as the latest casualties of global warming. And just who knows what will become of our beloved ugg boots?
http://www.theage.com.au/news/climate-watch/fashion-warms-to-reality-of-climate-change/2007/10/06/1191091426725.html

Gee...if you ever lived in the SF Bay Area, that's been par for the course as long as I can remember......

More liberal GW BS ....

Trueblue
10-07-2007, 01:45 PM
But we don't all live there, Wabash.

Wabash
10-07-2007, 02:40 PM
But we don't all live there, Wabash.

I was jes sayin! I live in the Pacific Northwest and have for nearly 30 years....all the trees have turned, getting colder, rain forecast for the entire week...it's "normal" here....how about where you live?

chinacat
10-07-2007, 04:23 PM
It's in the 80's here. This is seriously unseasonably warm. Its normally snowing by mid-late November,somtimes as early as Halloween, so summertime weather in October is really unusual.

I am happy to hear Target is offering swimsuits year round, though. I swim indoors at the Y & have lost 20 lbs recently. I need a new swimsuit, so that little tidbit brightened my day.

Wabash
10-07-2007, 06:05 PM
It's in the 80's here. This is seriously unseasonably warm. Its normally snowing by mid-late November,somtimes as early as Halloween, so summertime weather in October is really unusual.

I am happy to hear Target is offering swimsuits year round, though. I swim indoors at the Y & have lost 20 lbs recently. I need a new swimsuit, so that little tidbit brightened my day.

GW...The Plus Factor!:akbar

Trueblue
10-07-2007, 08:51 PM
I was jes sayin! I live in the Pacific Northwest and have for nearly 30 years....all the trees have turned, getting colder, rain forecast for the entire week...it's "normal" here....how about where you live?

Decidedly abnormal. An extreme drought, an extremely hot summer, with temperatures as high as 104, and it's still 80 degrees at 8:00 PM in October.

Wabash
10-07-2007, 08:59 PM
Decidedly abnormal. An extreme drought, an extremely hot summer, with temperatures as high as 104, and it's still 80 degrees at 8:00 PM in October.

Our summer was cooler then normal.....only reached 100 a couple of days...but, it's never the same, it varies from year to year..

Saguaro
10-07-2007, 09:04 PM
I would say the water restrictions we had this summer were NOT normal !

Ringo
10-08-2007, 06:59 AM
Our summer was cooler then normal.....only reached 100 a couple of days...but, it's never the same, it varies from year to year..
OH MY GOD!!!!!!!! :panic:panic And this has only been going on for what 4000 years??????????????

I am glad we have EVOLVED so much over the years and tonight we are going to go the mountain to watch a lamb being sacrificed to an Al Gore statue!! I guess its a Al Gore statue its shaped like a small Penis resting on a Huge ass shaped rock!:zen:voodoo

I have opted this winter to go with the Loin Cloth look, as I couldn't find a leaf big enough to cov..........:rooster


Does this mean then Alaska will compete with Hawaii for Winter tourists, will baby seals be safe from Hollywood debutantes?? I often wondered why the Hollywood airheads over the years wanted Fur coats when its 70+ degrees in LA in the Winter?

Wabash
10-08-2007, 11:12 AM
This post was done by me, some time back, and may not have reached everyone...so I'm going to rerun it.

There used to be a meteorologist for KGO Radio (ABC) in SF. Since I don't live down there anymore, I don't know if he's dead ......or alive and retired.
His name was Harry Geis and I was listening to him in 1977. Ca. was in the middle of a long drought and people were conserving water everyway they could.
One morning, Harry came on the air and told us that what we had been experiencing in this country for the last 50 years or so was "abnormal' weather. "Starting on or about 1976, we will be experiencing our more "normal" weather which involves extremes of weather. Hot to very hot, one year and cold or wet the next. Hurricanes and tornadoes some years and non existant in others."

Hmmmmmmmm, so prior to the big hype about Global Warming, we were being told about "extremes" in weather.
Therefore, I submit that any "abnormal" weather to some of you, is actually "normal" and has little or nothing to do with Man made activities....at all!:wink

Oceanbreeze
10-08-2007, 11:13 AM
Rest the assured the fashion industry has done than part to stop global warming when they all stopped eating. :devil

Wabash
10-08-2007, 11:22 AM
Rest the assured the fashion industry has done than part to stop global warming when they all stopped eating. :devil

Yep, fewer farts from the social egomaniacs!