Fresh isn’t Fast; A New Given Life to Clothes
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There is a quiet revolution unfolding, not on catwalks, but in corners where discarded textiles gather dust. In these overlooked spaces, a new kind of fashion is forming. It doesn’t chase the next trend, it reimagines the last. This is the spirit behind Fresh Isn’t Fast, a collaboration between Alterist and BDO, launched in Camden. More than an event, it’s a manifesto: a celebration of pieces that have already lived, and the designers giving them a second life. Find out more in Fresh isn’t Fast; A New Given Life to Clothes.
Pictures by Hermance & Audrey
Alterist is a new circular fashion platform that dares to alter the world’s perception of textile waste. With a mission to reduce fashion’s environmental toll through design, creativity, and collaboration, Alterist was born out of frustration with the fashion industry’s slow and often superficial approach to sustainability. Founded by individuals from across the fashion world, Alterist emerged from the shared realisation that authentic, lasting change was not being prioritised. They saw firsthand the devastating impact of fast fashion and the lack of meaningful alternatives. So, they created one.
With roots in over 18 countries and comprising 200 designers, Alterist is a digital-physical hybrid, a space that exists online and pulses through pop-ups and installations. Its mission is elemental: to reduce textile waste. Yet its methods are anything but ordinary.
Born out of disillusionment with greenwashed promises and faux sustainability, the founders, all fashion insiders, sought something deeper: authenticity. They saw fashion’s future not in fast fixes, but in slow, textured transformations. And they invited others to see it too.
Curated within the Camden launch was a lineup that read like a roll call of fashion’s future historians, those who do not discard the past, but rework it: Clara Chu, with her surrealist take on kitchen musts and clock leather. Iterum Studio, turning sofa scraps into utility dreamwear. Or Alena, whose denim confessions stitch memory into seams.

Each designer reframes what we call waste. They do not erase its origin; they honour it. A piece may begin in a dumpster, a domestic drawer, or an old soldier’s uniform, but through artistry and attention, it is reborn. Their work doesn’t mimic trend cycles. It resists them.
“Each item has its own story. You can feel it in the weight of the fabric, in what it’s been through.”
Alena Kudera, Designer
Fashion, as Alterist sees it, is not simply a product. It is process, politics, and poetry. It is the revaluation of materials once considered disposable, leather clocks, Tupperware lids, surplus uniforms, and the reclamation of craft in a landscape obsessed with speed. A jacket might take 12 hours. A bag, two weeks. Because care is stitched into every hem. Because nothing is rushed. After all, fresh isn’t fast.

And the impact is palpable. Today, 30% of UK textile waste stays within the country, while 17% is exported.
Alterist wants to flip that narrative by creating systems of local reuse and global collaboration. The platform is part of a broader vision to decentralise fashion power structures and bring waste back into the value chain, as material, as story, and as a catalyst for change.
At its core, Alterist stands on five values, not buzzwords, but beacons: Creativity, to imagine differently. Care, for people and planet alike. Circularity, the reweaving of waste into wonder. Collaboration, because change is never solitary. Community, the lifeblood of the movement.

This is not just about altering pieces. It’s about altering perception. It’s about seeing beauty where others see a burden. About asking harder questions. Where does our fashion go when we no longer want it. And more importantly, what could it become.
The Fresh Isn’t Fast event isn’t just about showcasing garments, it’s about showing up for the planet, for creativity, and each other. It’s about refusing fast fashion’s speed and disposability, and choosing something slower, sustainable, and far more revolutionary.
Alterist is still growing, and you’re invited to be part of it. Whether you’re a designer, buyer, brand, or creative spirit, this is your chance to join a platform built on integrity and impact on Alterist.com.
If you enjoyed reading Fresh isn’t Fast; A New Given Life to Clothes. Why not try Enduring Love: A Revival of Denim Rituals.
.Cent Magazine, London. Be Inspired: Get Involved
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