top of page

Digital fashion’s support system is growing. Are brands ready?

Jing Daily

23 Jun 2024

During the early days of digital fashion, support systems and resources were in short supply. Today, however, things are looking up for the industry.

Digital fashion house Syky has established itself as an incubator aimed at amplifying the work of fledgling designers. Alongside its Syky Collective accelerator program, the platform’s new monthly initiative, Syky Presents, brings more budding visionaries into the fashion fold.

The series kicked off on June 17 with a 13-piece capsule drop from five artists: fashion collective Sblmtn Studio; Web3 and 3D surreal animation artist Renderfruit; Athens-based artist Craves; 3D surreal art and character designer Oguz Yaron Dogru; and digital artist Tiago Marinho. The collectibles are available for purchase via Syky’s official website.

The emerging designers join a growing roster of artists flourishing under Syky’s guidance, including digital accessories label Xtended Identity, British-Chinese designer Stephy Fung, Berlin-based conceptual artist Taskin Goec, and Nigerian phygital fashion house Nextberries.

Virtual showroom developer Emperia is also building on digital fashion’s early-stage infrastructure to equip more creators with the necessary tools for growth in Web3.

This week, the company opened up its proprietary creator platform to the Web3 community, allowing artists, designers, and businesses to render and publish their own fully-functional virtual environments.

The toolkit, powered by Unreal Engine, features comprehensive commerce modules designed to support e-commerce integration for sales and marketing experiences. Users can also build their own customizable interactions, including gamified activities and token-gated rooms.

It will be interesting to see how builders across the digital fashion space will approach the open-source platform, as well as what impact it will have on the virtual e-commerce market.

With more resources now openly available to the community, barriers to entry are significantly lower, thus increasing the chances of digital fashion becoming more widely accessible and accepted.

Emperia and Syky aren’t alone in their endeavors. Their announcements arrive at a time when more globally influential players are allocating funds and resources to support the digital fashion economy.

Roblox, for example, is busy improving its Creator Hub, while fashion house Rabanne announced the launch of its new digital artist program just last week. Farfetch’s Dream Assembly accelerator has also helped propel startups like Spin by Lablaco to the forefront, as has Mastercard’s Web3-native music accelerator, a program that aims to help fledgling music artists forge careers in the digital economy.

bottom of page