👚👠 Watch this video for some fashion inspiration from a few of the lovely attendees of our Relove Fashion final! They are both stylish and sustainable, what’s not to love?
Follow us for more behind the scenes from the event.
-handStyle
Relove Fashion
Award winning sustainable fashion competition open to young people aged 12-19 in Ireland. Register your interest now!
https://marketing.rediscoverycentre.ie/relove-fashion-register-your-interest_26/27
👗 At the Relove Fashion grand final, we brought together some very stylish and sustainable people, so naturally we had to ask what they were wearing! 🧵
Watch the video for some circular inspiration, and don't forget to follow us for more behind the scenes from the event.
-handStyle
We're not done talking about the Relove Fashion finalist’s outfits just yet!
We spoke with Elodie Wallace, the creator behind Seaweed & Linen, to hear firsthand about the making of her outfit and what her inspirations were.
Watch the video to learn more, and follow us to see more finalists from Relove Fashion 2025/26!
21/05/2026
We're off around the country delivering winners visible mending workshops, and how beautiful are these pocket repairs?
15/05/2026
Congratulations to all of the fantastic ECO-UNESCO young environmental award participants and winners!
We were thrilled to see fashion (St Catherine's College Armagh, St Colm's Draperstown) and furniture (Balla Secondary school) reuse and upcycling feature in the winning projects for the waste category supported by the EPA Ireland. Special congratulations to St Catherine's College for winning the national junior category.
Clever upcycling also featured with the Local to Global award winner, Colaiste Treasa, in their "Light up Kolkata" project, upcycling used solar panels and jars.
Thank you ECO-UNESCO for the opportunity to celebrate all of the brilliant entries at the award ceremony earlier this week.
12/05/2026
Thank you Sylvia Thompson for celebrating Relove Fashion in this weekend's The Irish Times magazine!
From curtains to table cloths, beading to applique, the Relove Fashion competition is a showcase of imaginative reuse. Its part of the wider and growing movement aimed at tackling our overconsumption of textiles, supported by EU and national policy, better design, and keeping clothes circulating for longer through repair and upcycling. (Special shout out to workshops at the Rediscovery Centre, Roscommon Women's Network - RWN and Change Clothes).
Registrations of interest are now open for Relove 2026/7: https://ow.ly/gSem50YYiKr
Read the article: https://ow.ly/A2J050YYiKq
Look back on the Relove Fashion Grand Finale with us!
♥️ We brought 58 Relove Fashion finalists from across Ireland to showcase their upcycled designs and celebrate circular fashion in DCU.
From our amazing host Itspaulryder and our judges' insightful comments, to the finalists and their friends and family enthusiasm, the energy in the room was electric!
A huge thanks to all the young designers, schools, supporters and families who joined us!
This one will stay with us ♥️ Bring on next year!!!
25/04/2026
Elżbieta Klonowska from St Louis Community School, Mayo County Council has taken home the National Overall Award for her upcycled outfit, Rock them, Madonna!
This outfit really stood out to the judges for the amount of work and repurposing in each element. From the harvested bra cups covered with shirt fabric, the layers of frills on the underskirt, and the hundreds of hand made tulle roses creating such dramatic designs features in the skirt and the bolero.
➡️➡️➡️ Read About the Award Winning Outfit
🧵 Inspiration & Sourcing 🧵
Elzbieta had a very clear vision for her entry this year, inspired by the style of Monster High’s Operetta doll, she was sure she wanted to create a rockabilly style dress with a rose underskirt and a strong twirl factor.
Elzbieta sourced items for her design from her local charity shop, her own wardrobe and home, as well as from Vinted.
🧵 Design & Creation🧵
The skirt of the dress is made from a jumpsuit and an old skirt of similar material. Elzbieta made a pattern based off another skirt, and cut the fabric into strips. She also patched some holes that were in the items (of course!).
Elzbieta harvested the cups from an old bra, and covered them with fabric harvested from an unwanted shirt. Using the boning from the bra for structure, she attached the cups to the top of a dress sourced from a charity shop, and created a signature two-tone bustier top, which she then attached to the skirt. She used fabric from the same shirt to sew a decorative strip along the bottom of the skirt, and when she didn’t have enough she filled the gap with an embroidered name tag as her logo.
The zip at the back of Elzbieta's dress was harvested from the same unwanted dress. She attached halterneck style straps using leftover fabric from the dress.
The petticoat was made from old curtains. Elzbieta cut the curtains into strips and sewed them together to create the base of the skirt. She then cut and gathered straight 13 strips and attached them as ruffles the petticoat to give more volume.
Elzbieta hand made over 400 tulle roses from second hand tulle skirts and fabric to create the design feature at the bottom of her petticoat, as well as her signature bolero. Lastly she dyed the petticoat a rose coloured pink and put it through the wash several times to test its durability.
See more photos of the outfit: https://www.relovefashion.ie/rock-them-madonna-mayo
Last year Elzbieta took home a regional prize, for Best Evening in Connaught-Ulster. Huge congratulations to her for her national win!
The National winners are on display at the Rediscovery Centre, pop in to see them in person!
St. Louis CS Mayo County Council
25/04/2026
Brigh Harkin from Kerry County Council has taken home the National Award for Best Research for her upcycled outfit, Fite Fuaite! Brigh is pictured here with designer and NCAD lecturer, Orla Langan.
The judges were really impressed with Bríghs in-depth research and knowledge of the fashion industry, both its impacts environmentally and socially. They loved how she highlighted the interconnectedness of us all through our clothing, from where and how they are made, to where they end up, and represented this through her outfit.
➡️➡️➡️ Read About the Award-Winning Outfit
🧵 Inspiration & Sourcing 🧵
Brigh collected clothing passed down from her cousin that she had grown out of, including a black jumpsuit, a blue and white playsuit, a hat and a bag. She also gathered small fabric pieces from a scrap bag at home.
Brigh wanted to draw from the Irish phrase 'fite fuaite' - meaning intertwined or woven together, and decided to create a patchwork from mixed scrap pieces of fabric to represent this. She wanted to highlight all the people and environments connected through the fashion industry, from textile production and clothing manufacturing, to the people who buy and wear the clothes, and the people affected by where our clothes often end up in landfill.
🧵 Design & Creation 🧵
Brigh began by planning how she could make the jumpsuit fit her again. She made alterations like detaching the bodice from the legs and changing the shape of the bottom. This was done by inserting patchwork godets and lengthening them with panels harvested from the romper.
Brigh created the patchwork by cutting out small rectangle and square shapes from the scrap fabrics she collected and machine sewing them together to form larger pieces for the godets. The trousers are finished with a thin fabric trim around the waist that ties at the back, made from a harvested strip of fabric.
The outfit is accessorised with a bag and hat, also featuring patchwork details, made into long strips and sewn on to bring the whole outfit together.
See more photos of the outfit: https://www.relovefashion.ie/fite-fuaite-kerry
This is a second national win for Brigh, who last year took home the Overall prize for Relove Fashion. Huge congratulations to Brigh!
National College of Art & Design, Dublin Radio Kerry Kerry County Council Presentation Castleisland
24/04/2026
Aoibhin Kocikowska, Wicklow County Council has taken home the National Award for Most Innovative for her upcycled outfit, Reverse Converse.
This outfit just wowed the judges! Who would have thought you could turn a pair of runners into a top? They were also very impressed with the transformation of a pair of tracksuit bottoms into a skort.
➡️➡️➡️ Read About the Award Winning Outfit
🧵 Inspiration & Sourcing🧵
The items used to create this outfit were sourced from local charity shops, as well as leftover fabric from a previous project, and her own old jewellery.
Aobhin was inspired by similar runner upcycles she had seen online, and decided to incorporate this technique using Converse into her outfit design.
🧵 Design & Creation 🧵
The skort (skirt with shorts underneath) is made from a pair of tracksuit bottoms with a coloured panel down the side. Aoibhin removed the waistband, cut strips from tracksuit, and sewed them together creating a layered patchwork, arranging the strips so that the blue panel creates a kind of brickwork pattern. She then made the top part of the tracksuit legs into shorts.
To create the top, she deconstructed the Converse. She made two long strips of blue lacing from a length of scrap fabric she had from a previous project. She created the straps and corset lacing at the back by sewing the strips to the front shoe and lacing it through the eyelets at the back. When she tried it on she realised it didn’t fit, so she made it bigger by adding a strip of fabric between the two shoes, harvested from the blue side panel of the tracksuit leg.
The bag was made by removing the front part of the sole from each shoe and inserting one shoe into the other before glueing it back together. The seam is covered by a piece of a belt with the buckle used to close the bag.
Such innovation! Many people have already tried to buy the bag at the Rediscovery Centre…
See more photos of the outfit: https://www.relovefashion.ie/reverse-converse-wicklow
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