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H&M is the latest to jump on the black celebrity fashion collaboration craze

Academy Award-winning costume designer Ruth E. Carter has made looks for some of Hollywood’s most memorable movies.

On Thursday, the creative mind behind the critically-acclaimed styles used in hit films like “Black Panther,” and “Dolemite Is My Name,” launched a new, limited-edition H&M clothing line.

The Ruth Carter x H&M Collection is an assortment of t-shirts, sweatshirts, shorts and headgear commemorating African-American fashions of the mid-to-late 1980s and early 1990s, now known as the golden age of Hip-Hop. It was an eclectic time in black fashion history when vibrant pan-African colors, bucket hats, and apparel celebrating Malcolm X were staples in the culture.

It was also an era that Carter helped shape with her costume design work in Spike Lee films like “Do The Right Thing” in 1989 and the 1992 “Malcolm X” biopic starring Denzel Washington.

Carter says her new clothing line is a throwback to elements that inspired her early in her career. The venture is also giving her a way to connect with up and coming artists and inspire other black and brown creatives to chase their dreams.

“If someone was going to ask me if I was going to do a fashion line, my first response was no,” she told CNN Business. “But this new line tells a story. It connects everyone who has doubts or fears of themselves as they go through this journey. I hope any one of these pieces will shed a light of representation and confidence to the wearer and give them that energy that makes them feel great, like they can accomplish anything.”

H&M is one of the latest apparel companies to collaborate with a prominent black celebrity on a fashion line, but it is far from the first.

Last year, Gucci tapped Harlem fashion legend Dapper Dan — who was already on the company’s payroll — to do a collection. The announcement came shortly after the Kering-owned luxury retailer took heat for selling a turtleneck sweater resembling black face.

Coach worked with Michael B. Jordan on a new line inspired by Naruto, the actor’s animé muse. Louis Vuitton made Virgil Abloh its first-ever black designer in 2018. Its parent company, LVMH, partnered with Rihanna to create a Fenty luxury fashion line a year later.

Even athletic apparel companies are getting in on the black-collab. craze. Abloh recently unveiled his new Nike x Off-White training line earlier this month. And Beyoncé teamed up with Adidas last month to release her new Ivy Park X Adidas athletic gear collection.

Fashion industry expert Teri Agins, author of “Hijacking the Runway: How Celebrities are Stealing the Spotlight from Fashion Designers,” says the retail clothing industry is only now beginning to appreciate the value of multiculturalism in branding after decades of ignoring black and brown people.

Working with celebrity designers rather than developing up-and-coming ones, she says, gives companies a faster return on investment.

“If I were a big corporation and I’m thinking about who I want to promote, you want someone who has some name recognition and can give some immediate payoff,” Agins told CNN Business. “Celebrity trumps everything.”

H&M’s release of its new Ruth Carter collection comes just over two years after the company’s “Coolest monkey in the jungle” scandal, when the brand’s website featured a photo of a black child wearing a sweatshirt with the eyebrow-raising message printed on the front.

The image went viral and created international outrage. There were protests and riots outside H&M stores in South Africa, where the Swedish brand and its parent company, Hennes & Mauritz, had faced previous scrutiny for failing to hire more black models and designers. The uproar forced H&M to temporarily close some of its stores there.

Carter admits the incident made her think twice about working with H&M when she was first approached by the company.

“I not only thought twice, I thought about it three or four times over!” she said. “It was very important to me to know exactly how it happened and what they were doing in its wake. And they answered. I looked over everything. I then asked that my story with this line be about a positive message to empower others.”

H&M said it completely respects Carter’s opinion and her response, adding that since the sweater incident, the company has “listened to feedback and taken many steps to be a more inclusive and diverse workplace and brand.”

Over the past two years, H&M has hired Ezinne Kwubiri as its inaugural head of inclusion and diversity. The company also instituted an unconscious bias training program for its workforce and created a multicultural employee resource group known as the Collective.

In August, H&M unveiled its limited edition Mantsho x H&M collection after partnering with South African designer Palesa Mokubung.

The company also worked with Carter to create a scholarship program at Hampton University, a historically black college that is also her alma mater.

“Only then was I satisfied with H&M’s apology and show of remorse,” Carter said. “For me, the positive outcome is that through incidents like these, we can step closer to a universal language and positive imagery that inspires our children.”

Article Topic Follows: Biz/Tech

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