Tag: sustainable fashion

  • 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. 🙂

     

  • Fashion Friday: Uniform Project Update

    Fashion Friday: Uniform Project Update

    the uniform project little black dress

    I’ve had some people ask for more Uniform Project updates. I’ve been terrible about remembering to take the photos! And I wasn’t sure if people really wanted to see my outfits all the time.

    I’ve only left the house a handful of times the last two weeks, so my main aims have been warmth & comfort. This weekend I’ll get out to Goodwill for a bit of refashion hauling 🙂 so that my next update will be more interesting, I swear!

    3 outfits Uniform Project

    I just realized I forgot to number the photos. Oh well. Ya’ll are smart, you can follow along.

    1 was a baking day so I spent the day in my Flirty Apron. Little black dress over jeggings and brown boots.

    2 is the LBD over a tiered Urban Outfitters skirt that is one of my favorite items of clothing, ever. Also sneakers that lace up like ballet slippers and have cherries on them, that I call my dress-up sneakers.

    3 worn as a vest; I think this must have been my St. Patrick’s Day wearin’ o’ the green.

    This is the same day as the middle photo above but I really like these photos with the dog 🙂

     

    4 is over an argyle sweater with jeans and sneaks;

    5 was the day it occurred to me to turn the top under to make the dress a V-neck (incidentally, I was stopped on this day by an elderly gentleman who enthusiastically told me how cute my argyle tights were);

    6 is a comfy day, worn with velour pants from Boden and my MBT shaping sneakers, or my “heavyfeet.” I bought those when they first came out and the only styles available were butt-ugly white and butt-ugly grey. I wear ’em on days that I have a lot of housework to do.

    That’s all I’ve got this round, folks.

    What’s the Uniform Project? Rather than buy a whole bunch of new cheapie items, I selected one classic dress made sustainably of organic cotton and pledged to continually work it into my wardrobe in different ways, in an effort to inject “fashion” into my days without being wasteful— of money or materials. I gave myself an “out” by saying I was allowed to buy new items if they were secondhand (since my existing wardrobe is boring). And as a result I’m no longer living the WAHM life perpetually in my sweatpants!

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  • Fashion Friday: Bring Back the Housecoat!

    Fashion Friday: Bring Back the Housecoat!

    house coat pattern

    “Think simple” as my old master used to say—

    meaning reduce the whole of its parts into the simplest terms,

    getting back to first principles.

    -Frank Lloyd Wright

    A few weeks ago I ran across this video for the koobli™: a “unisex cover-up garment designed to protect your clothing from life’s unpredictable spills and messes. Made from soft, supple, strong 100% micro polyester suede, koobli™ is lightweight and easy to slip on and pull off — use it to cover work outfits, suits, uniforms, gowns, etc. Tough enough for multiple wearings yet disposable when necessary, koobli™’s simple, sensible and functional design makes it a must-have for busy parents and caregivers.”

    Watch the video. I’ll wait. (RSS and email readers may have to click through.)

    Okeydoke. So, for the bargain price of $25 plus s&h, you too can have an adult smock.

    OR…..

    We could bring back the housecoat.

    I suspect if you were born after 1980, you may not even remember the housecoat. When I was searching for housecoats on Old Man Google, I found that most people used the term interchangeably with bathrobe, and the two are not quite the same.

    Now, my Great-Aunt Jean had two types of clothing she called a housecoat. There were the “light housecoats,” which were handsewn cotton overshirts, with mother-of-pearl snap buttons and big poufy pockets with elastic at the top (so you could load them up with stuff but the pocket top would remain closed). You would wear these over your clothes when cleaning or cooking to protect whatever you were wearing underneath, and if the doorbell were to ring? The snap buttons pulled open in a, well, snap, and voila! You were presentable for company.

    This one is remarkably similar to the one that was “mine” when I went to visit and is for sale on ebay:

    light cotton housecoat

    The other housecoat, the “heavy housecoats,” were long and quilted and warm. They zippered all the way from the neck to the hem. Some were a thick sateen-like fabric, and some more a quilted flannel. They came in both short-sleeve and long-sleeve versions.

    Right up into very very old age, my Aunt Jean wore light fancy silky nightgowns to sleep in, and the housecoat to stay warm and presentable until she slipped into bed.

    Again, one on ebay that closely resembled “mine” when I went to visit. But no zipper.

    quilted housecoat

    These were hugely practical pieces of clothing. Why did they go out of style? I wasn’t there, but I have a couple of theories.

    The feminist movement.

    Aprons and housecoats, I suspect, were thrown off like shackles, symbols of the “perfect housewife” role that women no longer wished to be defined by. Aprons have come back as a sort of retro-cutesy ironic statement, but the utilitarian counterpart, the housecoat, still seems working class.

    The rise of disposable fashion.

    Once upon a time people made their clothes. Or they scrimped and saved to buy some nice things, and buying something new was sort of a big deal. (If you live in an older house, you totally know what I mean, because your closets are teeny-tiny.) You took care of your things. You mended them, you carefully washed and air-dryed them, and you protected them from dirt and grime so that you could get a couple of wears in before you washed again, prolonging the life of the fabric. Now? It’s no big thing if you get some sauce on your t-shirt. It’s so last season anyway, and it only cost five bucks at Target.

    Comfy pants.

    To put it simply, we don’t dress up to hang around the house or to sit down to dinner, or don a modest lacy thing nightly to sleep in (immodest, maybe, but not every night, and it’s not really for sleeping in, either). I love comfy pants as much as anyone, and in fact lived in them for pretty much 15 years straight. But now that I’m fully immersed in my Uniform Project, I’m gonna say… there’s something to be said for looking nice and put-together when you open the door for the UPS man, or the Jehovah’s Witnesses, or the elderly man who can’t find the park office, or your children (these all being people who have rung my doorbell this week).

    Cheap indoor heating.

    I grew up in a house where it was always freaking cold (unless it was unbearably hot). If you were cold, you put on a sweater and socks, or curled up under an afghan my mom had crocheted. In my great-aunt’s apartment, you put on your heavy housecoat. Today, people look at me like I’m insane when they hear we keep the thermostat to 63° daytime, 58° after 9pm. Heads up, people: dialing down the thermostat is green and it saves mad cash, and with oil prices the way they are you may want to get used to throwing on something long and warm over your regular clothes. (I am currently rocking a full-length flannel old man robe from L.L. Bean, and it’s awesome. But it’s belted. I’d love one that stayed zippered closed.)

    My modest proposal

    Here’s what I would like to see happen:

    • People buy less clothing, but pay more for items that are made sustainably, at a fair wage.
    • They relearn to appreciate styles that are practical and timeless and unlikely to become dated after a few months.
    • Because their clothing costs more, people take care of them. And learn to mend them.
    • Feminism becomes defined as equality and equal opportunity. Period. That includes the full ability to choose to be a homemaker, a SAHM, with no prejudice from male or female peers, dammitall.
    • People conserve energy. I think we’re probably headed this way anyway, but it bears mentioning. Everything is growing more expensive and we should all be socking away as much as possible. Turning down the thermostat and limiting the use of your dryer are two of the best & easiest ways to really put a dent in your power bill and keep $$ in your bank account. The benefits for the earth are a bonus.

    If you’re handy with a sewing machine, I found a couple of vintage patterns on etsy… I bet you could find a market for these 🙂

    housecoat duster patterns

    $10 at lisaanne1960’s shop

    $5.75 at old2newmemories’ shop

    $3 at retrospex’s shop (in Philly!)

    Or, you know.

    You could totally go with a 100% micro polyester suede koobli™, tough enough for multiple wearings yet disposable when necessary.

    What do you think? Would you rock the housecoat?

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