Style on the World Stage: Australia’s Athletes’ Fashion for the Paris Olympics 2024

Style on the World Stage: Australia’s Athletes’ Fashion for the Paris Olympics 2024

Style on the World Stage: Australia’s Athletes’ Fashion for the Paris Olympics 2024

Australia’s Olympians will be showcasing a new uniform in Paris, featuring the work of Indigenous artists.‍ The new uniforms were unveiled in ⁢Sydney,⁤ and included designs by the artist and boxer Paul Fleming and Torres Strait Islander artist David Bosun.‌ The new kits are designed by Japan-based sports apparel manufacturer Asics, in collaboration with the Australian Olympic Committee (AOC).

The uniforms also feature a ⁤traditional Japanese arrow pattern, known as yagasuri, representing strength,​ momentum and determination. When not‌ competing, Australians ‌will be able ‍to wear uniform dresses around Olympic venues for the first time. The dress option ​was empowering given rugby’s history as ⁣a male-centric sport. The new design is a⁤ nod to the way the Olympics unite people from all countries, backgrounds ⁤and cultures.

View image in fullscreen‘I’m super excited … to ‍wear this and represent my ⁤culture’ …​ rugby sevens player Maurice Longbottom. ‌Photograph:⁤ Bianca de ⁤Marchi/AAP

The rugby ‍sevens player Maurice Longbottom said the design​ was “a little bit special”. “I’m super excited … to⁤ wear this and represent my culture and my heritage on the world stage,” he said. ‍“Hopefully I can get out there and do Pauly Fleming proud.”

View image in fullscreen‘We⁤ get to wear‍ cute ‌dresses’ … rugby ⁢sevens player Charlotte Caslick. Photograph: Bianca ⁣de Marchi/AAP

Caslick said the dress option was empowering given rugby’s ‌history as a male-centric sport. ⁢“Paris is the fashion capital of the world and we get to wear cute dresses,” she said.

Kyle Vander-Kuyp, a‍ member of the AOC’s​ Indigenous⁢ advisory committee and Worimi and Yuin man, said he was encouraged by the athletes’ enthusiasm.​ “I thought, ‘will they embrace‍ this? Will they enjoy having Indigenous ⁣design?’ But to my surprise they said, ‘we want more, ⁢we want more’,” the record-setting‍ hurdler said.

The former medal-winning‌ cyclist and the Australian team’s 2024 chef de mission, Anna Meares, said the uniform was indicative of the nation’s cultural ⁤harmony. “We’re talking about that interweaving of the fabric – we⁣ really ⁢see that with ⁤the Indigenous ⁢design in our‌ uniform, but also sport in ⁣our culture.”

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2024-03-07 02:11:39
Original from ⁤ www.theguardian.com

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