
SinĂ©ad OâDwyer: âThe Glorification of Vulnerability in Fashion Is Really Bizarreâ
The Business of Fashion Podcast
Witnessing Runway Vulnerability
Sinéad recounts seeing visibly ill models backstage and questions the industry's glorification of vulnerability and beauty ideals.
Irish designer SinĂ©ad OâDwyer grew up in a household of creative entrepreneurs. Her father was a silversmith and a sculptor, her mother was a music educator and her grandmother knit and sewed uniforms. Until the age of fourteen, there were no screens in her home, not even a TV. Instead, she was encouraged to read, craft and spend time outdoors.
After studying in the Netherlands and a formative stint in the fashion industry, she developed a critical stance on the industryâs narrow body ideals.
âI saw quite a lot of models who were visibly ill. This glorification of vulnerability was really bizarre. It felt really insane to me that on the runway they look so pulled together, but then actually behind the scenes, there are so many emotional struggles happening,â she recalls. âWhen you are wearing a garment, you are actually wearing an imprint of another person's body. ... I don't think people really understand that the fit model for a brand is so important.â
This week on The BoF Podcast, Imran Amed sat down with Sinead to discuss her practice which centres on diverse bodies and finding practical, sustainable routes to market through direct to consumer, bespoke clients, and carefully chosen retail partners.
Key Insights:
- As a trainee, OâDwyer saw the jarring gap between runway images and backstage reality: âI saw quite a lot of models who were visibly ill ⊠this glorification of vulnerability was really bizarre,â she recalls. âIt felt really insane to me that on the runway they look so pulled together ⊠but then actually behind the scenes, there are so many emotional struggles happening.â At the RCA, with ZoĂ« Broachâs ethos of fashion as critical practice, she reframed her work toward contribution and change, interrogating fashionâs harmful beauty ideals.
- OâDwyerâs MA research used live silicone casts of friends and family to visualise that âwhen you are wearing a garment, you are actually wearing an imprint of another personâs body.â She critiques reliance on a single fit model and historic blocks, instead creating new blocks âthrough my own gaze as a woman,â choosing what she finds beautiful and then cutting for that, before generalising across a collection.
- According to OâDwyer, luxury brands tend to produce many styles in smaller quantities with fewer sizes. OâDwyerâs answer to this problem is a mixedâmodel delivery: keep wholesale tight, invest margin in madeâtoâorder âat the same price as the readyâtoâwear,â and prioritise popâups and tryâon moments. The aim is fewer but better retail partners and closer relationships. Crucially, the industry-wise fix requires intent: âPeople have to care. There has to be an investment in the whole industry. Initially you will lose a bit of money because you have to invest in that customer and say, âwe actually want to cater for you, we respect youâ.â
Additional Resources:
- The Emerging Designers Pushing Fashion Forward | BoF
- The Great Fashion Reset | Is Fashion Failing Emerging Designers? | BoF
- SinĂ©ad OâDwyer | BoF 500 | The People Shaping the Global Fashion Industry
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