Vivienne Westwood gives her advice on new designers and fashion waste

Getty Images Westwood backstageGetty Images

Dame Vivienne Westwood says people should buy fewer clothes to help protect the environment.

The designer spoke to Newsbeat backstage at her London Fashion Week Men's show.

"My message is, 'Buy less, choose well, make it last,'" she says.

Her circus-themed collection featured recycled plastic bottles as shoes and aluminium cans pinned to tights, as a campaign against fashion waste.

Vivienne Westwood A male model in a purple dressVivienne Westwood

It's only the second time the 76-year-old has shown a collection at men's fashion week.

The range was unisex, with androgynous female models in pinstripe suit jackets, and men in sheer tunics and form-fitting ball gowns.

Vivienne Westwood An acrobat in a hoop on the catwalkVivienne Westwood
Acrobats performed alongside models

After more than four decades in fashion she says there's no secret to success - young designers need to "work it out for themselves".

But she wants the fashion industry to move away from producing so many cheap clothes.

Vivienne Westwood A male model in a sheer tunicVivienne Westwood

She wants shoppers to buy fewer items, choose them better and make them last.

"It's [about] quality, not quantity, not landfill."

Vivienne Westwood Plastic bottles and cans were trapped in tights as part of Westwood's environmental messageVivienne Westwood
Plastic bottles and cans were trapped in tights as part of Westwood's environmental message

That approach will not only help protect the environment, but also free designers to make more beautiful clothes, she says.

"It would mean designers could then design the clothes that they love. They [wouldn't] have businessmen telling them about prices, or anything.

"What a designer wants is to make beautiful clothes and sell them at the right price."

Vivienne Westwood A model dancing on the catwalkVivienne Westwood
Some models danced down the catwalk

Unusually, the show featured live music, with instrumentalists Levent & Taylor alongside vocalist Mic Righteous.

The Margate rapper included lyrics about climate change in the set. He says it was nerve-wracking to play for a fashion crowd.

"I don't really fit in to that, but knowing that we were accepted was great."

Vivienne Westwood A model in circus-inspired makeupVivienne Westwood
The show had circus influences

It was the first time they had performed as a trio.

"We played some tunes for Vivienne and [husband and design partner] Andreas Kronthaler," says guitarist Levent.

"They gave us some feedback on what they wanted and we went away and worked out a 12-minute piece of music. We had a lot of fun doing it."

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