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Luxury fashion brand Saint Laurent to go fur-free in 2022

September 24, 2021

Killing animals for their fur "doesn't correspond to modern luxury," Saint Laurent's parent company said in a statement. It's the latest fashion house to go fur-free following growing backlash from consumers.

https://p.dw.com/p/40n5U
Pictured: Yves-Saint-Laurent-Museum in Morocco
Saint Laurent has faced backlash from animal activists after featuring a fox fur coat in its campaignImage: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Glaubitz

High-end fashion house Saint Laurent will stop using fur in its collections next year, its France-based parent company Kering announced on Friday.

Kering, which also owns the luxury brands Gucci and Bottega Veneta, will drop fur across all its brands, joining a growing list of companies worldwide.

Adapting to a 'changing world'

Animal rights groups have long appealed to fashion brands to drop the use of fur, which they say is unethical and causes unnecessary suffering to animals.

In recent years, several fashion houses — including Versace, Chanel and Michael Kors — have responded to the calls, resorting instead to fake fur and synthetic alternatives.

In its latest statement, Kering said its Italian menswear brand Brioni will also forsake fur.

"The world has changed, along with our clients, and luxury naturally needs to adapt to that," said Kering CEO Francois-Henri Pinault.

"We believe that killing animals not to eat them but only for their fur doesn't correspond to modern luxury which must be ethical, in sync with its times and the questions of our societies," Marie-Claire Daveu, head of sustainable development at Kering, told news agency AFP.

Saint Laurent under fire earlier this year

Saint Laurent faced backlash earlier in March after supermodel Kate Moss appeared in an advertising campaign for the brand wearing a fox fur coat. 

US-based animal rights organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) took the lead in demonstrations outside a Saint Laurent store in the fashionable Avenue Montaigne in Paris.

"There is nothing glamorous about fur," PETA told Saint Laurent at the time.

Donning a green coat, Burberry bows to consumers

According to PETA, 85% of fur sold globally is sourced from animals that live their entire lives in captivity, often in conditions "of misery" and "extreme suffering." They are regularly killed by poisonous gas, electrocution or beaten to death with clubs, the group said.

On Friday, fur items still featured on Saint Laurent's website, including a rabbit coat priced at €5,500 ($6,450) and a sleeveless fox vest for the same price.

Within the Kering group, Gucci was the first to drop fur in 2017, followed by Balenciaga, Bottega Veneta and Alexander McQueen.

The global fur trade is estimated to be worth billions of dollars annually, employing around 1 million people worldwide.

go/rs (Reuters, AFP)