Creativity, collaboration and a commitment to sustainability were on full display at Leighton Park’s annual House Sustainable Fashion Competition, where students transformed donated second-hand clothing into imaginative runway pieces inspired by the natural world.
Creativity, collaboration and a commitment to sustainability were on full display at Leighton Park’s annual House Sustainable Fashion Competition, where students transformed donated second-hand clothing into imaginative runway pieces inspired by the natural world.
The competition challenged each House to design and present three outfits, one for each age group: Fryer (Year 7 and 8), Juniors (Year 9 and 10), and Senior (Year 11 and Sixth Form). As in previous years, the themes were deliberately open to interpretation to encourage creative thinking while prompting pupils to explore new ideas and concepts.
This year’s themes followed as such: Fryer designed garments inspired by Fantastical Fungi. Year 9 and 10 students explored Biomimicry, looking to nature’s forms and processes for design inspiration. Meanwhile, the senior category worked with the concept of the Holobiont – the idea that organisms exist in complex relationships with other living systems.
A key rule of the competition ensured that sustainability remained at the heart of the event. Every House was required to create their outfits using only second-hand clothing and materials sourced from the Textiles Department, all generously donated by members of the Leighton Park community. Before construction began, each selection of materials was weighed and recorded, forming part of the competition’s scoring process.
Pupils carefully measured not only the initial materials but also the weight of the finished garment. This allowed judges to calculate how much of the original material had been used and how much had gone to waste, an important reminder that sustainable fashion means designing thoughtfully and minimising unnecessary waste.
The judging panel evaluated each outfit across five categories. These included how creatively the theme was interpreted in the brief, the overall sustainability of the design through effective use of second-hand materials, the durability and craftsmanship of the garment, the aesthetic appeal of the finished look, and the performance of the model on the catwalk.
The competition reflects Leighton Park’s long-standing commitment to its Quaker values, particularly the principle of sustainability. By encouraging students to reuse materials, reduce waste and consider the environmental impact of fashion, the event highlighted how creativity and responsibility can go hand in hand and showed how small changes can make a meaningful difference.
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