Epson has signed a technology and sustainability agreement to support First Nations Fashion + Design (FNFD), the NFP Indigenous Corporation whose goal is promoting the growth of the Indigenous fashion sector. Under the partnership, First Nations designers will gain access to Epson digital printing technologies.
“We are very excited to be working with Grace and her team at FNFD to promote the growth of Indigenous fashion and provide new skills and knowledge to help First Nations designers tell their stories through the art of fashion using Epson digital printing technologies,” said Epson Australia MD Craig Heckenberg.
FNFD founder and chairperson Grace Lillian Lee, said: “We met some of the senior Epson team at an FNFD ceremony in one of our pop-up stores and then they came back to visit and buy products from our wonderful designers. It was obvious they were interested in the brands we support and the conversation started from there as to how Epson could help in a way that would support our organisation.”
A big part of the discussion around a potential partnership between Epson and FNFD came from the fact that Epson had just launched their Monna Lisa ML-8000 direct-to-fabric printer, a unique product FNFD had been seeking for some time.
“We also discussed the Incubator Program we have developed with THE ICONIC,” Lee said. “Then, after a trip to the Epson Experience Centre, it became very clear that a partnership between Epson and FNFD could not only support the Incubator Program but Epson products such as the ML-8000, technology and expertise could support the overall growth of FNFD and our designers. Our organisations, objectives and values are incredibly well aligned and this is an ideal partnership.
“FNFD’s vision is to partner with organisations that can support First Nations designers, businesses and communities in the fashion industry in order that they can grow and develop their skills and businesses to become commercially self-sufficient. Then allow the value they have created to flow back into their communities - thus creating a self-supporting ecology.”
The first places in the THE ICONIC x FNFD Incubator Program were recently awarded to Gunggandji designer Elverina Johnson of label Pink Fish, Mt. Isa designers Dale Bruce, Cheryl Perez, Glenda McCulloch and Jaunita Doyle of label Myrrdah and Kuranda based designer Briana Enoch of label Jarawee.
Over the next eight months, the designers will participate in workshops, events and experiences developed by a range of industry experts and educators such as Epson, The Hanes Group and Bonds with ongoing feedback from the Indigenous creative community.
Heckenberg: “Our partnership with FNFD is built on a shared vision of promoting cultural and economic sustainability. Through directly supporting inclusive and authentic initiatives such as THE ICONIC x FNFD Incubator Program we will add value by providing access to the world’s most advanced textile printing technologies. We will also share new skills and knowledge to help First Nations designers understand how they can digitally translate their designs into high quality fashion.”
Epson’s products, services and technologies in digital print and projection will enable First Nations designers to tell their stories by converting their designs into commercially sellable items, Epson said. This includes printing their canvasses, printing fabrics for the making of fashion garments using direct-to-fabric printers such as the Monna Lisa ML-8000 and using direct-to-garment printers for items such as t-shirts, dye-sublimating designs on fabrics for soft furnishings and printing on to hard surfaces such as mugs and key rings.
Lee said, “Having Epson as a partner of FNFD gives us access to experts in the industry who can create new opportunities, boost skill development and industry engagement. Also, Epson is a company committed to helping further sustainability in fashion. Their printers offer on demand solutions which reduces waste and over production. This is also a partnership that allows Epson Australia to play a key role in a number of FNFD strategic initiatives that supports First Nations designers and businesses who work within the Australian fashion industry. Along with partners and partnerships like the one we now have with Epson, the FNFD program provides a national platform for grassroots art collectives and artists to showcase Indigenous-led arts, dance and fashion. FNFD along with Epson also aims to promote sustainable, ethical trading and best practice when working with, purchasing or licensing Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander arts, prints, designs, and cultural products.”
Heckenberg: “Sustainability is central to our partnership with FNFD. Epson is committed to playing its part in helping the world achieve a more sustainable future by using our efficient, compact and precision technologies to connect people and help industry reduce its impact of the environment. One example of this is Epson working with the textile industry to help it shift production from analogue to digital using our unique inkjet technology. This shift will make it possible to bring textile production back onshore to Australia and New Zealand and to better manage demand fluctuations and rapid turnaround times. It will also help to reduce excess stock and disposal losses and significantly reduce chemicals and water currently used in analogue production processes.”
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