Tag: green fashion

  • Patagonia: Eco Fashion is Ethical Fashion

    Patagonia: Eco Fashion is Ethical Fashion

    patagonia

    Because the greenest product is the one that already exists.

    -from the Patagonia website

    Patagonia is a clothing company that’s taking sustainability seriously.

    I’ve been meaning to write about them ever since they ran an ad on Black Friday that read “Don’t buy this jacket,” with this copy:

    The environmental cost of everything we make is astonishing. Consider the R2 Jacket shown, one of our best sellers. To make it required 135 liters of water, enough to meet the daily needs (three glasses a day) of 45 people. Its journey from its origin as 60% recycled polyester to our Reno warehouse generated nearly 20 pounds of carbon dioxide, 24 times the weight of the finished product. This jacket left behind, on its way to Reno, two-thirds its weight in waste… There is much to be done and plenty for us all to do. Don’t buy what you don’t need. Think twice before you buy anything.

    We’re then invited to take the Common Threads Initiative pledge, which asks you to reduce, reuse, and repair. Only when you’ve exhausted the usefulness of your item, should you then recycle. And then Patagonia introduces a the fifth R, to reimagine a world where we take only what nature can replace.

    It all seems counter-intuitive and somewhat gimmicky, and at the time I thought the selling point was that their clothing was hardy and well-made from quality fabrics and therefore long-lasting; so by BUY LESS they really meant buy Patagonia and you won’t need to buy as often. Which, don’t get me wrong, is a very valid argument.

    But Patagonia totally seems to be putting their money where their mouth is.

    • You can have your clothing repaired and your footwear resoled through the company; they will pay for repairs that they’re responsible for and charge a fair price for repairs due to normal wear and tear.
    • You can recycle your Patagonia clothing by sending it to them or dropping off at a store, “ideally, while you’re running other errands, to reduce environmental impact.” What’s salvageable is repurposed. Totally worn out garments are recycled into new fiber or fabric.
    • The cycle is closed with items for purchase made from recycled textiles.
    • “Nothing wearable should be hoarded; useful things should be in circulation.” Patagonia has established an online store on eBay green where you can resell your used clothing or buy from other sellers. Since their clothing is built to last, these recycled items are likely to be in good condition.
    • The company donates factory seconds to activists in the field and to those who have lost their belongings in disasters.
    • The site allows you to ask questions about the product right there on the item description page, which helps you to make the right decisions as to fit and suitability. How is that eco fashion? Let me ask you… how many times have you bought something only to have it languish in your closet because the fit was off? Not to mention the resources saved by not having to do a return.
    • And finally, Patagonia is one of California’s first Benefit Corporations, meaning that the company is committed to achieving “general public benefit.” While other companies are legally bound to maximize profits,

    Companies that incorporate as Benefit Corps must consider an array of stakeholders beyond shareholders, including workers, suppliers, the environment and the local community. They must measure their progress toward that goal against a third-party standard.

    It’s a solid, all-around corporate ethic, one that a person can be proud to support with their dollar. Hopefully it’s sustainable for them as a company— inspiring others to follow suit.

    Confession:
    I’ve never purchased anything Patagonia. Will I love it?

     

     

  • Compostable Pumas, Clothes Made from Milk, More: Fashion Friday

    Compostable Pumas, Clothes Made from Milk, More: Fashion Friday

    grade school fashion

    One should either be a work of art, or wear a work of art.
    -Oscar Wilde

    Found some interesting headlines about eco-fashion this week: enjoy!

    (Photo is of Cass in a hand-me-down dress with headband made of recycled materials. Friendship bracelet from Kelly at Design Crush. The purse was a present from Danielle Liss. This is how she dresses to go grocery shopping.)

     

    Puma’s New Tack on Sustainable Consumption:
    Compostable Clothes

    “In the biological cycle, I can make shoes and shirts that are compostable so I can shred them and bury them in the back garden. We are working on products that meet these two criteria.”

    Why is this not already a thing? In any case, I love my Pumas and I’m happy to love them even more.

     

    Anke Domaske, German Fashion Designer, Creates Environmentally Friendly Clothing Made From Milk

    After two years of trial and error, working with a research lab, Domaske and her team of six finally landed on a process of reducing milk to a protein powder that is then boiled and pressed into strands that can be woven into a fabric… She uses only organic milk that cannot be consumed because it has failed Germany’s strict quality standards.

    And? AND?!  Two pounds of fabric can be produced using only 2 liters (a half gallon) of water. Two pounds of cotton? OVER 10,000 LITERS OF WATER.

    This is full of the awesomesauce. And by awesomesauce I mean milk. It does a body good… inside and out.

     

    T-Shirt Remix:
    Recycling America’s Used Clothes for Social Impact

    “Our consumption is so rampant that we are dumping 95 percent of our clothes in the developing world,” Lohr says. The clothes we buy here in the U.S. and barely use—like that bar mitzvah party-favor tee—end up in thrift stores, which sell their excess in bulk to third-world distributors, supplying a global chain of used goods.

    The good folks at Project Repat are raising money to launch the No More New project: paying workers in Kenya a fair wage to rework our cast-off clothes into bags and scarves. They’ll retail for $30, and include a donation to a nonprofit. (The pilot plan just involved restamping old shirts and reselling them for $25. They sold 500, raising enough money to build a solar-powered computer lab in Kenya and put five girls through school for one year in Tanzania. HOW HARD DOES THAT ROCK.) You can be a part of this innovative project and help back the funding by donating $1 or more.

     

    Over-Consumption Invokes the Six Items or Less Experiment

    Surveys show that most women own seven pairs of jeans but wear only four regularly and buy approximate 50 percent more shoes than they need.

    ‘Tis the season for feeling kinda gross and crappy about rampant commercialism and the GIMMEs. Could you go for a month only wearing six items from your closet? Chances are, you trend toward your favorite few anyway. There is an official 6 Items project underway, but you might want to try it just for fun. (Underoos, socks & shoes, bathing suits, accessories, workout gear, uniforms, coats and sleepwear don’t count towards your six, and you’re allowed multiples of the exact same item, which makes this SO EASY for me). It’s like the Uniform Project but less intense… using clothes you already have and are comfortable with.

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    Thus concludes this week’s episode of Eco Fashion Friday.

    Stay tuned until the next time I remember that I like to do this on Fridays.

    If you liked this, leave me a comment! Maybe that will help me remember. 🙂