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Patrick robinson author
Patrick robinson author












patrick robinson author

Hope to see you all next season if there is one and I’m fortunate to be back for it. That being said, as always, I still wouldn’t trade my job for anything.” Lee added “So if the stars align, and I’m fortunate to be back for another season, I promise to do my best to ensure you have the best experience that I and whatever crew I’m blessed with can provide.

patrick robinson author

We got through it, but I don’t feel that it was our best effort by any means, and we can and will do better. Did we fail? No, but we could have been better. And what did Captain Lee say of this season? “The failure of a season falls squarely on the Captain’s shoulders. Viewers learn if Kelley and Jennice are still together or not. Meantime, Kelley and Jennice Ontiveros fume. So did Ben and Kate bed one another below deck? Chef Ben Robinson and Kate Chastain’s faces are shown as Andy Cohen asks who did Ben sleep with besides Kat Held. We’re going to pay everyone a super fair wage that works on this project.Second, Chef Ben Robinson confesses to allegedly sleeping with two women on Below Deck. It’s about not being just environmentally responsible, but also socially and economically responsible. It’s really about letting the customer decide what we’re going to make going forward, they get the vote, and then we’ll go out and make it in our communities. “Part of the reason we could do this in two weeks is that it’s all done with 3-D modeling, so you can blow it up and move it around,” Robinson explains. Indeed, it’s thanks to Robinson’s thoroughly researched digital-first approach that the project feels less like a pipe dream, and more like a genuinely compelling prototype for building a more sustainable fashion label in 2020. In a sense, we’re going back to that model-but we’re also going to be using a lot of tech.”

patrick robinson author

“People made things at home, and that’s how they ran their businesses.

patrick robinson author

“I was telling my dad about it, who was involved in the Civil Rights movement, and he told me that this is how the world worked when he grew up, especially in the Black community,” Robinson says. And this new model also exists as a more sentimental ode to the rich tradition of Black craft communities in America. Robinson speaks thoughtfully about his presence as a Black designer in the industry many decades before the long-overdue shifts currently underway to address representation and diversity within the fashion community. “But halfway through this crisis in the U.S., when we started seeing huge job losses and the Black Lives Matter protests, I felt like we were only talking out of one side of our mouth by only talking about the environment, and that we also had to be a social company.” “We’ve always been very environmentally focused-all of our fabrics are either upcycled or heavily sustainable and registered with Bluesign,” he explains. The benefits, he hopes, will be broader than just the ecological (although they will be that, too, given the dramatic reductions in international shipping and the sole use of deadstock fabrics). and work in localized production hubs employing craftspeople and technicians beginning in Detroit and New York. The changes in question are part of a project Robinson is terming “community-led,” which will eventually see all of Paskho’s production move to the U.S. “We’ve actually changed our production model completely.” “It's the fastest we’ve done something this big,” he explains. After developing an entire collection in just two weeks, today Paskho is debuting six pieces made from upcycled deadstock fabrics that will mark a turning point for where Robinson is planning to take the brand next. Robinson has also been quick to respond with his approach to both design and production.














Patrick robinson author