TED RESOURCE:
ABOUT
The TED project was set up in 1996 to look at the role that
the designer can play in creating textiles that have a reduced impact
on the environment. Since 2003 this research has centred around the TED
Resource which is an open access facility that houses a collection of
fabric and clothing samples, press cuttings, academic papers, research
projects and case studies for students, designers and researchers.
The contents of the Resource is divided into three sections
which reflects the current research work of the TED project as a whole:
1) The most obvious starting point for any designer trying
to create textiles that have a reduced impact on the environment is materials
selection. This could include choosing materials that are non-toxic or
recycled, such as organic cotton or reclaimed textiles.
To reflect this first stage, the Resource includes information
on all types of manmade and plant fibres; fibre cultivation and production;
fabric manufacture including finishing processes and dying and printing.
2) Moving beyond materials selection, the designer can take
a broader view of the product/ their design and its environmental impacts.
Considering that up to 80% of a product’s environmental costs are
determined at the design stage, there are several eco design concepts
that further increase opportunities for environmental improvements.
The Resource includes information on lifecycle thinking, short life/long
life textiles, fair-trade and ethical production, design for recycling,
new technologies and consumer use.
3) Finally, the designer can go beyond product design and
broaden their focus to reanalyse the whole system in which their textile
product is produced and consumed. At the heart of most of the environmental
problems is the issue of consumption. Society needs to address its over-reliance
on product consumption and the subsequent environmental impacts that are
associated with this.
Designers should therefore be encouraged to disengage from
consumer culture and to play a radical and innovative part in the creation
of a more sustainable society and to find new directions for product and
service innovation.
The Resource includes information on systems and services
design, local/global issues and social sustainability.
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