For those who don't follow CraftSnark, let me introduce you to the drama over how Black Nambian women now own all patchwork clothes in the entire world and anyone with a company that has a "white-sounding name" is stealing patchwork. To be fair, even CS thinks it's bullshit.
ChristyDawn is a handmade, sustainable clothing company. They pay their workers a living wage.
They released a patchwork red wrap dress, which is hand-cut by a Latina lady. So we're not even dealing with "white people" here.
A.La.Reunion is inspired by Nambian culture and makes spaghetti-strap patchwork dresses with many different colors.
Can you spot the similarities betweent the two? No? Me either.
But as you can see from the chronically online Instagram cry-babies, people got butthurt that ChristyDawn had the audacity to make a patchwork dress because it's clearly stolen from A.La.Reunion despite not even being remotely similar at all. I didn't bother linking all the comments, because they all sound the same.
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The best part is the top comment whining about non-existent theft is from Haptic Labs, which makes map quilts.
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Map quilts have existed since the 50s, maybe even before. You can find a lot of vintage patterns for them. I'm sure some ingenious lady made a map of her town on fabric with embroidery and quilting centuries ago, but it's been lost to time. There's also plenty of Etsy map patterns presumably released before Haptic Labs ever existed. So they stole the idea of map quilts themselves to make a profit.
As for A.La.Reunion, she believes she owns the rights to patchwork dresses and blah blah representation blah.
If I didn't think patchwork looked like ass on me, I'd be buying ChristyDawn's dress and supporting a less idiotic company.
And fun fact, the Nambian patchwork dresses only came about in the early 20th century. They're not some centuries old fashion, unlike most quilting. If we're talking about patchwork garments in history, the Japanese were creating
boro (patchwork) fabric for garments since the 17th century. The style has been carried on throughout the years and used by fashion designers around the world. Yet...there's not really seeing a flood of Japanese people getting pissed about patchwork.