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In her article, “The Great Uncut,” Sarah E. Braddock Clarke highlights wasteful and wasteless pattern cutting and signposts non-Western clothing construction as a more conscious approach. Garments that maintain the uncut cloth's integrity are inherently less wasteful and more flexible than conventional cut-and-sew construction, as we see in Rta Kapur Chishti’s article on the sari, beautifully illustrated by Paula Sanz Caballero. In this issue, we consider uncut cloth in its multiple forms, including the significance of the turban in Sikh culture and question its adoption as a fashion accessory. The hijab, a site of political protest in contemporary Iran, is scrutinised. As is The Kashmir shawl an example of a global commodity linked to colonialism and consumerism. The colonial trade in cloth is beautifully chronicled in Frances Homsn Jus’s article and Susan Meller’s new book – a must-read for anyone interested in graphic design and textile history.
Taking an example from the blue-sky thinking seen in the ancient sari, the trade blankets worn by the Osage people of the Midwest, portrayed in Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, and Anuj Sharma of Button Masala, this January, I urge you to resolve to consider alternatives to the ubiquitous cut-and-sew when making your clothing choices."
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