Article, 2024

Does resale extend the use phase of garments? Exploring longevity on the fashion resale market

International Journal of Sustainable Fashion & Textiles, ISSN 2754-0278, 2754-026X, Volume 3, 1, Pages 29-48, 10.1386/sft_00038_1

Contributors

Nielsen, Mette Dalgaard (Corresponding author) [1] Skjold, Else 0000-0002-0613-0995 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Royal Danish Academy – Architecture, Design, Conservation
  2. [NORA names: Royal Danish Academy - Architecture, Design, Conservation; Artistic Higher Education Institutions; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Despite a growing engagement in design strategies for longevity and circular business models (CBMs) such as resale, volumes of underutilized garments keep increasing at an accelerated pace. Within research, there is a lack of empirical validation of what actually takes place as garments enter the secondary market, as well as how the product journey of garments in situated contexts, such as local resale environments, is shaped. Therefore, this article presents an empirical follow-the-garment exploration comprised by (n)ethnographic data from two pilot studies and an ongoing Ph.D. project. With a point of departure in selected resale environments and focusing on the two Danish fashion brands GANNI and Baum und Pferdgarten (BuF), the article inquires selected examples of resale mechanisms that partake in the ongoing configuration of garment trajectories and emerge as vital co-creative powers in bringing longevity into being – or failing to do so. Combining empirical data with new materialist approaches that situate agency as a hybrid and distributed concept, the article delineates garment lifespans as inherently entangled in and dependent upon multiple agential matters. Arguing that product journeys cannot be predetermined, the article proposes a critique of design- and garment-centric longevity strategies that exaggerate the abilities of designers to control garment lifespans beyond the design stage. While having a narrow time–space horizon and a limited focus on two specific case brands, the article acts as a reflective comment that could have broader implications for perceptions of CBMs and design strategies for longevity in a fashion and textiles context.

Keywords

Argues, Baum, Ph.D., Ph.D. project, ability, ability of design, accelerated pace, agencies, agential matter, approach, article, brand, buffing, business models, case brand, cases, circular business models, comments, concept, configuration, context, critique, data, design, design stage, design strategy, distribution concept, empirical data, empirical validation, engagement, environment, exploration, fashion, garment, horizon, hybrid, journey, lack, lack of empirical validation, lifespan, longevity, longevity strategies, market, materialist approach, matter, mechanism, model, pacing, perception, phase, pilot, pilot study, power, production, production journey, project, resale, resale market, research, secondary market, situated agency, stage, strategies, study, textile context, textiles, trajectory, validity, volume

Funders

  • Innovation Fund Denmark

Data Provider: Digital Science