The founder and creative director of British streetwear label A-Cold-Wall pledged £25,000 (roughly $31,500) to be equally divided into grants for 10 small Black-owned businesses in a range of areas, including tech, design and engineering, and retail and fashion. His foundation also pledged £10,000 ($12,630) to Black Lives Matter for those on the front lines of the fight for equality and social justice.
Ross shared on Instagram: "My Heart and soul is with our brothers and sisters in the USA - I am with you in solidarity, and in spirit. As a global people - continue to donate. Economic support will assist in expediting and compounding resources - tangible change. This is an extremely urgent call, it is not a forum for discussion, nor a moment for inflamed rhetorics or lucid mantras.
"You must understand the gravitas of such traumatic realities - do not remain silent, remain focused."
The designer fashion resale platform has teamed with the magazine for a celebrity auction, with proceeds going to the NAACP and NHS Charities Together.
Items donated so far include Christian Siriano dresses worn by Ashley Graham (to the CFDA Awards) and Karlie Kloss (on Project Runway); an Alexander McQueen leather jacket from Kate Moss; Chanel bags from Adut Akech and Candice Swanepoel; Shalom Harlow's Versace robe; and a New York Yankees-themed Gucci top and trousers from Stella Maxwell.
The Dutch model donated a pair of Phoebe Philo Céline earrings for the Hardly Ever Worn It x British Vogue auction. On her personal Instagram she linked to the Minnesota Freedom Fund, which in addition to amassing a bail fund for people arrested while protesting also supports local causes and links out to organizations such as Reclaim the Block and the Black Visions Collective.
Through June 15, 2020, 100 percent of net proceeds from the Nepalese-American designer's limited edition Stronger in Colour hoodies and T-shirts are being donated to The Bail Project."For many Asian Americans living in this country, our ancestors and parents worked hard and sacrificed so we could have better opportunities," Gurung, who participated in Define American's Black + Gold Forum to discuss relations between Black and Asian communities, wrote in a June 5 op-Ed for the Washington Post. "I believe that speaking out against racism, disparities and xenophobia is the ultimate show of respect. It shows our ancestors that their hard work is not in vain, that we understand all they had to overcome, and that they sacrificed their voice so we could find ours. We must stop the cycle of submission, and take on the mantle to fight for our rights and the rights of others. By opening the door for future generations, we can begin the process of healing."
The sustainable made-to-order fashion platform, which operates its own factory in the Dominican Republic and on-demand fabric-printing process that allows brands to create quickly and without waste, announced a $50,000 initiative to "empower 10 creators of color to build and launch their own fashion brands by August 2020."
"This technology allows [designers] to spend more time being creative," Resonance creative director Nicole King told Vogue. "The pressure of predicting what fashion will be like 12 months from now is completely eliminated."
Sisters Laura and Kate Mulleavy have pledged 100 percent of the profits from their brand's online jewelry sales through July 31 to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
The independent label committed to donating 100 percent of net profits from all e-sales in June to Color of Change, The Black Youth Project 100 and Black Visions Collective, all Black-founded organizations fighting for Black equality and racial justice.
"We at Peter Do demand accountability from our leaders, but also understand that we cannot rely on a system built on oppression and the systematic devaluing of black lives," read the mission statement on the label's website. "We've chosen to aid these organizations and their mission to empower true leadership and lasting change.
"The Peter Do team has expressed our individual views; now is the time for our family to speak with our collective voice, and encourage unified action. We must all do our part not only now, but for the future."
All net proceeds from sales of the brand's Hot Wok Dress—best known for the way it fiercely draped Rihanna and expressly back in production for the cause—will be split between Black Lives Matter, The Voice of Domestic Workers and Solace Women's Aid.
"Black Lives before anything," wrote designer Asai Ko. "Just start with one product. 100 [percent of] profits after the cost to make the garment. Your percentage reflects your compassion. Tbh nobody should be using resources in fashion to further pollute this world until what they create supports black lives and POC in every level."
The label started auctioning off previously unproduced sample designs from its sneaker collaboration—the final price of which would be triple-matched by Asics—and split the proceeds among Black Lives Matter, the Minnesota Freedom Fund, Black Vision Collective, Reclaim the Block and The Bail Project.
The high-end denim brand is donating 100 percent of the proceeds (minus sales tax and shipping fees) from sales of face masks to Black Lives Matter, Color of Change, the Rebuild Foundation, Planned Parenthood, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Los Angeles LGBT Center, the National Women's Law Center, the Children's Defense Fund, Real Justice and the ACLU.
"Doing nothing is not an option," COH wrote on Instagram. "We urge everyone to do something peacefully. We're listening, learning, and contributing to organizations that are fighting injustice on many levels. We believe that everyone must do something to fight injustice - whether it is racial injustice or gender injustice or sexual preference injustice or whether it is the injustices in our judicial and health care systems."
Lou Dallas founder Raffaella Hanley has been donating 50 percent of the sales from her one-woman New York label's "End Militarism" T-shirts to BlackVisions Collective, as well as 30 percent from sales of Crop Savage Hoodie to The Okra Project; BTFA Collective, which benefits black trans women in the arts; and the Black Trans Travel Fund.
Temporarily shuttered due to COVID-19, the Delancey Street vintage store best known for its premiere selection of concert T-shirts, opened its doors to City Kits, which assembled packages of provisions—water, masks, gloves, etc.—for protesters.
The Project Runway winner turned mentor was already known for his diverse clientele, and he kept the sewing technicians he has on staff busy when the COVID-19 pandemic forced non-essential businesses in New York to close in March by turning his atelier into a face mask manufacturer. They made the masks solely to donate and, Siriano told The New Yorker, workers were not required to come in—but around 10 started showing up each day for the label's new endeavor.
So it was no surprise when, after George Floyd's death on May 25, Siriano was posting the work phone numbers of Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and District Attorney Mike Freeman on his Instagram; urging followers to vote in their state primaries on June 2; and sharing a series of steps people could take to demand legal action be taken against the cop who shot Breonna Taylor and to donate to her family.
On June 8, 2020, the Italian fashion house—which in 2019 promised to improve diversity in hiring after producing a turtleneck on an $890 sweater resembled blackface—launched Gucci Equilibrium, a new platform to fulfill the luxury brand's "commitment to generate positive change for people and our planet." In addition to environmental and sustainability initiatives, there is a pledge to "fight for equality and combat racism."
Since George Floyd's death, Gucci says they have made donations to the NAACP, Campaign Zero and Know Your Rights Camp through its North America Changemakers Impact Fund.