Prada to shed fur | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

(FILES) In this file photo taken on January 13, 2019 a model presents a creation for fashion house Prada during the Men's Fall/Winter 2019/20 fashion shows in Milan. - The first Italian luxury group, Prada, announced on May 22, 2019 that it would no longer use animal fur in the Prada collections. (Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP)

By: Céline Cornu via Agence France-Presse

 

Luxury fashion house Prada said Wednesday it will remove animal fur from its collections, joining a lengthening list of designers to make that choice.

 

Prada’s decision, to take effect with its women’s Spring-Summer 2020 collection, was welcomed by several animal protection associations, a statement said.

 

The Italian fashion house said its decision stemmed from “a positive dialogue” with the Fur Free Alliance (FFA) of more than 50 associations in about 40 countries, notably the Italian group LAV and The Humane Society of the United States.

 

Other major names to have renounced the use of animal fur include Armani, Burberry, DKNY, Donna Karan, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Gucci, Michael Kors and Versace.

 

BEVERLY HILLS, CA – NOVEMBER 25: Animal rights groups and PETA stop in front of a Prada store on Rodeo Drive during an anti-fur demonstration urging Black Friday shoppers to stop buying fur-related products on November 25, 2011 in Beverly Hills, California. Neighboring city West Hollywood unanimously approved an ordinance to ban the sale of fur clothing, the first such ban in the United States. Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images/AFP

 

Prada “is committed to innovation and social responsibility, and our fur-free policy…is an extension of that engagement,” artistic director Miuccia Prada was quoted as saying in the statement.

 

“Focusing on innovative materials will allow the company to explore new boundaries of creative design while meeting the demand for ethical products,” she added.

 

The Prada statement included reactions from several animal protection groups, with FFA program manager Brigit Oele saying: “This global movement is gaining momentum fast, and it’s very unlikely that fur will ever return as an acceptable trend. This is a great day for animals!”

 

The fur industry has scorned the trend towards fur-free fashion, and Mark Oaten of The International Fur Federation said in a statement: “I am surprised that a brand who care about sustainability are banning a natural product like fur.

 

“Now Prada customers will only have plastic fur as an option, which is bad for the planet. I urge Prada to think again and trust its own consumers to decide if they want to buy real or fake fur.”

 

Fur represents a fraction of most fashion groups’ sales in fact, and while figures for Prada were not available, at rival Gucci which stopped using fur in 2018, it accounted for just 0.16 percent of the total.

 

A model displays a creation as part of Prada Spring-Summer 2013 collection on September 20, 2012 during the Women’s fashion week in Milan. AFP PHOTO / FILIPPO MONTEFORTE (Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE / AFP)

 

Appealing to younger clients

Prada and the others might attract younger customers with the decision meanwhile, as they are more likely to take ethical considerations into account according to sector specialists.

 

Fashion analyst Nina Marston at Euromonitor International noted that “industry players face increasing pressure to take a stance on ethical issues such as animal cruelty.”

 

Her group found that 28 percent of Millennial consumers worldwide said that “buying eco-friendly or ethically conscious products make them feel good.”

 

Prada will thus “further its appeal to the growing number of Millennial and Gen Z consumers, who are vital to the future of the luxury industry,” Marston concluded.

 

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