Eco-Friendly Designer Transforms Garbage Into Glamorous Outfits

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Most artists have a favorite material they like to work with. For 28-year-old Kristen Alyce, it happens to be trash. The eco-conscious designer uses her incredible talent to transform garbage like empty drink bottles and Skittles wrappers into glamorous outfits that sell for thousands of dollars.

Kristen says the idea came to her after she saw how much waste she and her three college roommates generated on a daily basis. The Fine Arts student began to dream about transforming the discarded bags and packages into beautiful garments. Her first dress made from plastic bags and rolled magazines was quirky, fun and even glamorous. However, she only made it to test her creativity.

The young designer did not consider starting a commercial venture until she spent a week working at Couture Fashion Week in New York City. There she observed the excitement generated by new and vintage looks and decided to see if her unusual idea would result in as much enthusiasm. She began by creating a line of 12 garbage-inspired dresses. They were a tremendous success and Garbage Gone Glam was born!

Today the company that has offices in Palm Beach, Florida and New York City, produces a wide variety of outfits that range from cocktail dresses to ball gowns. Kristen, of course, doesn't scout trash cans for her material anymore. Instead, she seeks it from companies that have manufactured more than they need and are planning to throw away the extras. Since the designer can work with anything from brochures to yellow page directory pages to candy wrappers, finding 'trash' is never an issue.

However, if you think the garbage inspired couture dresses come cheap, think again. The price for ready-made creations retails on the company's site from $500 to $1,500. Those seeking custom outfits have to fork out as much as $2,000 USD. Though that may appear expensive, the designer says that she has no shortage of customers. In fact thanks to persistent requests she now even has trash inspired attire for men that includes jackets, ties, trousers and even board shorts! While, most of the outfits are hardy enough to withstand multiple wears, whether they can be cleaned is a little unclear.

Resources: odditycentral.com, dailymail.co.uk

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1334 Comments
  • purdue11
    purdue11almost 9 years
    i think that the cloths must be so much money becaucs then people will run in the story and still the cloths
    • purdue12
      purdue12almost 9 years
      she took lots of time to do that and she makes it out of trash.
      • purdue22
        purdue22almost 9 years
        It is a high price because nobody else makes them
        • purdue8
          purdue8almost 9 years
          Because Kristen has a talent from turning dirty trash from glamourous out fits. The costemers will pay so much also because nobody does that but her so the prices will be high.
          • purdue14
            purdue14almost 9 years
            I think that Kristen's customers willing to pay so much for outfits made from trash because they were fashionable in some way.
            • purdue16
              purdue16almost 9 years
              I think Kristen's customers pay so much for outfits made of trash because they like the creativity of Kristen's work.
              • purdue10
                purdue10almost 9 years
                I think they are willing to pay so much because they love her design of the clothing and her clothes are one of a kind
                • purdue20
                  purdue20almost 9 years
                  I think she wants to make people pay $1,000 for the trash dresses because she makes them by herself and she kinda invented to make dresses out of trash with her creativity.
                  • purdue3
                    purdue3almost 9 years
                    Maybe because they like it and maybe they want to pay them alot for the hard work they did.
                  • purdue21
                    purdue21almost 9 years
                    They like how it looks, or they like the style.