(11 Aug 2022) DENMARK SUSTAINABLE FASHION SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS RESTRICTION SUMMARY: LENGTH: 7.13 ASSOCIATED PRESS Copenhagen, Denmark - 10 August 2022 1. Pan left of mannequin on display at Copenhagen International Fashion Fair (CIFF), part of Copenhagen Fashion Week 2. Tracking shot of jeans on rack 3. Clothes on display, visitors walking by 4. Exhibitor and stand 5. Tracking shot of clothes on rack 6. Tilt up of visitors entering CIFF at Bella Centre convention centre 7. Pan right of sign, reading (English): "Circular Fashion & Textiles Days" 8. Tilt up of exhibit 9. Pan left of Veras clothing 10. Mid of banner, reading (English): "Circular Fashion & Textiles Days" 11. Various of exhibitors speaking with visitors 12. Various of Lea Wermelin, Danish Minister for the Environment, touring exhibit 13. SOUNDBITE (English) Lea Wermelin, Danish Minister for the Environment: "Well, I think it's very important to underline that it's actually companies committing themselves to targets. So, it means more recycling, more reuse of fibres, and also these circular design guides. So, a whole new way of thinking and bringing all of these companies with very different productions together. I think that could make us show the way for not only Denmark, but for the rest of Europe as well." 14. Mid of A-board, reading (English): "Circular Fashion & Textiles Days" 15. Various of Rejkjaer woollen clothing 16. Tilt down of Textile Pioneers booth 17. Various of shredded old textile stock in glass jar 18. Close of t-shirt made using recycled waste textiles 19. Various of banana palm tree marrow in glass jar 20. Various of Kim Rohde Mogensen, co-owner of Textile Pioneers, showing banana palm tree marrow UPSOUND (English): "This is the marrow of the banana stem. And we can then do a mechanically shredding process and then we get a fibre out of this." 21. SOUNDBITE (English) Kim Rohde Mogensen, co-owner of Textile Pioneers: "When we are talking about post-consumer waste. It's not yet sorted into colours. So, when the demand becomes higher, then we can also set up bigger and bigger and better systems. Instead of making small, closed systems, we make one big system so we can make one big system for North Europe, South Europe, and that would be a lot better for the environment." 22. Various of Klaus Samsoe clothing made from leftover furniture fabrics 23. Setup shot of Klaus Samsoe, designer, Klaus Samsoe, handling clothing 24. Cutaway of clothes hanger, Samsoe in background 25. SOUNDBITE (English) Klaus Samsoe, designer, Klaus Samsoe: "You have already used carbon and stuff like that for making these things for fabrics, for furniture, and a furniture fabric lasts so many years that the carbon effect is very small, year by year, compared to a more fashion thing, like a fashion statement t-shirt and something like that you wear maybe a year and then you change to another one." 26. Various of SPOOR leather footwear 27. Close of tag showing cow hide number 28. Pan right from tag to SPOOR leather footwear 29. Various of Birgitte Holgaard Langer, business development director, SPOOR, scanning QR code in leather shoe using smartphone 30. Pan right of SPOOR leather trainers 31. SOUNDBITE (English) Birgitte Holgaard Langer, business development director, SPOOR: 32. Various of Hemp Copenhagen Co. clothing, hemp plant 33. Various of Veras clothing 34. Various of Kintobe bags, part made with padding made from an algae-based foam 35. Exhibitor speaking with attendee 36. SOUNDBITE (English) Betina Simonsen, CEO of Lifestyle and Design Cluster: LEADIN: STORYLINE: Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Archive Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/APArchives Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/APNews/ You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d497f32636464db7a2d5738c8b43c72f