Advertisement
IRL

A fashion designer made a corset with vintage fabric. 2 weeks later, it was allegedly ripped off by fast fashion retailers.

‘I don’t think they copied your piece.’

Photo of Cecilia Lenzen

Cecilia Lenzen

Laptop screen with corset on dpop caption 'NO because fast fashion is ripping this EXACT corset I designed a few weeks ago that was made from VINTAGE FABRIC. Unreal.' (l) Woman hand on mouth caption 'NO because fast fashion is ripping this EXACT corset I designed a few weeks ago that was made from VINTAGE FABRIC. Unreal.' (c) Laptop screen and corset on keyboard caption 'Like this video to raise awareness that FASTFASHION STEALS from small businesses' (r)

A fashion designer on TikTok says a corset she made with vintage fabric was ripped off by fast fashion retailers.

Featured Video

The designer, known as Ruth Wiggins (@jonnieandru), shared a video on TikTok showing the corset she created alongside a targeted ad showing the same design.

“NO because fast fashion is ripping this EXACT corset I designed a few weeks ago that was made from VINTAGE FABRIC. Unreal,” Wiggins wrote in the video’s on-screen caption. “Like this video to raise awareness that FAST FASHION STEALS from small businesses.”

https://www.tiktok.com/@jonnieandru/video/7086966405656235310
Advertisement

Fast fashion is a term used to describe the clothing industry business model of replicating recent catwalk trends and mass-producing them at low cost to bring them to retail stores quickly. Small fashion designers often claim to be the victim of large retailers such as Shein essentially stealing their designs without credit.

Wiggins’ TikTok video went semi-viral with about 23,000 views on the platform. Viewers had mixed reactions to her claim — some completely denied it.

“I don’t think they copied your piece in specific, there’s a lot of people that make these corset in this exact toile print ,.. that’s why it’s popular,” one viewer commented on the video.

Some viewers pointed out that the targeted ad Wiggins showed said “preloved” in the description, meaning it was being sold secondhand. The TikToker shut down those suspicions by saying she hadn’t even sent her design to production yet.

Advertisement

“It’s on Depop, that’s not fast fashion. They sell second hand pieces through the users,” one viewer said.

“I’m also a huge advocate for selling & reselling online! Small businesses are incredible. But this was a different thing,” Wiggins wrote in reply. “I LOVE creators on Depop – but this link does not take you to a Depop seller. Only to a generic page. It’s a targeted ad!”

“So in just a few weeks time, some business put into production a copy of something you made and then someone bought it… and reposted it for sale used?” another viewer commented.

“But this item hadn’t even gone to production for me yet. It’s a dupe,” Wiggins said in a reply to the comment. “It wasn’t an add to a real item! It’s not even ON a Depop. It’s a targeted ad – I’m a huge advocate for reselling and buying second hand!”

Advertisement

The Daily Dot reached out to Wiggins via TikTok comment.


Today’s top stories

‘Fill her up’: Bartender gives woman a glass of water when the man she’s with orders tequila shot
‘I don’t think my store has even sold one’: Whataburger employees take picture with first customer who bought a burger box
‘It was a template used by anyone in the company’: Travel agent’s ‘condescending’ out-of-office email reply sparks debate
Sign up to receive the Daily Dot’s Internet Insider newsletter for urgent news from the frontline of online.
Advertisement
 
The Daily Dot