Commonwealth Club of California Podcast

Why Clothes Matter: Identity, Resistance and Belonging in Times of Crisis

Mar 24, 2026
Anna Chiu, San Francisco designer focused on local, sustainable womenswear. Tony Bravo, arts and culture columnist covering style and queer life. Laura L. Camerlengo, museum curator of costume and textile arts and fashion historian. They discuss San Francisco’s unique dress cultures, fashion as nonverbal political language and resistance, sustainability and local production, and why getting dressed can be an act of care and belonging.
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INSIGHT

Fashion Anchors Local Economic Comebacks

  • Fashion has historically anchored San Francisco's economic comeback, exemplified by Levi's and The Gap and postwar store-led exhibitions.
  • Laura cited the 1954 I-Magnon fashion show that rallied community and commerce after WWII.
ANECDOTE

Mayor's Wife Choice Symbolized Local Support

  • Anna Chiu sensed a creative-energy comeback with designers moving to SF and patrons from tech supporting arts.
  • She described dressing the mayor's wife for the ballet gala as symbolic local support for small designers.
ADVICE

Make Getting Dressed A Daily Creative Act

  • Treat daily dressing as a creative, life-enhancing act; don't deny yourself that choice.
  • Tony Bravo cites making at least one creative decision a day and enjoying fabrics, craft, and designer process.
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