May 25, 2013

Pop Art: Escama Studio 2011 Collection

The fabric-lined Luci tote, $250, features over 200 post-consumer recycled pop tops.

The 2011 line from Escama Studio

The Leda clutch, $150, is lined in silver satin.

With its recently-launched 2011 line of handbags and accessories, Escama Studio takes recycled pop-tops to a new level of sophistication with updated shapes such as the oversized Luci tote shown here and details that include chrome hardware and detachable wrist straps.

Founded in 2004 by Andy Krumholz and now based in San Francisco and Brazil with the help of Krumholz’s friend and business partner Socorro Leal, the company has grown from a small operation employing 12 artisans to one that works with over 100 women in two cooperatives that provide fair wages and a fair trade work environment. Each bag is hand-stitched using crochet techniques and recycled tabs by an artisan who signs her name to the piece when finished.

Moving beyond the simple, sustainable bags the company is best known for, the latest offerings range from the classically-shaped handheld Leda clutch to the slightly slouchy Masha messenger bag. Also new to the line are accessories, including a belt, necklace and brooch.

Want to learn more about the curious path of a pop top from Brazil to the arms of fashionable women around the world? Here’s a short video that traces pop tops from Brazil to their arrival at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

More eco-friendly San Francisco fashion….

Escama Studio: Cool Crochet Aluminum Tab Accessories

I just recently learned about the cool recycled products that are being made by Escama Studio. At first glance, these items are bags and other accessories made from aluminum can tabs. With further research you’ll find that it’s crochet work that is used to hold these pieces together to make fashionable accessories for the modern eco-minded individual.

What is Escama Studio?

This is a collaborative design studio that is based in two different locations – here in San Francisco and also in Brazil. Designs originate from both of the different studios. They say that their mission is “creating innovative and stylish products from post-consumer and other sustainable materials, through partnerships with producers in underprivileged communities.” The Escama Studios team is made up of both men and women.

How Underprivileged Communities are Served

The crochet work that goes into these products is done by hand in Brazil by women’s collectives. The women who participate in these collectives are considered artists. Each bag has a tag with information about the artist. You can head to the website of Escama Studio to read about each of the different artists. Consumers who wish to can send a thank you note to their artists via the website. The artists earn a livable wage for their crochet work. Escama Studios also tries to help the artists in other ways, assisting them in opening bank accounts, helping them get computer literacy training and providing them with a percentage of gross sales to benefit the cooperative.

Basics of Escama Studios Products

The studio has a basic aesthetic design that it follows when creating its products. They all use recycled aluminum can tabs. They also use traditional crochet techniques from Brazil that have been adapted to create a modern design utilizing these unique materials.

Examples of Escama Studios Products

Here are some samples of their work from their website but I’d encourage you to check out the entire website for more information.

This post originally appeared on Crochet Concupiscence, a blog about all things crochet!

All the Right Moves: Ethical Fashion Night

escama-bag

indigenous-designs

pact-bikini-underwear

leda_front

More often than not, it’s oh-so-easy to tell the difference between right (recycling) vs. wrong (the all-to-common San Francisco special: a left turn made from the right lane). But pondering the ethics of fashion has been known to leave us with a headache. Is it better to buy organic, even if it is shipped from overseas? How do we know fair trade is really fair? What does eco-friendly really mean?

Instead of ruminating over these style conundrums by your lonesome, you can do so among others while perusing apparel and accessories by environmentally- and socially-responsible companies during Thursday’s Ethical Fashion Night.

“[Ethical fashion] doesn’t have to be expensive, and it doesn’t have to be difficult,” says Domenica Peterson of Global Action Through Fashion, the Bay Area-based organization behind the event.

Along with fashion displays from labels such as PACT, Vagadu and Indigenous, the event seeks to educate attendees about fair trade and socially-responsible fashion production methods. Music, food and drinks take the sting out of the learning process.

The event is open to the first 350 people to RSVP online.

Photos (from top): Escama Studio; Indigenous; PACT; Vagadu.

More San Francisco fashion events