La Marisol tejiendo la arte de VOZ, una original #VOZwoman. Foto por @pilarcastroe
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Kiana Khansmith

⁂
ojovivo

Discoholic 🪩
Cosimo Galluzzi
Keni

JVL
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

tannertan36
almost home
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
Game of Thrones Daily

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Three Goblin Art

roma★
we're not kids anymore.

if i look back, i am lost
Jules of Nature
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@madebyvoz
La Marisol tejiendo la arte de VOZ, una original #VOZwoman. Foto por @pilarcastroe
Beautiful Shiela Hicks dress in motion by the talented @ascotandhercamera
Delivering gorgeous fall wovens worldwide! #aw15 #handmade #ethicalfashion #luxury made in #chile #mapuche art photo by @bybridges (at Manufacture New York)
⚓️🌊 enjoying the long weekend at the beach with #VOZwoman @adelejacques!
#VozWoman | Adele Jacques
It was such a pleasure chatting with filmmaker, model and writer Adele Jacques. We had a very interesting chat with Adele as we strolled towards to scenic Brooklyn Bridge Park location dubbed for her Voz Woman shoot. She let us in on some of her most pertinent inspirations for her upcoming film which encapsulates a woman’s relationship with nature. The coming of age, seventies inspired film takes on Hollywood references with a twist from a woman’s point of view.
Firstly, she plans to completely juxtapose the filmmaking industry’s unsustainable production practices with a more ecological approach to filmmaking.
Adele: “Cinema is one thing that is not always done (sustainably) at all. Let’s say Transformers goes to Bulgaria and trash the country to make a movie worth like $55 million dollars and they don’t care if a village is destroyed..”
She goes on to mention that her movie focuses on ecology and a woman’s relationship with water and the desert. She plans to practice a much more sustainable production process, making her movie not only fundamental but relevant to her own carbon footprint as well.
Adele mentions that the movie has many magical elements and that every element has a purpose and voice. She personifies all elements of nature.
Adele: “Every character has a God’s name, but in a subtle way, not like ‘oh it’s Zeus...’” [she says with a chuckle] “but they are almost like hero, comic book figures […] The land is a character, the lake is a character, so there are special effects where the mountains may break like this…” [she mentioned while doing a collapsing hand gesture.]
Adele goes on to explain the origin of the character’s as well as her pivotal relationship with nature.
Adele: “I call it a fantasize autobiography, so it’s me, but I built my character with my mother’s life as well. And she slowly goes into a magical world in very subtle moments [...] She interacts with nature to a point where she’s completely immersed in it and it’s how she finds her interior back.”
She explained her reasons for wanting to become a filmmaker and how her background in cabaret prepared her for the filmmaking industry.
Adele: “I’m a producer in nature, I like to put projects together [...] I was always taking photos, I was doing cabaret, and thought I should put a project together. I love casting people, I love dressing people, I love cooking, I can do catering, so I should put something together and try to do a project. I wanted to put myself in my own movies. [...] And I love reading scripts, LA has the best scripts.”
She goes on to explain her interest in film history and elements of film that she loves which aren’t necessarily used anymore.
“I studied art history so I have very specific references of frames that aren’t used anymore that I would like to use again, like the sixties close frame where you put one person on side of the frame. my feature film will have lots of porno frames like from underneath so you see the boobs and stuff, it’s really fun” [she says with a confident smile.]
It was great to chat with Adele and learn more about her influences and passions as a filmmaker. Be sure to check out her website to learn even more about this phenomenal, multidimensional woman of nature. Adele’s website -> http://www.adelejacques.com/film
#madebyvoz hand knitting process at our roots. Photo by @pilarcastroe
VOZ Woman | Austen Leah Rosenfeld
In this Voz Women feature, we caught up with an old colleague and friend of Voz founder Jasmine Aarons. A prolific poet and honorary Voz model Austen Leah Rosenfeld. Her poems have graced the pages of the Antioch Review, the Salmagundi Magazine and the Indiana Review, to name a few. Her work can also be seen published on Style.com. So what is her life like beneath the pen and pad? She shares how her home inspired her along with the moment that she realized poetry was her passion.
Where is home for you? How did it shape you?
Los Angeles. I think it made me find certain landscapes beautiful, deserts and freeways, that aren't usually considered beautiful.
When did you know you were going to be a poet?
I always wanted to be a writer, but I took a poetry class in college and it suited me better. I'm not very good at articulating myself with words but poetry allowed me to make a new language out of my language.
_______
Here is an excerpt from one of her pieces, Palm Reader
Palm Reader
… I miss the trains of the East, their structured narratives,
the taximeters twitching like insect wings, red reminders
of where I’ve been.
I am not what I am. All the old hotels
have fallen to their knees,
but I see one chandelier still swinging,
casting shattered light along the wall
like cave paintings, jasmine-scented ghosts of Coconut Grove.
Land of rolling hills and arrivals, of ceaseless exodus.
There is no leaving this.
Who is your muse?
I don't have a muse. But I love songs by Dolly Parton, paintings by Johannes Vermeer, books by Joan Didion.
What does fashion mean to you? How would you describe your own personal style?
Fashion is a source of anxiety for me which is why I'm fascinated by it. My style has a bit of a western feel and a menswear influence.
Effortlessly #chic in the Fringe Top #madebyvoz #aw15 #regram from @mohawkgeneralstore ☀️ (at Los Angelos, California)
Stunning #fall #regram styled by our lovely @ode_boutique ! Shawl #chevron in #handmade #babyalpaca
Marisol, una de los maestra tejedoras de #VOZ, preparando lana para tejer #handmade #fall foto por @pilarcastroe
From rain to shine! #VOZ in #LAlove for @brandassembly at the @cooperdesignbuilding this week!
Another illustration from our intern Tiffany featuring the Diagonal Wrap and the Textile Wrap Skirt from our Fall/Winter 2014 Lookbook
VOZ as a Certified B Corporation
In 2013 VOZ was certified as a B Corp under Apparel and Education Programs. According to the B Corporation website, B Corps meet rigorous standards of social and environmental performance, accountability, and transparency. They consist of over 1000 businesses from 33 countries and over 60 industries, all striving to improve environmental and social practices in manufacturing.
In Chile, we provide sustainable materials sourced as locally as possible and employ artisans to naturally dye yarns according to their families’ traditional processes – this protects their environment and propagates their dye recipes among our weaver groups. All fair trade wages are negotiated transparently with the weaver group through a consensus process. We buy finished textiles from weavers at 50%-100% higher prices than neighboring artisanal NGOs or organizations. Our decentralized production and order delivery system enables artisans to work from home. This allows our artisan partners to care for their families, manage their farms, and live in accord with their indigenous lifestyle.
Scenes from the outdoors, Chile
Photos by Pilar Castro for VOZ
Photo from our SS14 trunkshow last Thursday
Tools For Transparency in the Global Fashion Supply Chain
On Tuesday, July 22nd, we attended the TEXWORLD international trade fair to listen to the Tools for Transparency seminar. The panel consisted of Benita Singh, Co-Founder & CEO of Source4Style, Leonardo Bonanni, PhD, CEO & Founder of Sourcemap Inc., Pranay Srinivasan, Founder/CEO of Sourceasy, and moderator Bob Bland of Manufacture NY.
These startups provide tools for companies to learn about and monitor textile sourcing. Interest in responsible sourcing has grown immensely - first with food, and now with clothing. After the tragedy of Rana Plaza in Bangladesh last year, people realized that we need to start thinking about the people who make the clothes. Visibility in supply chains is an advantage to companies - think Everlane, for example, who cuts out middlemen and engages directly with factories to produce their goods. We are buying the garment as well as the story behind the garments, the knowledge that we fund an ethically and environmentally responsible practice.
Here at VOZ, we are motivated by the same responsibility: preserve natural ways of making textiles along with the cultural significance of such ways, empower the artisans and communities who create these textiles, and provide an alternative to environmentally toxic and mass-produced fast fashion.
Getting excited for the Spring launch!