Eco Trash Couture

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USA Today

Airports cater to art lovers with intriguing installations

By Harriet Baskas
April 12, 2011

Read article on-line.

At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, you’ll soon find an exhibit of couture fashions made entirely from trash by Nancy Judd of Recycle Runway.

Included among the 18 pieces is an outfit commissioned by Delta Air Lines that Judd has dubbed “Environmental Steward-ess.” The vintage-style flight attendant uniform, which includes a hat and purse, is made from worn-out leather seat covers from Delta planes. The purse, made by Tierra Ideas, has a liner made from recycled wool curtains. The best part: The cape, which was inspired by Wonder Woman’s invisible plane from early comic book days, is made from outdated seatback safety cards, discarded pretzel bags, old plane tickets and past issues of Sky Magazine.

Find it: The Recycle Runway exhibit opens April 18th and continues until April 2012 in nine cases on Atlanta International Airport’s Concourse E. A video about Recycle Runway will also run on the airport’s CNN channel at each gate.

 

 

Chic Republic

April 8, 2011

Interview at the Launch Party for the Atlanta International Exhibition.

View interview on-line.

Talking with Tami

Talking with TamiApril 7, 2011

Trash Is The New Black
Yes you heard it right folks! The next time you go to throw away that pop can, or that old cd you might want to take a closer look at it and turn that trash in to something fashionable and feel good that you are helping the environment.

Read the full post.

Metro Mix Atlanta

April 7, 2011

Nancy Judd launches her national eco-fashion exhibition at Environment Furniture in West Midtown

Recycle Runway exhibition, includes 18 eco-trash couture garments takes between 50-450 hours to create, and is the culmination of ingenious re-use. Pieces include faux fur jackets made with endless loops of cassette and video tape; a dress created of origami junk mail fans sewn together like fish scales; a dress inspired by jellyfish fashioned from plastic bags and an evening gown glittering with thousands of pieces of crushed glass.

View the full slide show of over 50 images.

The Environmental Steward-ess

I have wanted to create a vintage flight attendant uniform using airline garbage for many years, so this commission from Delta Air Lines was a dream come true!

The uniform, hat and purse are sewn from worn-out leather seat covers from Delta planes. The cape is made from replaced safety cards, Sky Magazines, old plane tickets, and pretzel wrappers all cut into strips and sewn onto worn pillow cases. The cape was then lined with a discarded Delta blanket. Both the cape and purse appear to fly in the wind thanks to armatures created from metal wire used for yard signs during the last presidential election. And the final touches? To create the vintage Delta symbol on the purse, hat and belt I used recycled aluminum cans.

The garment was created to showcase Delta’s numerous sustainability programs that range from in-flight recycling to numerous fuel and CO2 conservation initiatives. For details, read the full 2009 DELTA Corporate Responsibility Report.

After the commission began, staff from Delta mailed many boxes of waste materials to my studio in Santa Fe, and I received old photos of stewardess uniforms from the 1940s and 1950s sent to me by employees at the Delta Heritage Museum. After hours of carefully washing who-knows-what-off the old leather seat covers, they were cut, sewn and transformed into the coat and skirt using a vintage pattern from the 1940s.

Matthew Mahler of Tierra Ideas designed and made the purse. Matthew works regularly with Delta Air Lines creating wonderful bags out of recycled aircraft seat covers provided by Delta. See his whole line of recycled bags and totes atwww.tierraideas.com.

I named this piece the Environmental Steward-ess because I liked the play on words. At its core, my work is about inspiring all of us to become environmental stewards.  Stewardesses assist us in arriving safely and comfortably to our destination. Combining the concepts of environmental stewardship and the role of a stewardess seemed like a perfect fit. (As a side note, “flight attendant” is the new gender neutral word for “stewardess”, but Delta accepted using “stewardess” in the name of the garment because of the vintage design.)

One morning as I began to put all the design concepts together I woke up at 2:00 AM and realized that the Environmental Steward-ess needed to be a super-hero! I began researching female super heroes from the 1940s for the design of the cape and I was interested to learn that Wonder Woman was actually created in 1941 by a psychologist to inspire girls to stand up for themselves. In addition to being incredibly strong, she had bulletproof bracelets, a lasso of truth that made men be honest, and most relevant to this project, an Invisible Plane!

Cape Detail

Working on the cape was an interesting experience because the safety cards are quite macabre. Cutting out pictures of people preparing for a crash, evacuating a plane and floating on life rafts is pretty morose. In fact one of my collaborators who helped to cut the safety cards is afraid of flying and joked about taking an anti-depressant before working on the project! In contrast to the morbid content, these tragic scenes are depicted in colorful cartoons, so from afar the cape looks quite whimsical and cheerful. I really enjoy this contrast. It felt to me in the end that the cartoon feeling of the cape compliments the comic strip super-hero aspect of the garment!

The Environmental Steward-ess will join 18 of my other eco-chic pieces in a yearlong exhibition in the Atlanta International Airport. The show will be on display on April 18th in nine cases located throughout International Concourse E.

Thank you to all of the people* who helped to construct the Environmental Steward-ess, and to Delta Air Lines for commissioning this piece, it has been one of the most engaging and fun garments that I have created thus far!

*My collaborators on this project were Frank Wrenn, Jennifer Otenti, and Judy Ondrey from Delta Air Lines, Matt Mahler from Tierra Ideas, Dawn and Jeremy Richards from Bacon-Richards Fashion Design Studio, Dan Radven, Nicole Morris, Susan Todd and Ariel Harrison. Thanks everyone!

Garment photo by Jay Sturdevant

Recycle Runway in Shopping Malls

Recycle Runway has begun a new partnership with shopping malls. Malls attract millions of people and are an excellent place to provide information about sustainable consumerism! In October 2010, the University Mall in Chapel Hill, North Carolina commissioned Ms. Judd to create a new garment, Tireless Couture. The garment will stay on exhibit in the Mall until January 2011 when it will join the rest of the Recycle Runway Collection in the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

Tireless Couture

Tireless Couture, workshop

ReDress: Upcycled Style

Eighteen of Nancy Judd’s enchanting couture fashion sculptures made from trash traveled to museums and art centers around the United States from 2013-2017. Watch this interview with Nancy talking about the ReDress exhibition.

Ruth Funk Center for Textile Arts, 2013

“The ReDress exhibit has been a gem to have within our walls and has sparked conversation and imagination among visitors, volunteers, staff and the campus. Your message is delivered in such a positive way that it motivates and excites individuals to want to become more aware of the impact their daily life has on the planet.”

Bascom Center for Visual Arts

“Everyone in Highland is talking about your exhibition – lots of good buzz about the Bascom.”
“We are absolutely thrilled to have this show and the response from visitors is nothing shy of amazing.”

ReDress at the Reading Museum

The Reading Public Museum

“ReDress:Upcycled Style by Nancy Judd is more than just an exhibit. It’s an idea transformed into something people will remember, something that will make an impression on them. Judd takes discarded waste and turns it into something beautiful. Trash becomes a dress, shoes a purse or a hat that can be displayed to show people how they can help the environment and upcycle.”
Article from a student review of the exhibition.

Woodson Art Museum

Woodson Art Museum

“Nancy led a gallery walk on the final afternoon of her artist residency, May 1-4. On the first sunny afternoon after a long Wisconsin winter, more than 30 visitors flocked to the Museum for this program. Nancy ascertained the makeup of the group and tailored her comments to ensure she provided fresh content, different from her previous residency programs so that it wouldn’t be repetitive for those who attended previously. Her frank, open comments about her artwork and acceptance of commissions were well received and appreciated and likely encouraged visitors to pursue their career path with a realistic mix of passion and pragmatism.”

Exhibition Schedule:

  • The Ruth Funk Center for Textile Arts in Melbourne, Florida – Winter 2013
  • Bascom: Center for Visual Arts in Highlands, North Carolina – Spring 2013
  • Reading Museum in Reading, Pennsylvania – Fall 2013
  • Woodson Art Museum in  Wausau, Wisconsin – Spring 2014
  • Stamford Museum in Stamford, Connecticut – Spring 2015
  • Artesia Historical Museum and Art Center in Artesia, New Mexico – Winter 2016/Spring 2017
  • Farmington Museum in Farmington, New Mexico – Winter 2017/Spring 2018
  • Fort Collins Museum of Art in Fort Collins, Colorado – Summer 2017

See a video of ReDress at the Ruth Funk Center.

Photos by Sarah Jane Smith (Funk) and Ian Michael WardPs (Bascom)

USA Today

January 1, 2010

A traveler admires the Recycle Runway at Phoenix Sky Harbor. The Phoenix Airport Museum partnered with artist Nancy Judd on the exhibition of dresses created from materials that are often discarded.

Read article on USA Today website.

2012 Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport Exhibition

Nancy Judd’s Recycle Runway exhibition in the ATL Airport, 2012

Twenty one of Nancy Judd’s eco-fashion sculptures were installed in ten cases located throughout international Concourse E from May 2011-June 2012.  You can read blog posts about her midnight adventures installing the exhibition and a final report on the installation. You can also take the Eco-quiz and perform some E-activism that was a part of the show.

The following video showed on the CNN channel at every gate through out the Atlanta Airport several times a day during the exhibition!

Thank you to Atlanta’s Airport Art Program staff and the sponsors for making this exhibition possible!

Caution Dress

Made from caution tape, this dress signals a strong warning!

Caution tape recovered from the side of the road was sewn onto a vintage sundress. This serious eco-wear took 50 hours to create and was completed in 2011.

Read a blog post about creating the Caution Dress.

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Global output of heat-trapping carbon dioxide jumped by 6% in 2010. This increase in carbon dioxide is very disturbing for two reasons: 1.) it marks the biggest increase on record, and 2.) the new figures for 2010 mean that levels of greenhouse gases are higher than the worst case scenario outlined by climate experts just four years ago. This information represents a clear CAUTION that the world’s efforts to slow man-made global warming are not enough, and we need to take more drastic measures.

Source: U.S. Department of Energy