Californian firm touts ‘mushroom leather’ as
sustainability gamechanger
Vegan leather alternative isn’t just the hot fashion
must-have – it could teach us about consumption and waste
Grown in trays, mycelium is engineered to look and
feel like calfskin or sheepskin
Jess
Cartner-Morley
@JessC_M
Thu 2 Dec
2021 06.00 GMT
Vegan alternatives
to leather could save more than just animals. The scientists behind fashion’s
new latest must-have – the “mushroom leather” handbag – believe that mycelium,
a material grown from fungi which can be engineered to look and feel like
calfskin or sheepskin, could help save the planet.
Speaking to
the Guardian before a talk at the Business of Fashion Voices conference in
Oxfordshire, Dr Matt Scullin, CEO of biomaterials company MycoWorks, forecast
that mushroom leather could be a sustainability gamechanger, “unlocking a
future of design which begins with the material, not with the object”.
Fine
Mycelium, a patented material which can be grown from fungi in trays in a
matter of weeks, replicates the appearance and feel of leather while
outperforming it in strength and durability. The material recently made its
high fashion debut as an exclusive Hermès handbag.
“It can
give the same emotional response as an animal leather. It has that hand-feel of
rarity,” says Scullin. On a planet of finite natural resources, Scullin
believes both the technology and the mindset of carbon-neutral, grown-to-order
mushroom leather could be “revolutionary” – and have implications for
innovation in manufacture beyond fashion.
Alongside
Scullin at the conference will be Merlin Sheldrake, author of Entangled Lives:
How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds, and Shape Our Futures. Sheldrake,
a biologist, is joining a lineup which also includes designers Vivienne
Westwood and Tommy Hilfiger, “because I’m interested to talk to people in
creative industries about how the possibilities of fungi can help open the mind
to new ideas”. “I am excited to support the fashion world in its efforts to
become more sustainable. There is so much potential in fungi to overcome some
of the problems we face,” he said.
Sheldrake
sees fashion’s engagement with mushroom leather as a platform for “fungi as an
analogy for thinking creatively, and sustainably”. Mushroom leather can be
grown in pieces to the specific shape and size required by a designer,
eliminating the need for cutting room waste. A report by the Higg Materials
Sustainability Index found bovine leather to wreak more environmental damage
than any other fabric, including plastic-based synthetic leather, due to the
deforestation and gas emissions associated with animal rearing.
With
leather goods accounting for 15% of the luxury market in 2019, according to the
Statista Consumer Market Outlook Luxury Leather Goods Report, sustainable
alternatives could have a significant impact on fashion’s footprint.
Bolt
Threads – another California-based biomaterials company working with mushroom
leather, which collaborated with Stella McCartney on a handbag shown at Paris
fashion week and is developing products with Adidas – is another leading player
in the mushroom leather market, alongside MycoWorks.
Mushrooms
may not have a glamorous image, but fungi-based leather has become an exclusive
material, favoured by the kind of high-fashion design studios which work with
double face cashmere, and silk organza. But in order to have a substantial
impact on sustainability, the material would need to be accessible at a lower
price point. “We are working with luxury fashion first because they are ahead
of the curve when it comes to sustainability,” says Scullin. “These are brands
which are in a position to think big and to think long term.”
But
partnership with mass market brands is “on the radar” of MycoWorks, which is
about to open a second factory in the US. Scalability that ensured the material
could be used in high street fashion or in car upholstery is a definite
possibility – the material can be grown in trays in a few weeks – but
bioscientists caution that insensitive design could undermine some of the
environmentally friendly properties of mycelium. If a handbag or jacket is
produced using hardware, trims, adhesives and fastenings which are not
biodegradeable, this would undo much of the good the material was developed to
achieve. “We can bring biodegradeability to brands, but there is a big problem
in the industry with thinking sustainably about a finished product,” says
Scullin.
Sheldrake
believes that one of the overarching lessons learned from studying fungi is
“reforming the way we think about waste. If fungi didn’t do what they do, our
planet would be piled metres high in the bodies of animals and plants”. He
believes that the impact on mushroom leather on our culture could go way beyond
a new It bag. “We have been trained as consumers to think in terms of a
straight line whereby we buy something, use it and throw it away. Fungi can
inform thinking about fashion on lots of levels. This is about material
innovation, but it’s also about the culture of making endless new things, and
what we can learn from thinking in terms of nature and of cycles instead.”
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