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A group of Indigenous artists from Manitoba is headed to Toronto next week for the fourth annual Indigenous Fashion Arts Festival, a biennial event that hosts more than 100 Indigenous artists, designers, makers, brands and pundits from Canada and all over the world. Read this article for free: Already have an account? To continue reading, please subscribe: * A group of Indigenous artists from Manitoba is headed to Toronto next week for the fourth annual Indigenous Fashion Arts Festival, a biennial event that hosts more than 100 Indigenous artists, designers, makers, brands and pundits from Canada and all over the world. Read unlimited articles for free today: Already have an account? A group of Indigenous artists from Manitoba is headed to Toronto next week for the fourth annual Indigenous Fashion Arts Festival, a biennial event that hosts more than 100 Indigenous artists, designers, makers, brands and pundits from Canada and all over the world.

The four-day festival features runway shows, a 70-vendor marketplace at CF Toronto Eaton Centre, and the Fashioning Resurgence symposium and workshop series at Toronto Metropolitan University’s Student Learning Centre. Beth McIvor, 45, the Métis maker behind Red Earth Ceramic Jewelry, says being part of the IFA Festival is “quite an honour.” She sees it as part of a larger movement to raise the platforms of Indigenous creators and their work.



SUPPLIED Indigo Arrows is a line by designer Destiny Seymour. “When you’re just d.

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