Chinese fashion designer Zhou Li, whose Dejin fashion brand recently exhibited at China Fashion Week, has been making embroidered silk masks equipped with high specification N95 air filters since February, providing the fashion-conscious with protective options.
At the onset of the outbreak, fashion brand Armani had begun making single use medical overalls for hospital workers at all its Italian factories in an effort to support healthcare workers amidst the coronavirus crisis.
The masks made by Superbottoms, a reusable diaper brand, are made with 100 percent cotton and have a pocket where one can insert a non-woven fabric as a filler. Around the world fashion brands like Dior, Prada, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, to name a few have been manufacturing masks at their facilities, while in India, designers Anita Dongre and Masaba Gupta are playing their part in stopping the spread of the novel coronavirus via funds, donations and masks. A large number of businesses in Beirut also switched to making masks, a rare opportunity as the pandemic hammers their collapsing economy. The local currency has plummeted and unemployment, inflation, and poverty have soared since last year.