Barbie wouldn’t have been a fan of the latest Zara collab, and neither should you

By Jennifer Raymont

Published Jul 20, 2023 at 11:40 AM

Reading time: 2 minutes

The day is finally here, it’s the eve of the Barbie movie release date—and yes, I’m more excited than I ever was on Christmas eve. While I already have my cinema ticket in hand and popcorn at the ready, the influx of Barbie-related fashion collaborations has raised some issues I feel must be addressed. I’m sorry to say that in the real world, life in plastic might not be so fantastic.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by BARBIE (@barbiethemovie)

Though the Barbie promo tour has been seemingly never-ending, seeing the latest of Margot Robbie’s Barbie doll recreation outfits kept us all enthralled and completely obsessed. Then came the promo collabs. Our FYPs were filled to the brim with videos of the Barbie Malibu Dreamhouse Airbnb and info junkets about the Barbie menstrual cup—they just never stopped coming.

@elitedaily

Life in plastic, it’s fantastic! Step inside the viral @barbie Dream House on @airbnb (hosted by Ken 💁‍♀️) with us ✨ #barbie #barbiedreamhouse #malibu #malibubarbie

♬ original sound - Barbie Movie

The latest in a heavy stream of Barbie collabs is the Barbie x Zara capsule collection. While the majority of other collabs focussed heavily on logomania, the fast fashion giant took a slightly different approach, one that aims to allow customers to dress up like Robbie rather than looking like the iconic doll’s biggest fan. Although, rest assured, we’re definitely both. Zara even thought of creating garmz for Ken’s minions, too.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by ZARA Official (@zara)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by ZARA Official (@zara)

My personal favourites from the collection are the metallic halter neck co-ord, the pink gingham dress and the raffia beach bag. I will stop at nothing to pull together the perfect fit  for my trip to the cinema and the impending Barbiecore summer. Fast fashion and its long list of problematic aspects, however, might be the thing to hold me back.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by ZARA Official (@zara)

We’ve all been there before: you see a Zara item go viral on TikTok, but as soon as you find time to pop into one of its many stores, it’s already disappeared from the shelfs. That’s because Zara is essentially glorified fast fashion. It’s got the fancy logo and editorial campaigns, but it equally employs mass production manufacturing.

Zara is owned by Inditex, aka the largest global fast fashion conglomerate out there. In 2021, the company had a whopping 565,027 tonnes of garments on the market, and the recent Barbie collabs are only making it worse. Such a massive collection turnaround means that there is a landfill somewhere out there just waiting for Barbiecore to be another throw-away micro-trend.

@alltheperks

Replying to @ericakekenealon it’s as fast as they get #overconsumption #microtrends

♬ original sound - djparry

Forever 21 and Gap have also jumped on the Barbie hype train with their respective one-off collections. The Forever 21 collection undeniably fits the brand’s stereotype (think teeneybopper mesh T-shirts with the Barbie logo blazed across your chest). The Gap collection, on the other hand, is more grown up. Gap’s T-shirts feature a hybrid of the Gap and Barbie logo in bright pink—it would be rude not to.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Gap (@gap)

The problem with such one-off collections is that they encourage impulse buying. Even I’m guilty of buying something I don’t need or even want in the long run, simply because I feel threatened by the thought of it selling out or because I can’t fight off that gut-wrenching feeling of wanting something you can’t have. Companies like Zara are not only playing with our money, but our feelings, too.

Limited edition collections also promote haul culture. Over the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, TikTokers bought in bulk, leading fast fashion giants to mass produce and the increasingly rapid production of micro-trends. Julia Peterson, senior insights strategist specialising in youth culture, told Vogue Business: “Despite [gen Zer’s] desire to shop responsibly, I think there’s also this other side of them that is craving style, craving products that are going to make them feel good and that are affordable.”

So when it comes down to it, as much as I’m gagging to get my pink clobber on and head to the movies, there is no doubt that the never-ending Barbie collabs helped perpetuate throwaway fashion. Whether it’s limited edition beauty launches or Zara’s mass-produced clothes collection, that’s a whole lot of plastic that will end up in landfill as opposed to the Barbie Malibu Dreamhouse. This Barbie is turning her back on fast fashion.

Keep On Reading

By Jennifer Raymont

Check out Margot Robbie’s best looks from the Barbie press tour and the dolls that inspired them

By Charlie Sawyer

A guide on how to save on your energy bills after CEO of British Gas owner admits he can’t justify his £4.5M salary

By Charlie Sawyer

Real Legion from viral Who TF Did I Marry TikTok drama comes out with new response

By Charlie Sawyer

Watch Tyler, the Creator and Post Malone get down to Colbie Caillat

By Abby Amoakuh

Celebrity podcaster Bobbi Althoff comes forward as deepfake porn video of her goes viral

By Abby Amoakuh

Is football apolitical? Here is how FIFA and the UEFA are used to further political agendas

By Alma Fabiani

What does being so babygirl mean and what’s Jacob Elordi got to do with it?

By Abby Amoakuh

New Channel 5 documentary My Wife, My Abuser: The Secret Footage compared to Depp-Heard trial

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

What is the viral red nail theory and does it actually work?

By Charlie Sawyer

British Museum attempts Roman Empire TikTok trend, fails miserably and gets called sexist

By Emma O'Regan-Reidy

Stanley vs YETI: Which tumbler is worth the hype?

By Abby Amoakuh

Neuralink’s human implant success sparks fear for the future of society

By Abby Amoakuh

Far-right influencers try to bail out Elon Musk as Disney and Apple leave X due to antisemitism claims

By Abby Amoakuh

Austerity-era PM David Cameron appointed Foreign Secretary. Here’s what he’s been up to since his resignation

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Raven-Symoné tells fans to stop sending death threats to her wife Miranda amid online hate

By Abby Amoakuh

Inside Just Stop Oil training sessions where new recruits are taught how to deal with angry drivers 

By Charlie Sawyer

Gwyneth Goes Skiing is a campy delight, plus it’s doing wonders for Gwyneth Paltrow’s PR

By Charlie Sawyer

How much money does tradwife influencer Nara Smith make from TikTok? Someone did the maths

By Emma O'Regan-Reidy

From gen Z farming to pro-hybrid work, here are 3 ways the younger generation will impact 2024

By J'Nae Phillips

Why Gen Z still turn to nature and the great outdoors for fashion inspo years after gorpcore’s rise