Bolivian turns waste into high fashion
Each dress is a unique, eco-friendly work that takes about a week to make by hand and comes with a $250 price tag. Macedo does most of the work herself, using giant needles for the crochet work.”Not only do we recycle paper, but we also use vegetable dyes, cocoa bean shells, and we even make our own natural adhesives,” Macedo told AFP, adding that her goal was to be as “ecologically pure as possible.”Since starting out in 2005, the fashionista has been invited to present her work at several international venues, including the 2006 Amsterdam Fashion Week, the 2008 Paris Chocolate Festival — which featured French singer Anne-Laure Girbal wearing one of her eco-dresses — fashion shows in Tokyo in 2007 and 2010, and in Madrid in 2010.
At her seventh fashion show, entitled “Recycle Yourself” this month in La Paz, a model wore a white Macedo dress of crocheted paper with two large ruffles, one around the neck and the other around the hem, made of pink polyethylene bags.”Paper is good material to work with,” said the designer, boasting that she learned how to “give it movement” like fabric. “It’s the material I feel most comfortable with.”Describing herself as an amateur designer, Macedo has in the past bought her own materials and recycled household waste, including CDs discarded by her photographer husband.
Her latest show was the first for which she had the backing of corporate sponsors, and she jumped on the opportunity to use material from their products for her creations.One model hit the runway wearing a blouse adorned with soda bottle caps, and a plastic red skirt with the ubiquitous white-on-red Coca-Cola logo. Another had a blouse made out of paper flyers from a local shopping mall, another sponsor.A model wearing a dress covered with old CDs attracted a round of enthusiastic applause. Another wore a miniskirt made of nylon bags.Fellow designer Claudia Perez describes Macedo’s work as “more art than fashion”, as it was created to be displayed rather than worn.