Words May Garland
Cyber clothes are changing our relationship to fashion. Will the demand for physical garments decrease when we can purchase a digital wardrobe in the metaverse?
One thing is for sure, in light of the climate crisis we are facing, we’ve reached a time where the fashion industry needs to become sustainable, and these technological advances may be the answer.
The way we view fashion has changed. Gone are the days of flipping through a catalogue to view the latest collections; instead, our devices register our interests from our search history and bombard us with online advertisements every time we open social media.

Thanks to COVID-19, many brands are also choosing to digitise their shows during fashion week and more people are opting for online stores as a substitute for window shopping. Brands have taken advantage of this by making full use of the video conference platform, Zoom to showcase their stock to customers.
In Sweden, brothers Hannes and Simon Hogeman were not put off by the lockdowns and launched a virtual version of their store, Trés Bien to keep sales high. The convenience of online stores has meant our shopping experience has advanced from the high-street to a virtual dimension. It doesn’t look like this progression is slowing down either, with 900 million more digital buyers this year than in 2020.
Tech expansion in the clothing industry is going even further. Brands such as Tribute and The Dematerialised are paving the way for fashion designers to create downloadable garments.

Their CGI 3D modelling, UX design and coding technology is used to innovatively create collections that challenge our relationship to clothes as consumers.
Fashion collections can be made from NFTs (a non-fungible, unique token) which allows you to own luxury pieces in virtual space, dress your gaming avatars and even customize your Instagram grid to include photos of you in a new digital ‘fit.
Luxury brands such as Gucci, Balenciaga, Louis Vuitton and more are now collaborating with NFT creators to join the crypto craze. Morgan Stanley predicts that metaverse gaming and NFTs could make up 10% of the luxury goods market by 2030.
These cyber developments we are witnessing in high-fashion push boundaries in the retail industry, allowing gravity-defying silhouettes to be designed to achieve what could not be achieved in physical fashion. The innovation and creativity that virtual fashion accommodates allow designers to explore fashion free from gendered boundaries and make it accessible to all.

“We strongly believe that digital fashion is the future we should embrace. With no need for physical deliveries and production, it is available without restrictions for any gender, sex or size.” – Tribute
The rise in popularity of cyber fashion or ‘contactless fashion’ also has environmental benefits by reducing pollution from manufacturing physical garments and the harmful emissions from shipping stock to our wardrobes.
Shopping for contactless fashion may also curb ‘throwaway culture’ by satisfying our need for the latest trends without purchasing a physical object that may get thrown away at the end of the season.
Virtual fashion is an exciting development in the retail industry and comes with its set of advantages; however, we’re still not quite there with achieving the perfect sustainable solution in the fashion industry.

The blockchain technology used in NFT fashion requires high energy consumption, which has a detrimental effect on the planet. As the digital artist Memo Akten discovered, the average NFT has a carbon footprint equivalent to more than a month of electricity usage for the average person living in the European Union.
The progression into virtual fashion allows brands to be more experimental with their designs and find new ways to slow fast fashion. However, we still have further to go to develop fully sustainable technology that won’t negatively impact the planet.
For some, cyber fashion still feels like a bizarre and fleeting trend but with more brands experimenting with NFTs, it looks like cyber garments are now the present and the future for fashion. Are we on a path to switching out our Gucci for pixels?
