How One Minneapolis Upcycler is Changing Sustainable Fashion

How One Minneapolis Upcycler is Changing Sustainable Fashion

Kristen McCoy poses like a mannequin among her own designs made from condoms at the RETHINK studio on Tuesday in Minneapolis.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

Trash bags, CDs and condoms: How one Minneapolis upcycler is changing sustainable fashion

Arts and Culture: Kristen McCoy used to make purses out of old shower curtains and CDs. This was in the early 1990s in the rural Minnesota farming town of Hoffman.

So experimental design is nothing new for McCoy. She is equal parts designer, upcycler, professional tailor and problem solver.

Her experiences led her to a surprising fashion innovation — making clothing out of old (but unused) latex condoms.

For the “Ready or Hot” Planned Parenthood Minneapolis runway show which presented in February, McCoy made four looks out of condoms. Yes, it was a way to promote sexual health, but it was also another fashion challenge for McCoy.

Planned Parenthood North Central States began doing condom couture as part of their runway show in 2014 with a dress designed by Joy Noelle.

“There’s so many ways to be sustainable and eco-friendly and glamorous right now and you know, the price tag is right to do so,” McCoy said

Kristen McCoy is seen

Kerem Yücel | MPR News

McCoy’s stint with condoms is just a small part of her overall mission for sustainable fashion. Fifteen years ago, for a post-apocalyptic cyberpunk fashion show, she collected trash from the streets of Minneapolis and used parchment paper and an iron to smooth out possible designs. She then used trash bags as corsets and lace.

McCoy has a long history as an upcycler, but not with intent. She says there was no money for her to buy new fabrics so she began cutting apart her old clothes.

“Everything just became upcycle out of necessity, it was what I had access to,” she said. “Upcycling is a great home for somebody with an overactive imagination, it has been really nice to channel it into these pieces that are deemed a lost cause and then I bring it back to life.”

After she ran out of clothes, she discovered the thrift store. That is where things started to change — she could buy all of the material she needed for only five dollars.

Later, she decided to go to Minneapolis Community and Technical College to study apparel technologies. She soon learned about fast fashion and how wasteful the industry is.

Kristen McCoy looks on with a sewing machine

McCoy is hosting a condom couture studio tour.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

“To me, that was mortifying, I had to figure out a way to be okay with being in the fashion industry. Otherwise, I needed to find another field to go into,” McCoy said. “So that is when I dug deep and revisited what I was doing as a kid and realized there was a word for it —upcycling. And from then on, I decided I was only going to work with surplus or secondhand fabrics.”

At her RETHINK studio in Minneapolis, materials are spread across the room. Upcycled jeans that had been deemed doomed, old choral dresses and floral bedsheets.

And in the middle of the room, her four condom couture looks. A puffer vest, faux fur, bomber jacket and fringe skirt.

But they did not come that way. Instead, things began with many boxes of condoms being delivered to her studio. She had to experiment. Could she cut them? Sew them? Fringe them?

Every outfit was stitched by hand, and if she was lucky, by machine. That meant hours and hours of work. She set up an assembly line with her family. The tips were cut and rectangles were measured.

Kristen McCoy poses for a portrait

Kristen McCoy has been upcycling her whole life. She began with old shower curtains and CDs making them into purses.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

A bomber jacket was made with a loom, sweatpants and rubber cement. For a skirt, all the fringes were cut by hand. The puffer vest is cut rectangles, and the faux fur is folded repeatedly and sewed.

For McCoy, her latest fashion adventure came at the perfect time.

“Things are so polarized now, it caught me off guard. When I made the announcement I was doing this, I lost a bunch of followers on Instagram,” she said. “Which, I mean, if you’re going to have a list cleanse, it’s okay if people leave because they aren’t comfortable. I grew up with abstinence-only education and had some really hard learning experiences with that. The things they [Planned Parenthood] are doing … it’s worth fighting for.”

At the end of the project, McCoy said she isn’t surprised by her latest new medium. She loves a challenge, and showing people what is possible with something they would never consider. And if she can make clothes out of condoms, her hope is maybe we can rethink our fashion choices.

McCoy says the easiest place to start for those who want to enter the sustainable fashion sphere is by working with what is already in your closet. Any change is still change — and you can’t do it all.

Rainbow fringe skirt seen

A rainbow fringe skirt out of condoms. The look debuted at the “Ready or Hot” Planned Parenthood runway show.

Kerem Yücel | MPR News
The woven condom bomber jacket seen

A woven bomber jacket made out of condoms. The look debuted at the “Ready or Hot” Planned Parenthood runway show in Minneapolis.

Kerem Yücel | MPR News
Faux fur condom jacket seen

A faux fur jacket made out of condoms. The look debuted at the “Ready or Hot” Planned Parenthood runway show in Minneapolis on Feb. 28

Kerem Yücel | MPR News

You can find old pieces in your closet and make new ways to wear them, start getting clothes tailored and treat your clothes better. This means drying your clothes on low and air-drying stretch jeans and delicates.

Resale and repair stores are a must, and the Twin Cities offers many options. McCoy suggests 4evr Sale’ingOld SchoolCake Plus Size ResaleRepair LairScience and Kindness and Minneapolis Mending.

“There’s so many ways to be sustainable and eco-friendly and glamorous right now and you know, the price tag is right to do so,” she said.

You can shop McCoy’s designs online, or by texting 612-876-7978 to schedule a visit to the RETHINK Studio at 3449 Bloomington Ave in Minneapolis.

Kristen McCoy works on the Puffer Condom Vest

Once McCoy realized how wasteful the fashion industry is, she says she needed to figure out a way to be okay with it in her own way.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

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ICYMI

Groveland Gallery: New Works – Minneapolis, MN

Is Eyeshadow An “Old-Lady Thing?”

Is Eyeshadow An “Old-Lady Thing?”

NYLON’s beauty editor weighs in on the Gen-Z/millennial divide when it comes to going-out makeup.

BEAUTY: I’m not normally one to fear the churn of the trend cycle — if someone wants to bring back low-rise jeans and flared yoga pants, let them. But recently, I learned that my attitude wasn’t quite so casual when I was hit with a paralyzing, paradigm-shifting beauty revelation: We are, apparently, facing the potential end of eyeshadow.

As a beauty editor, I feel like I’m the last one to find out that eyeshadow is allegedly over. The first sign was when I was recently at The Spaniard in the West Village, where the crowd generally falls on the southside of the millennial-Gen Z cusp. I was wearing a full-on shimmery mint-green eyecourtesy of a gorgeous Pat McGrath Labs palette, but I couldn’t help but notice that everywhere I looked, there were only very bare lids. Soon after, I was served a now-viral TikTok video in which creator Jennifer Latch says her daughter “just told me that eyeshadow is a Gen X and millennial thing, aka an old-lady thing.” (The surrounding discussion is, tellingly, only millennials in an uproar — or offering ways to modernize their application based on this shocking information.)

I love all makeup, but I love eyeshadow the most — it’s also by far the makeup I get the most compliments on (perhaps from millennials, but still). And for as long as I can remember, applying powdered pigments to your eyelids — especially of the smokey, colorful, or glittery variety — has always equaled fun. It signifies getting dressed up and going out, we were taught in the aughts and 2010s. Good skin is nice, sure, but it’s not the centerpiece of a “look.” Lipstick is cool, but it’s prone to smudging or coming off on the rims of glasses. Eyeshadow, in comparison, is pretty, draws attention to your gaze, generally stays in place, and says “I’m here to have a good time.” Sometimes the best part of the night is getting ready with your friends, listening to music, and blending out dark shadow in the outer corners of your eyes. How could we have strayed so far from the light?

To confirm this chilling news, I accessed my own Gen-Z data bank: my 21-year-old cousin. “If I saw a smokey eye, I would think that they are definitely older,” she says, though she adds that she has nothing against them (probably to soothe me). “I might wear it if someone was doing it for me for an occasion — but it’s just a lot of work for just going out.” Her preferred nighttime look, she says, is dewy and clean: maybe some eyeliner, but at most a little bronzer swept across her eyelids. All her friends subscribe to the “less is more” approach Sofia Richie Grainge and Alix Earle have popularized.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 01: Sofia Richie attends the 2024 Warner Music Group Pre-GRAMMY P...

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PARIS, FRANCE - FEBRUARY 28: Alix Earle attends the Balmain Womenswear Fall/Winter 2024-2025 show as...

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Mentally, I wonder where the fun has gone, but as we talk, I start to get it. Part of the appeal is the perceived breeziness: If your “day” and “night” looks are one and the same, you don’t need to get ready because you are ready. But maybe the bigger reason is that the way we live has become so drastically different that the very idea of separation in the day is now outdated.

Millennials grew up going to class in the morning and going out at night; then, as adults, we commuted to offices where, at 5 p.m., we’d throw on a lip or eye at our desks to meet our friends for drinks. Every women’s magazine told us about tweaking our outfits and makeup to go from day to night, but it was also the real structure of our lives. But in the post-COVID era, fewer of us leave the house at 9 a.m. and come back late anymore. Work and free time have all merged into one, with the same comfy clothes and unchanging makeup — which some may find freeing, but to me feels monotonous.

So while it feels odd to accept that we’re no longer the youngest, coolest generation anymore, I can also cherish how I learned about makeup (and life) the way I did. And yes — to no one’s surprise, I, for one, will be holding onto my eyeshadow. Even if Gen Z is now making fun of us for our old-lady makeup and “wearing business casual to the club,” at least we were going to the club at all.

SHOP NYLON-APPROVED EYESHADOWS

MTHRSHP Bijoux Brilliance Palette in Starstruck Splendour
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MIA 40 years of Art in Bloom – Minneapolis, MN

ICYMI: “Eggroll Queen” to bring her food truck to Minneapolis

ICYMI: “Eggroll Queen” to bring her food truck to Minneapolis

Eggroll Queen

“The Best Egg Rolls in Town” are coming to the city on Friday.

St. Paul‘s Eggroll Queen is bringing her food truck to Minneapolis.

The business posted on its Facebook page that it will begin lunch service twice a week in the city, and will be parked by The Commons at 2nd Street, 2925 Chicago Ave. this coming Friday.

It marks a positive step for owner Mai Vang after a tumultuous year in which she has seen her food truck burglarized multiple times.

Community members along with fellow food truck owners have provided support to Vang’s business, raising thousands of dollars in times where she needed it.

Eggroll Queen’s origins date back to late April 2015 and Eastsider Vang’s prolific fundraising efforts, making 3,700 egg rolls for a charity event on behalf of the Peter Vang family, who lost their daughter in a house fire.

Her cooking exploits continued, later that year selling egg rolls at $1 each to raise the money to pay for cochlear implants two years after she suffered sudden and permanent hearing loss.

This eventually turned into the food truck that has been a common sight across the east metro in recent years, and will now become one in Minneapolis too.

Minneapolis Eggroll Queen Fans, we’ll start serving lunch twice a week beginning tomorrow!

You can check out where the truck will be next here.
Groveland Gallery: New Works – Minneapolis, MN

Groveland Gallery: New Works – Minneapolis, MN

Dusk – Wabasha Bridge

Groveland Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of New Works, an exhibit of etchings and paintings by Stuart Loughridge. As a studio painter, Loughridge works primarily with oil-paint and watercolors. He is a devoted printmaker, well known for his etchings–and occasionally he is able to find time to create serigraphs. Stuart’s methods of creating a landscape are rooted in the 18th and 19th century practice of watercolor sketching, and he always carries a small watercolor kit with him. These treasured plein-air sketches are the raw material, the seeds for the finished studio creations, whether that be an etching, watercolor, or oil painting.

Reminiscent of an old master’s printmaking process, Stuart builds his richly detailed prints with layers of precise, linear marks. His subjects span rocky northern shores to architectural city bridges recognizable to metro residents. Stuart’s eye for detail extends to his unique frames—his work resides in antique frames handpicked and refurbished by the artist. Of this new series, Stuart states, “As usual I wish to present to the viewer with as wide a range of media and genre as I am able. This show will focus on printmaking along with a selection of paintings in watercolor and oil, with attention to the relationship between the field sketches and the studio works.”

Winner’s Circle: The Kentucky Derby Party – Canopy by Hilton Minneapolis Mill District

Winner’s Circle: The Kentucky Derby Party – Canopy by Hilton Minneapolis Mill District

Winner’s Circle The Kentucky Derby Party

Winner’s Circle is THE Kentucky Derby Party for lovers of fashion.

Karen Morris Millinery: Karen felt it’s time for a fresh new take on the Kentucky Derby. The inaugural Winner’s Circle is “The” Kentucky Derby Party for lovers of fashion in Minnesota. This new event will combine the fun parts of a typical Derby party together with a runway show featuring Karen’s newest hats along with elegant ready-to-wear summer fashions, plenty of fun and games, and more.
Runway show, derby viewing, silent auction, fun and games, all for the benefit of This Old Horse.

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