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Glastonbury Festival tents used to make London Fashion Week dress

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Bekki Frost A blue and green dress made out of tents with messages on is showcased by designer Alice Bowen-Churchill outside of an Oxfam tent on a sunny day.Bekki Frost

Alice Bowen-Churchill (R) spent nearly a month making a “sustainable” dress made of recycled festival tents

The designer of a dress made of discarded festival tents says it was a “dream come true” to see her creation modelled at London Fashion Week.

Alice Bowen-Churchill, 43, from Bristol, has made a blue and green dress from recycled tents left behind at UK festivals last summer, including Glastonbury.

The gown, worn by model and actress Eunice Olumide, includes contributions from festival goers who were invited to sew messages into the lining.

Ms Bowen-Churchill said using tent material to create the look was “key to help people think differently about waste and what it could actually be used for”.

Bekki Frost Two people sow messages into the Oxfam tent dress, which is on display at a festival.Bekki Frost

Festival-goers were invited to sew messages into the lining of the dress

The dress is made of two tents, complete with guy ropes, hooks and rings, and a second-hand anorak jacket.

It was showcased at Oxfam’s Style for Change Catwalk on 12 September, and designed to highlight the need for a more “sustainable approach” to fashion.

“There was a time when second-hand was thought to be of lesser quality, but that’s not the case at all,” Ms Bowen-Churchill said.

“It’s about encouraging people to be inquisitive and brave and understand that there is another way of buying ‘new’.

“Whether it’s for your kids’ world book day costumes’ or something to wear at a fashion show, it doesn’t have to be brand new.”

Chris Yates/Oxfam Model Eunice Olumide is pictured on the catwalk wearing sunglasses and a blue and green dress made out of recycled tents.Chris Yates/Oxfam

The dress was modelled by Eunice Olumide at the Oxfam Style for Change Catwalk

She said seeing her dress open the show, after it took nearly a month to make, was “like a dream come true.”

“I felt so proud and excited about what we had achieved. It felt like such a special event to be part of,” she continued.

Also walking at the fashion show was Dragon Den star Deborah Meaden, from Taunton.

She made her catwalk debut for charity, wearing second-hand designer vintage clothing.

“We know that the fashion industry is having a huge impact on our planet, which is exactly why we need to be talking about sustainable clothes,” she said.

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