Earlier this year, Maria McMans began experimenting with the Irish Linn Table Cloth after her Auntie Bibi was built. At that time, he said, “I am not a super -flower crotch person, but I was like ‘okay, this is meaningful’, and then, it is a surprise to see how this discovery experienced the creative boundaries for the designer.
“I think he allowed me to think different about sustainability, like not, ‘oh my God, it has to be recycled,’ but that the story can happen even more.” He explained during a meeting at his Triba home, which often doubles like a showroom. Artisanal French Dental de Calic Kidri Les, which is “certified and secure by the French government” played a role in his resort collection, trimming his favorite NAIA renewal fabric fabric, and in fragile flower samples. But its influence can be felt somewhere else, as is made with three different flower samples in a light surrounding cardin, or even with “cut” on the waist bands and pockets in a pair of organic cotton genes. They were still beautifully finished, and their trademark grocery was standing in the ribbon, but the layers remained incomplete, quarreled.
But that does not mean that McMans have stopped their tireless search for new materials and new sustainable technologies. In this season, he introduced a recycled polyester “sharing”, which is used very cool and glamorous – ongoing statement coat. And a biodegradable nylon that makes sense like a scuba, which turned the extra long legs thanks to the addition of a belt loop (!). He explained, “Most nylon foam comes from the fuel industry – especially coal – and if the biodgrade does not have much time, it can be taken anywhere for a hundred and thousand years.” “It is made of a fruit polymer, so it reacts more like a paper or cotton, and will boldly bodify an industrial landfill in five years. The mill was started by this woman named Regina and she is amazing, everything is sustainable.”