ECO-LUXE LABEL HARTISWIM LAUNCHES AT VOISINS

HartiSWIM, a British Isles-based eco-luxe swimwear brand made its debut in Jersey’s premier department store Voisins this week. The label is the creation of Tessa Hartmann CBE, a fashion veteran, entrepreneur, and TV personality.

Inspired by her artist husband who paints under the name of ‘Harti’, this is a bold, sustainable statement print collection of swimwear made from recycled plastic bottles from our oceans. By using this new sustainable fiber called ‘Repreve’, made from bottles collected within 50 kilometers of coastlines in countries or areas that lack formal waste or recycling systems, HartiSWIM allows their customers to play a role in solving the ever-growing problem of ocean plastic. This premium fabric also features built-in sun and chlorine protection to +50.

Having worked as a consultant in the fashion industry for over 25 years and the founder of The Scottish Fashion Awards, Hartmann recruited her old friend and UK lingerie industry veteran David Finlayson, former president for Sales and Marketing for Calvin Klein Underwear Europe. Together they have seen first-hand how the sector is one of the major polluting industries in the world, and Tessa decided to step up and create the ethical swimwear label.

The ‘Series 1’ debut is a 12-piece capsule collection featuring Harti’s pop-art graphics from his artwork which depict the ‘collective subconscious’ and consist of sleek one-pieces, statement bikinis, eye-catching rash guards and dreamy organic silk kaftans. The label will not have dated seasonal collections, instead it will encourage customers to buy better but buy less to help the environment. Customers will be enticed to collect from each series of statement prints which will be reproduced in limited quantities per year, with subsequent series being added from Harti’s artworks annually.

Authentic, original, and audacious, the pieces can be worn from beach to street, any time of the day. The collection encourages imperfections as Harti’s paintings are filled with blotches of colour, glazing streaks, because to be perfect is boring, artificial, one-dimensional and intrinsically robotic. Tessa wanted to create a label that is inclusive in terms of its sizing, ageless and environmentally conscious. She has banned photoshop from her shoots and aims to use models who represent real women.