Home breadcru News breadcru Sustainability breadcru 'Recycling old materials is present in Bahamian culture'

'Recycling old materials is present in Bahamian culture'

24 Jun '20
1 min read

The tradition of making garments out of reclaimed materials as observed during Junkanoo—a traditional festival which takes place throughout the Caribbean—demonstrates that the process of recycling old materials is present in celebratory aspects of Bahamian culture, says Teleica Kirkland, creative director at the Costume Institute of the African Diaspora.

"In the Bahamas, the term Junkanoo refers to a parade that happens every Boxing Day and New Year’s Day. Revellers wear elaborate costumes made of cardboard, paper, scrap and natural materials, including straw plait, and dance down Bay Street, the main street running through the centre of Nassau," Kirkland writes in an article in the hard bound fifth edition of the Sustainability Compendium - ‘Going Circular’ brought out by Fibre2Fashion.

The phrase “junk a new” was declared by veteran Junkanoo practitioner and musician Dr Offfff as his band would make their costumes from any types of organic trash on the morning of the parades, literally turning junk into something new, Kirkland writes in her article 'Junk a New'.

Pre-order your copy of the Sustainability Compendium V – Going Circular

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