Английская Википедия:Aurora James

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Aurora James is a Canadian creative director, activist, and fashion designer. In 2013, she founded the fashion label Brother Vellies, with the goal of promoting traditional African design practices and techniques. In 2020, James founded the 15 Percent Pledge as a non-profit organization to support Black-owned businesses. Her memoir Wildflower was released in 2023.

Early life

James was born to a Ghanaian father and a Canadian mother in Guelph, Ontario, Canada.[1][2] Her childhood was split between Canada and Jamaica.[1][3] In 2010, James relocated to Los Angeles and later to New York City.

Career and brand

After traveling across Africa[4] in 2011, James spent the next few years experimenting with design, testing designs at local markets in New York and working with various artisan groups.[1] She launched Brother Vellies in January 2013,[4] started with $3,500 in savings,[3] with a goal of promoting the work of African artisans.[2] The first formal Brother Vellies collection was produced for the spring 2014 season and was created entirely with shoemakers in South Africa. James later expanded to working in other countries within Africa and beyond, including Mexico and Honduras, to continue producing desert boots, shoes, slippers, and sandals.[5][2]

In 2015, James began producing handbags for Brother Vellies, the same year she won the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund prize.

In 2020, James was featured on the cover of the September issue of Vogue magazine, in a portrait by Jordan Casteel.[6][7]

In 2022, she was also unanimously elected as a Vice Chair of the CFDA.[8]

Brother Vellies has been worn by activists, celebrities, artists and musicians, including Beyoncé,[4] Solange Knowles,[9] Nicki Minaj,[10] and Elaine Welteroth.[11] James designed the "Tax the Rich" dress worn by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at the 2021 Met Gala.[12][13][14][2]

The 15 Percent Pledge

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In 2020, in the wake of the murder of George Floyd and the wave of Black Lives Matter activism that followed, James launched an initiative called the 15 Percent Pledge,[15][16] with an Instagram post on May 29 that Vogue writes "immediately went viral and resulted in an outpouring of interest."[1] The 15 Percent Pledge Foundation was then created as a non-profit organization to urge major retailers to commit 15 percent of their shelf-space to Black-owned businesses.[3][17] The foundation offers large corporations accountability and strategy suggestions[18] as well as consulting services.[17] The goal of the foundation is to advocate on behalf of Black-owned businesses and to build generational wealth in Black communities;[19] according to its website, the initiative "was born from seeing multiple acts of social injustice and police brutality in the United States, with a lack of corporate accountability for the systemic issues at play."[20]

Time magazine writes that James wanted to "find a way that companies could make a tangible change", and "from there, the 15 Percent Pledge was born." Cam Wolf writes in GQ magazine that "James is careful to note that the 15 Percent Pledge is not the only solution", and that James said, "This is a really tough time for everyone, and people shopping is by no means going to ease the pain of the lives that we have lost ... There are also a lot of other things that we need people to be doing, like donating to bail funds."[21]

Memoir

In May 2023, James' memoir Wildflower was released.[22] According to a review in Kirkus Reviews, "Throughout the text, James is vulnerable and frank, cultivating a narrative voice that is both intimate and captivating; on the line level, her language is impressively lyrical."[22] Bianca Betancourt writes in Harper's Bazaar, "James doesn't hold back. She movingly intertwines memories of her youth with deeply honest accounts of the life she leads today as a designer and entrepreneur."[23]

Cat Woods writes in Observer, "While reading Wildflower, it can sometimes be hard to see how James conjured up the resolve and determination to carry on in an industry notoriously defined by privilege, exploitation and savage competition."[24] In Fashionista, Andrea Bossi writes, "Sure, a fashion lover can appreciate how James takes the reader through learning about the footwear trade, but the book speaks to a broader audience. Specifically, it appeals to anyone who has ever questioned their path and purpose, especially women and women of color."[25]

Awards and honors

References

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External links

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