AI in fashion friend or foe part 2

9

October

2025

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In my last post I discussed whether AI tools are usefull in creating art related to fashion. After receiving some criticism I continued my research and found the urge to write about it again. Today I take my stance between two topics: operational transformation (as Luce presents) and the sustainability imperative (as Ramos et al. emphasize). Merging them offers a more balanced view. Yes, AI is likely to shape the future of fashion, but its promise will only be fulfilled if it is executed responsibly and in service of environmental and social goals.

Leanne Luce’s book guides the reader down a roadmap of how AI is involved in every layer of fashion. She argues that AI tools like generative models, help designers create ideas faster, iterate better and provide validation quicker. Still, the human remains central while AI only accelerates and refines. AI is also used for inventory optimization to reduce overproduction and mismatches in supply and demand. Which seems to work quite well for the fashion brands. With the help of a chatbot, search systems make the customer experience more tailored and personalized. These tools are at the same time becoming more accesible for smaller brands. This will lower the barriers of entry and creates more space for experimentation and variety in fashion. Luce did not ignore the risks, but places AI in the position of a colllaborator and not a replacement for human creativity. From Luce’s point of view, the future of fashion is a duality between humans and AI. Where AI serves as a amplification for human intelligence.

The 2023 review by Ramos, Rivas-Echeverria, Perez, and Casas changes the perspective. This review asks how AI can help the fashion industry become more sustainable. These other findings question the optimism from Luce’s book. Ramos et al. provide multiple areas where AI contributes to a more sustainable industry. AI is used for supply chian optimization. This creates better demand forecasting, logistics optimization and better resource allocation. Together this can minimize waste and energy use. AI can also assist in designing eco-friendly materials. AI can detect defects and advice materials for recycling. With this infromation brands can make more informed and sustainable decisions. Artificial neural networks are the backbone in many AI applications in fashion. Usage of this demands massive high-quality datasets, which a lot of fashion brands lack. There’s an imbalance between economic sustainability and social environmental impact. AI is a crucial partner but isn’t a silver bullet.

AI has been forecasted to become a big driver of the fashion future, but not in a deterministic way. The functionality of AI depends on how it is adopted ( ethically, sustainably etc.) The succes of AI in fashion will come from scaffolding human judgment and artisanship, helping humans make better choices. To come back to my previous statement from my previous blog, this does partially agree with my first statement, but now has more backbone in explanation.

References:

Ramos, L., Rivas-Echeverría, F., Pérez, A. G., & Casas, E. (2023). Artificial intelligence and sustainability in the fashion industry: a review from 2010 to 2022. SN Applied Sciences, 5(12). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42452-023-05587-2

Artificial Intelligence for Fashion. (z.d.). Google Books. https://books.google.nl/books?hl=nl&lr=&id=ZRF-DwAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PR5&dq=AI+tool+in+fashion+industry+&ots=rLumX1HZh3&sig=brjEPXZArXcNcyZGRhCLbn4tods&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=AI%20tool%20in%20fashion%20industry&f=false

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AI in fashion, friend or foe?

7

October

2025

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AI tools in art are described as software that uses artificial intelligence to assist with or generate creative works. Popular text-to-image generators are Midjourney, DALL-E and Stable Diffusion. In this blog I will discuss a few components of generated art. I will discuss if the art, generated by AI, show originality, skill, commercial purposes and a poetic meaning and. These are characteristics which I look for in art, and am curious to discover and discuss if AI can create such art. If so, what does this mean for artists and the fashion industry.

To answer this question, I first need to do my research on the AI tools. The website of AIArtists.org shows 41 creative tools to generate AI art such as Runway ML. Runway ML is capable of creating images, videos, transformations, virtual stages, virtual try-on etc. It offers a wide array of possibilities. If an artist would want to create a new design for his winter collection, he/she would start a conversation with AI and tell it his/her preferences. I explored the possibilities and limits of this tool and received some inspiration from it. To give the reader a clearer view I’d like to share my experiment.

As input, I asked AI to create an image of a rose and a ballerina. These are two things I want to reflect in my new design. The tool created an image of a ballerina balancing on two legs with a big white rose behind her, few times the size of the ballerina. It wasn’t quite what I imagined so I asked AI to make it more original, skilled, with commercial purpose and a poetic meaning. I had to elaborate on what commercial purpose and what poetic meaning, so the next image had to depict the beauty of a white rose reflected on the ballerina. The commercial purpose entailed the possibilty of using this design in a ballet show. The output gave an image of a ballerina with a long flowing skirt, balancing on one leg with a picture of a rose on her had. I realised, my inputs had to be more specific for AI. I didn’t know yet if I wanted it to be a skirt or a dress or something else. The second output gave me new inspiration, the skirt started looking like a rose and I asked AI to make the skirt more distinctly rose-like in its appearance. The thirds output gave me a new goal for creation. My experience with this AI tool was very positive. Although AI didn’t always understand what I wanted it to create, the last result depicted an image of what I was imagining in my head. It felt like a collaboration.

AI is giving the fashion industry a lot of beneficial tools to new creations. It is described as a powerful tool that is amplifying creativity. According to The Guardian (2024), people fear jobs losses and death of imagination and with that the world of fashion. The 40th anniversary of London fashion week hosted an AI-generated fashion show where people, who can’t entry the industry through traditional pathways, can show their designs created by AI to an audience. So, AI offers artists opportunities to entry the market. The fear of job loss is also quickly being debunked, meaning that AI only works if someone is using it, meaning we still need people to operate it. An article by Vogue (2025) shows concerns for the intensive energy use by fashion brands. AI is now mostly used for streamlining supply chains of fashion brands to become more sustainable. But people show concerns if it doens’t beat it’s purpose for being sustainable.

In conclusion, the AI tool is offering opportunities for artists to enter new markets and for the fashion industry a more efficient supply-chain. By using the tool in the right way, users will receive new inspirations and ideas and even designs. Improvements can always be made and according to my experience the perfect design tool should leave as much room for creativity as possible and at the same time completely understand what the user is looking for. So eventually improvements for text-to-image translation. Even though AI needs a lot of energy to operate, it is still forecasted to become a big part of the fashion industry.

References:

Jobe, N. (2024, 8 februari). How AI is ‘amplifying creativity’ in the fashion world. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2024/feb/08/ai-london-fashion-week Doyle, M. (2025, 6 maart).

Why fashion should think carefully about using generative AI. Vogue Business. https://www.voguebusiness.com/story/sustainability/why-fashion-should-think-carefully-about-using-generative-ai

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How much do we need the metaverse now?

23

September

2025

4/5 (2)

How real can the metaverse be when there is nobody who will use it? In the movie ‘ready player one’ the metaverse is a crowded place, almost everybody lived in the digital world and not in the physical world. Most importantly, because the depiction of earth in the movie is a garbage dump with containers layered on top of each other which serve as homes for people. It makes sense that people would want to escape to a more aesthetic place and in addition, been given the opportunity to become any appearance you prefer. So, why aren’t we all living in the metaverse yet?

The metaverse that I will describe is the one presented by Mark Zuckerberg. His idea is to provide a virtual world for people to connect, work, play and shop with each other. A place for social interaction. But the most important characteristic of the meta verse is the feeling of being truly present with another person. If the metaverse would feel as real as our physical world, the barriers to join would collapse and people would move to a virtual world. So, why hasn’t that happened yet. According to K.Baker (2025) the metaverse failed because of technology limitations, bad user experience, high cost of entry and the rise of generative AI. There were also privacy concerns. Users described the verse as unfinished and poor visuals. The VR glasses are also very expensive and require a powerful computer. Although it’s failed expectations, the technology is not dead yet and probably waiting for collaborations between retail companies to join the verse and pull in users.

In my opinion, the meta verse is not a direct need for consumers in this time period. But, if Mark Zuckerberg were to collaborate with amazon and other big retailers. People would maybe start to be curious about this new path to their products and slowly start to enter this virtual world. The first people ready to join the virtual world; have to be able to afford the Hardware and not be bothered by the visuals. They would use the world purely to acquire their products for games and other information goods related platforms. If the metaverse is able to give consumers an experience of being truly present, that would mean the beginning of a completely new world.

References:

Baker, K. (2025, 17 juli). What Happened to the Metaverse? How Zuck’s VR Dream Died. Enterprise Tech News EM360Tech. https://em360tech.com/tech-articles/what-happened-metaverse-how-zucks-vr-dream-died

Clayton, B. J. (2023, 25 september). Metaverse: What happened to Mark Zuckerberg’s next big thing? https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66913551

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