Earlier this year, San Francisco businessman Richard Ma spent $10,000
on a dress created by The Fabricant, the world’s first digital-only
fashion house. The problem is that the dress didn’t really exist outside
the digital world.
Digital-only clothes are so new that most people haven’t even heard
about them, but some experts believe they will one day be a flourishing
industry. But why would anyone be interested in fashionable garments
that don’t exist in the physical world? If you can’t put them on and
show them off, what’s the point? Well, that’s what makes them so
interesting, you can actually put them on (sort of) and show them off on
social media, in fact that’s actually their main purpose.
“Once the world got introduced to social media, clothing production
increased massively. It’s all about ‘the fake reality’ – we have to
understand that people are buying things to wear once and be pictured
in, they never wear these clothes again,” Ronny Mikalsen, CEO of
Scandinavian fashion brand Carlings, told Evening Standard.
Social media has created a serious sustainability crisis in the
fashion industry, with popular brands like Zara taking just a few weeks
to get new designs into production and keep up with demand from young
consumers. That’s where digital fashion comes in. When you want to show
off some cool new clothing, all you have to do is pay digital-only
fashion houses to create something for you. They’ll layer it over one of
your photos and make it look like you’re actually wearing it.
Iridescence, the $10,000 dress that The Fabricant created for Richard
Ma’s wife, was silver and silky in its composition, and when it caught
the light, it twinkled. It was just the kind of unique clothing you
would want to show off. But digital fashion doesn’t have to be
expensive. Carlings launched its own digital collection in October of
last year, with items priced as low as $11. The whole collection sold
out in just one week.
The interesting thing about digital clothing is that the price you
pay per article only covers the cost of having it fitted to one picture.
If you’d like to “wear” it in another photo, you have to pay an extra
fee.
As crazy as paying for digital clothing sounds for most people,
experts believe it will become big business in the not so distant
future.
“This will never replace physical clothing. We will always need those
items, but they’re not the items you want to express yourself, they
don’t show the other side of your personality, which the younger
generation are all keen to do,” Ronny Mikalsen said.
“Digital fashion will become an important part of every fashion
business’ future business model. It’s not going to replace everything,
but it will be an important part of that,” Matthew Drinkwater, head of
the Fashion Innovation Agency at the London College of Fashion, added.