Miranda Mallinson-Pocock

Redress Design Award 2024 Finalist

Meet The Designer

“My focus as a sustainable designer is on preservation, creating from what is already in our local communities and designing pieces that have purpose and longevity.”
Miranda Mallinson-Pocock
“My focus as a sustainable designer is on preservation, creating from what is already in our local communities and designing pieces that have purpose and longevity.”
Miranda Mallinson-Pocock

Bio

Miranda Mallinson-Pocock is a Finalist of the Redress Design Award 2024. She is studying for her BA (Hons) in Fashion Design from Kingston University, UK.

Region

Collection

Focus

Redress Design Award Collection

Miranda’s Redress Design Award collection, ‘Nostos’, reflects the theme of homecoming and how we seek comfort in our homes during chaos and change. The collection repurposes home textiles such as bed linens and soft furnishings, and reknits moth-eaten or neglected jumpers, to create elevated everyday pieces that carry nostalgic memories. Felting adds patterns and textures to knitwear, along with improving the strength and durability from natural fibres such as wool and ramie.
Nostos

Redress Design Award Collection 2024

Miranda’s Redress Design Award collection, ‘Nostos’, reflects the theme of homecoming and how we seek comfort in our homes during chaos and change. The collection repurposes home textiles such as bed linens and soft furnishings, and reknits moth-eaten or neglected jumpers, to create elevated everyday pieces that carry nostalgic memories. Felting adds patterns and textures to knitwear, along with improving the strength and durability from natural fibres such as wool and ramie.

Q&A with the designer

It was natural for me to design and create garments from what was already around me. Both my parents repurposed and reused what we had. Curtains would find a second life as pillow cases, bedsheets as children’s costumes, and odd trinkets made into light fittings or decorations. Seeing purpose in what others would regard as waste expands the creative design process, meaning my work can be led by the textiles themselves, leaning into their imperfections and irregularities.

By focusing on local sourcing methods, and relying on community for fabrics, I can minimise waste, not just in materials, but in carbon footprint from travel and processing.

Focusing on working with wool, lambswool, and other natural fibres means I can combine yarns of the same type to ensure recyclability. It was difficult working with yarns that have lost some of their strength, but with processes like felting, I’ve found ways to reuse these yarns which otherwise would not have been able to create a long-lasting garment.

Another key issue I consider a lot is wearability. I am passionate about making clothes that people would want to wear as a beautiful everyday garment, something that has purpose and function, not something to just be stored.

I am keen to develop my knowledge of the commercial side of the fashion industry, to better understand how sustainable practices can be scaled up in larger companies. With large companies able to greenwash their campaigns with little regulation, I would like to know how to discriminate between actual positive change and empty marketing.

I am also inspired by smaller companies combating waste in knitwear manufacturing, such as The Waste Yarn Project and Bethany Williams. Working with socially and environmentally conscious brands like these is a long-term goal of mine.

Pack away tote bags! You never know when or where your materials will come from. Sometimes it’s when you least expect it that you discover or are gifted something, or come across a charity shop or market. It’s good to have a bag handy so you’re not stuck carrying armfuls of fabric around.

I hope that when people see the collection, they get the same feeling of comfort from it that I do. The materials used are familiar to all of us, and I want to create something soft and inviting that resonates with people’s sense of safety at home.

January 15, 2025

Online Session: Circular Fashion Design Strategies: Design for Low Waste

Join a LIVE online session for emerging designers to deepen your knowledge for creating circular fashion, and give you an edge in your application for the Redress Design Award.

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November 7, 2025

SME clinic to grow online retail business sustainably

Redress, together with global logistics leader and Redress Design Award 2025 Platinum Sponsor, DHL, invited our Redress Alumni budding fashion brands along with other Hong Kong SMEs to a clinic-style ...

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November 5, 2025

Supporting sustainable talent with exhibitions and networking

Fresh off the runway of the Redress Design Award 2025, we unveiled exhibitions to feature the waste-reducing looks of our ten Finalists and select Alumni who are spearheading fashion’s shift toward ...

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