Michael Kors is
going fur-free. The American accessible luxury brand announced Friday that it
will no longer use animal fur in its products, with production being phased out
by the end of December 2018. The policy will apply companywide, including
the Jimmy Choo brand, which Kors acquired in July.
The house, which has paraded
models down the runway wearing luxurious fur coats in the past, joins a growing
number of fashion companies looking at alternatives after coming under pressure
from animal rights activists and changing consumer tastes.
“This decision marks a new chapter
as our company continues to evolve its use of innovative materials,” said John D. Idol,
Michael Kors’ chairman and chief executive, in a statement.
“Due to technological advances in
fabrications, we now have the ability to create a luxe aesthetic using
non-animal fur,” added designer Michael Kors. “We will showcase these new
techniques in our upcoming runway show in February.”
Michael Kors’ move follows a similar
initiative by Gucci, which in October pledged to drop fur from its collections,
joining brands like Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren, Tommy Hilfiger and
Armani, which are all fur-free. Retailers including Selfridges and
Yoox-Net-a-Porter also do not sell fur items.
Yet despite a number of brands
announcing fur-free policies, the use of the material in collections still
prevails, said Fur Information Council of America spokesperson Keith
Kaplan: "Nearly 70 percent of major designers included fur in their
Autumn/Winter 2017 collections."
“In the pre-Fall 2018 showings
currently underway, fur continues to maintain a major presence, because
innovative new techniques in fur processing and production allow designers a
breadth of creative possibilities unmatched by any other textile,” said
Kaplan. “Designers and consumers also recognise the value of fur as a
natural and sustainable product, as well as the artisanal craft skills that
make each fur piece unique, [which is] especially important as consumers become
more aware of the environmental and social costs of mass-produced fast
fashion."
“Killing animals for fur is archaic
and inhumane,” said Wayne Pacelle, president and chief executive of the Humane
Society of the United States (HSUS).
PJ Smith, the HSUS’s senior manager
of fashion policy, who worked with the company on its fur-free policy, added:
“Today’s consumers want fashionable, luxurious clothing and accessories that
also align with their social values and Michael Kors’ fur-free move makes it a
leader in that regard.”
The announcement comes after animal
rights activists interrupted Kors' speech in June 2017, in a packed theatre at
New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Over 20 protestors took the stage and
balcony, while chanting and playing the sounds of animals being killed for fur,
shutting down the event for approximately ten minutes.
Protestors have also been targeting fashion brands at London Fashion Week over
the industry’s continued use of fur in its collections.
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