Cyclades
Student Name : Valerie Papadopoulou
Mentor Name :
Company : CHIMAR


Green Producer Diary
My Motivation
I created Cyclades from a family textile passed down from my great-grandmother because I wanted memory, heritage, and design to exist in the same garment. The inspiration came from the calm geometry of Cycladic figurines, the light of the Aegean, and the simplicity of island life. Sustainability is important to me because it proves that something old can become meaningful again without waste. For me, fashion can carry history while still feeling contemporary, useful, and emotionally alive.
My Vetrine Journey
The journey began with the decision to work with an old family bed cover from the 1900s and to respect its material limits rather than force it into a conventional pattern. I researched zero-waste logic and the minimalist forms of Cycladic culture to guide the design direction. Then I started draping the textile on the mannequin, creating the head opening with pins and studying how the lace could remain visible as part of the final identity of the garment. One of the biggest challenges was the fragility and uneven behavior of the old fabric. I also had to balance the purity of a simple geometric silhouette with the need for strength and wearability. To solve this, I adjusted the proportions, reinforced the most sensitive seams, and kept the construction as clean as possible. Another important step was deciding that the leftover fabric should not be discarded, so I transformed it into a sea urchin-inspired decorative element. By the end of the process, the garment evolved into a polymorphic piece that can be worn in different ways while preserving both its zero-waste logic and its emotional value.
Sustainability Aspect | Your Actions / Explanation |
|---|---|
Environmental | I reused a vintage family textile instead of producing or buying new fabric, applied zero-waste cutting logic, preserved the handmade lace, and transformed the leftover fabric into a decorative sea urchin element. Because the garment is made mainly from natural fibres, it avoids synthetic microplastic impact and supports a longer life cycle. |
Social | The project keeps family memory and cultural heritage active through contemporary design. It also communicates respect for traditional craftsmanship and encourages people to value existing materials instead of treating them as disposable. |
Financial | The garment remained low-cost because the main material already existed. Its simple construction reduced unnecessary production steps, and its three wearing options increase value and usefulness without requiring additional garments. |
A Message to Consumers
I would like people to know that Cyclades is more than a garment; it is a continuation of a family story. By choosing a piece like this, they support a slower and more meaningful way of dressing, where beauty, memory, and sustainability can coexist.
A Message to Future Learners
Start with what already exists around you and listen carefully to the material before designing. Simplicity can be powerful, and nothing needs to be wasted when creativity is guided by care, patience, and respect for the past.
Product Details
Product Name
Cyclades
Reference / SKU
VETRINE-VPAPADOPOULOU-CYCLADES-001
Color
Sand beige / off-white
Size
One size / polymorphic fit
Weight
Approx. 520 g
Quantity (if multi-pack)
One
Materials Information
Composition
Vintage loom-woven family fabric made of silk and twisted cotton with handmade cotton crochet lace; cotton sewing thread
% Recycled Materials
% of Recycled / Reused Materials: approx. 95% reused vintage textile
Reusability: Reusable and wearable in 3 ways (kaftan, dress, blouse)
Recyclability: High, due to the predominance of natural fibres
Traceable assets (materials origin IDs, fibers batches)
Vintage family dowry bed cover / sheet from the 1900s, reused as the main garment textile
Handmade cotton crochet lace preserved around the perimeter
Leftover fabric transformed into a sea urchin decorative element
Cotton sewing thread for reinforcement and finishing
Manufacturing & Supply Chain
1
Location
Athens, Greece
2
Date
Material selection and concept research: 2026-01-12
Draping and first pattern tests: 2026-01-25
Zero-waste cutting and sewing: 2026-02-08
Finishing and styling adaptations: 2026-02-18
3
Type of processes
Material selection, zero-waste draping, pinning, opening formation, sleeve shaping, circular cut detail, sewing, reinforcement, belt/tie construction, finishing
supply chain map
Tier 4Raw material
Tier 3Material processing
Tier 2Component manufacturing
Tier 1Final assembly
Environmental & Social Impact
Reused heritage textile, natural fibres, zero-waste logic, multifunctional use, repairable design, Microplastics: No
18 hours, EUR 10
Care, Repair & Lifetime Extension
1
Care Instructions
Hand wash cold with mild detergent, dry flat in shade, iron on low heat, store folded
2
Repair Information
Repair seams or lace by hand when needed; reuse again as garment or textile piece; compost or recycle natural fibres where facilities exist

