fbpx
Wikipedia

Sustainable fashion

Sustainable fashion (also known as eco-fashion) is a term describing products, processes, activities, and actors (policymakers, brands, consumers) aiming to achieve a carbon-neutral fashion industry, built on equality, social justice, animal welfare, and ecological integrity.[1] Sustainable fashion concerns more than addressing fashion textiles or products. It addresses the entire process in which clothing is produced, consumed and disposed; who, what, how, when, where and the expected useful life of the product before entering landfill. The sustainable movement looks to combat the large carbon footprint that fast fashion has created by reducing the environmental impact of fashion such as air pollution, water pollution and overall climate change.

In 2020, it was found that an approach of voluntary self-directed reform of textile manufacturing supply chains to reduce the environmental impact of fashion by large companies had failed.[2][3] Measures to reform fashion beyond greenwashing needed to involve policies for the creation and enforcement of standardized certificates along with related import controls, subsidies[4] and eco-tariff-like interventions.[5][6][7]

Background and history

The origin of sustainable fashion movement is intertwined with the modern environmental movement, with the publication in 1962 of the book Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson.[8] Carson's book exposed the serious and widespread pollution associated with the use of agricultural chemicals, a theme still relevant to the environmental and social impact of fashion today. The decades which followed saw the result of human impact on the environment more systematically investigated, notably the effects of industrial activity. New concepts were introduced for discussing these effects, such as sustainable development, a term coined in 1987 by the Brundtland Report.[9]

In the early 1990s, roughly coinciding with the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, popularly known as the Rio Earth Summit, 'green issues' (as they were called at the time) made their way into fashion and textiles publications.[10][11] These publications featured well-known companies such as Patagonia and ESPRIT, who's founders Yvon Chouinard and Doug Tompkins, were outdoorsmen who witnessed the environmental harm of overproduction and overconsumption. Doug Tompkins and Yvon Chouinard were early to note that exponential growth and consumption are not sustainable.[12] In the late 1980s, they brought environmental concerns into their business models, commissioning research into the impact of fibres used in their respective companies. For Patagonia, this resulted in a lifecycle assessment of four fibres, cotton, wool, nylon, and polyester. For ESPRIT the focus was on cotton—representing 90% of their production at the time—and finding better alternatives to it. A primary focus on materials' provenance, impact and selection, fibre and fabric processing is still the norm in sustainable fashion 30 years on.[13]

The principles of 'green' or 'eco' fashion, was based on the philosophy of the deep ecologists Arne Næss, Fritjof Capra, and Ernest Callenbach, and design theorist Victor Papanek.[14] This imperative is also linked to a feminist understanding of human-nature relationships, interconnectedness and “ethics of care” as advocated by Carolyn Merchant,[15] Suzi Gablik,[16] Vandana Shiva,[17] and Carol Gilligan.[18]

The legacy of the early work of Patagonia and ESPRIT continues to shape the conversation around fashion sustainability today. In 1990, ESPRIT placed an ad in Utne Reader making a plea for responsible consumption, and ESPRIT and Patagonia co-funded the first organic cotton conference held in 1991 in Visalia, California, aimed at broadening the movement to include many fashion brands.

In 1992, the ESPRIT e-collection based on the Eco Audit guide by the Elmwood Institute, was developed by head designer Lynda Grose[19] and launched at retail. In 2011 the brand Patagonia ran an ad and a PR campaign called "Don't Buy This Jacket" with a picture of Patagonia merchandise. This message was intended to encourage people to consider the effect that consumption has on the environment, to purchase only what they need.[20]

In parallel with industry, research around sustainable fashion has been in development since the early 1990s, with the field now having its own history, dynamics, politics, practices, sub-movements and evolution of analytical and critical language.[21][22][23][24][25][26] The field is broad in scope, including technical projects that seek to improve the resource efficiency of existing operations,[27] the consideration of brands and designers working within currently understood frameworks[28] as well as those which look to fundamentally re-imagine the fashion industry, including the growth logic.[29]

In 2019, a group of researchers formed the Union for Concerned Researchers in Fashion (UCRF) to advocate for radical and coordinated research activity commensurate with the challenges of biodiversity loss and climate change.[30] In the fall of 2019, the UCRF received the North Star Award at the Green Carpet Fashion Awards during Milan Fashion Week.[31]

Purpose

Adherents of the sustainable fashion movement believe that the fashion industry has a clear opportunity to act differently, pursuing profit and growth while also creating new value and deeper wealth for society and therefore for the world economy. The goal of sustainable fashion is to create flourishing ecosystems and communities through its activity.[28] The movement believes that clothing companies ought to place environmental, social, and ethical improvements on management's agenda.[32][33] This may include: increasing the value of local production and products; prolonging the lifecycle of materials; increasing the value of timeless garments; reducing the amount of waste; and reducing the harm to the environment as a result of production and consumption. Another goal is to educate people to practice environmentally friendly consumption by promoting the "green consumer", which can allow for the company itself to gain more support and a larger following.[34][35]

Green consumerism is the shift in consumer behavior attitudes advocating for the efficient use of energy, which ultimately helps in saving money, reducing utility bills, lowering emissions of greenhouse gas, and enabling economies to meet the growing energy demands. In recent years there has been an increase in research centered around consumer reactions to the advent of green products within fast fashion.[36] Critics doubt the effectiveness that this has, but companies have already begun slowly transitioning their business models to fit a more eco-friendly and sustainable future. Thus the industry has to change its basic premise for profit, yet this is slow coming as it requires a large shift in business practices, models and tools for assessment.[37] This became apparent in the discussions following the Burberry report of the brand burning unsold goods worth around £28.6m (about $37.8 million) in 2018,[38] exposing not only overproduction and subsequent destruction of unsold stock as a normal business practice, but behavior amongst brands that actively undermine a sustainable fashion agenda.[39]

The challenge for making fashion more sustainable often requires systematic reinvention, and this call for action is not new. The UCRF has argued that the industry focus remains the same ideas originally mooted in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The Union observes, "so far, the mission of sustainable fashion has been an utter failure and all small and incremental changes have been drowned by an explosive economy of extraction, consumption, waste and continuous labor abuse."[40]

A frequently concern of those working in the area of sustainable fashion is whether the field itself is an oxymoron.[41] This reflects the seemingly irreconcilable possibility of bringing together fashion (understood as constant change, and tied to business models based on continuous replacement of goods) and sustainability (understood as continuity and resourcefulness).[13] The apparent paradox dissolves if fashion is seen more broadly, as a process not only aligned to expansionist business models[42][43] and consumption, but instead as mechanism that leads to more engaged ways of living.[44][29]

Temporal concerns related to fashion

Fashion is, per definition, a phenomenon related to time: a popular expression in a certain time and context. This also affects the perception of what is and should be made more sustainable – if fashion should be "fast" or "slow"—or if it should be more exclusive or inclusive.[45][46] Like much other designs, the objects of fashion exist in the inter-zone between desire and discard along a temporal axis, between the shimmering urge towards life and the thermodynamic fate of death. As noted by cultural theorist Brian Thill, "waste is every object, plus time."[47]

When it comes down to the garments themselves, their durability depends on their use and "metabolism"—certain garments are made to withstand long use (ex. outdoor and hiking wear, winter jackets) whereas other garments have a quicker turn-around (ex. a party top). This means some garments have properties and a use-life that could be made more durable, whereas others should be compostable or recyclable for quicker disintegration.[48] Some garments age well and acquire a patina and a romantic enchantment not unlike the wonder, fascination and grandeur of historical ruins, whereas the derelict and discarded rags of last season is an eyesore and nuisance; the first connotes a majesty of taste, whereas the second is the underclass of waste.

"Fast fashion"

 

One of the most apparent reasons for the current unsustainable condition of the fashion system is related to the temporal aspects of fashion; the continuous stream of new goods onto the market, or what is popularly called "fast fashion." The term fast fashion is used to refer to the fast paced production of goods at an unethical level which often has a negative impact on the environment. As a way to conform to the latest fashion styles and keep consumers wanting new garments, current fast fashion trends pre-suppose selling clothing in large quantities.[49] Due to fast fashion being affordable and able to keep up with the trends, there has been an increase in apparel consumption. Consumption has risen to 62 million tonnes annually and is projected to reach 102 million tonnes by 2030.[50] This type of fashion is produced in vast quantities with low quality materials and are sold through chains such as H&M, Zara, Forever21, Shein, etc. A popular fast-fashion retailer called Shein which is most notably advertised on social media platform TikTok, is one of the most visited fast-fashion websites in the world and ships to 220 countries, however, many people have begun to question how ethical and sustainable Shein is as it is responsible for about 706 billion kilograms of greenhouse gases in 2015 from the production of polyester textiles and makes up for hundreds of gallons of water being used for one garment.[51] In January 2021, Shein offered over 121,000 garments made from polyester, making up 61% of their clothing total.[52] The fashion industry has a value of three trillion dollars. It is two percent of the world's gross domestic product (GDP) - the total monetary or market value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country's borders in a specific time period.[53] Out of the three trillion dollars, the majority is made of fast fashion.

However, the "fast" aspect of consumption is primarily a problem for the environment when done on a massive scale. As long as fast conspicuous consumption was reserved to the rich, the global impact was not reaching public attention or seen as a problem. That is, "fast" shopping sprees of haute couture is not seen as a problem, rather it is celebrated (for example in movies such as Pretty Woman), whereas when people with less means shop fast fashion, it is seen as unethical and a problem. Today, the speed of fast fashion is common across the whole industry as exclusive fashion replicates the fast fashion chains with continuous releases of collections and product drops: the quality of a garment does not necessarily translate to a slower pace of consumption and waste.[citation needed] These releases are only exasperated by the acceleration of fashion trends. As micro-trends are only lasting an average of 3 years, the demand for clothes has also accelerated.[54]

Fast fashion has negative effects on the environment and is unethical in terms of production. In order to make clothing fast enough to keep up with the changing fashion trends, the clothes are produced in harmful ways. "Fast" clothing is made with synthetic fibers as opposed to natural fibers. The synthetic fibers are made using the Earth's fossil fuels. Almost sixty percent of clothes are made this way.[55] Since people spend so much money on these types of clothes and purchase them so frequently, landfills are filling up quickly. Over sixty percent of clothes made every year end up in landfills as consumer waste, and almost twenty percent of the world's waste is constituted by fashion products.[53] Therefore, because fast fashion frequently introduces new collections, consumer consumption increases. Consequently, leading consumers to view low-cost apparel as disposable since there are continuous releases of products.[56] Production of these types of clothing is also commonly exploitative, with most factories that produce "fast" clothing employing workers on low wages in exploitative environments. Workers from Shein reported making as little as 35 cents per garment produced, as well as operating on 18-hour workdays with 1 day off per month.[57] Exploitative fast fashion production is prevalent in countries like China, Bangladesh and Vietnam.[58] Hard labor was always around in the fashion industry dating back to when slave labor helped factories gather their materials. People making these clothes today suffer from harsh working conditions, low wages, and risks to health and safety.

"Slow" fashion

Slow fashion can be seen as an alternative approach against fast fashion, based on principles of the slow food movement.[59][60] Characteristics of sustainable fashion match the philosophies of "slow fashion" in that emotional, ecological and ethical qualities are favored over uniform and bland convenience with minimal friction. It requires a changed infrastructure and a reduced through-put of goods. Categorically, slow fashion is neither business-as-usual nor just involving design classics. Nor is it production-as-usual but with long lead times. Slow fashion is a vision of the fashion sector built from a different starting point.[61] Slow fashion is a fashion concept that reflects a perspective, which respects human living conditions, biological, cultural diversity and scarce global resources and creates unique, personalized products.

The term Slow Fashion came about quite organically. It was coined by Kate Fletcher of the Centre for Sustainable Fashion, following the phenomena of the slow food movement.[62] As with the slow food movement, Fletcher saw a need for a slower pace in the fashion industry.[63]

Slow fashion challenges growth fashion's obsession with mass-production and globalized style. It becomes a guardian of diversity and changes the power relations between fashion creators and consumers, therefore forging new relationships and trust that are only possible at smaller scales. It fosters a heightened state of awareness of the design process and its impacts on resource flows, workers, communities, and ecosystems.[64]

Slow fashion often consists of durable products, traditional production techniques, or design concepts that strive to be season-less or last aesthetically and materially for longer periods of time. The impact of slowness aims to affect many points of the production chain. For workers in the textile industry in developing countries, slow fashion means higher wages. For end-users, slow fashion means that the goods are designed and manufactured with greater care and high-quality products. From an environmental point of view, it means that there are less clothing and industrial waste that is removed from use following transient trends.[65] Emphasis is put on durability; emotionally, materially, aesthetically, and/or through services that prolong the use-life of garments. New ideas and product innovations are constantly redefining slow fashion, so using a static, single definition would ignore the evolving nature of the concept.

Examples of stability of expression over long times are abundant in the history of dress, not least in ethnic or folk dress, ritual or coronation robes, clerical dress, or the uniforms of the Vatican Guard.[66] The emphasis on slowness in branding is thus an approach that is specific for a niche in the market (such as Western-educated middle-class) that has since the 1990s become dominated by "fast" models. One of the earliest brands that gained global fame with an explicit focus on slow fashion, the Anglo-Japanese brand People Tree, embraces the concept of ethical trade, manufactures all products in accordance with ethical commerce standards, and supports local producers and craftsmen in developing countries. The People Tree brand is known as the first fashion company to receive the World Fair Trade Organization product label in 2013, demonstrating their dedication to fair trade and the environment.[67]

The concept of slow fashion is however not without its controversies, as the imperative of slowness is a mandate emerging from a position of privilege. To stop consuming "fast fashion" strikes against low-income consumers whose only means to access trends is through cheap and accessible goods. Those who are already having a high position in society can afford to slow down and cement their status and position, while those on their way up resent being told to stay at the lower rungs of the status hierarchy.[68] "The prestige of slowness allows a cultural signifier for those already have social positions to preserve, and have time and money to take it easy and enjoy the pleasures of reflection and meditate over their moral superiority."[69]

Garment use and lifespan

The environmental impact of fashion also depends on how much and how long a garment is used. With the fast fashion trend, garments tend to be used half as much as compared to 15 years ago. This is due to the inferior quality of fabrics used but also a result of a significant increase in collections that are being released by the fashion industry. Typically, a garment used daily over years has less impact than a garment used once to then be quickly discarded. Studies have shown that the washing and drying process for pair of classic jeans is responsible for almost two-thirds of the energy consumed through the whole of the jeans' life, and for underwear about 80% of total energy use comes from laundry processes.[13] The dyeing process also contributes close to 15%-20% of wastewater. For this reason, innovative techniques are being introduced to reduce energy and water consumption, such as utilizing CO2 in the dyeing process.[56] Thus, use and wear practices affect the lifecycles of garments and needs to be addressed for larger systemic impact.[70]

However, there is a significant difference between making a product last from making a long-lasting product. The quality of the product must reflect the appropriate fit into its lifecycle. Certain garments of quality can be repaired and cultivated with emotional durability. Low-quality products that deteriorate rapidly are not as suitable to be "enchanted" with emotional bonds between user and product.[71] It is important to notice that choosing and promoting "emotional bonds" with consumer objects is an endeavor more easily done under circumstances of excess, as the needy have no other option than to keep and care for their belongings.

As highlighted in the research of Irene Maldini, slowing down (in the sense of keeping garments longer) does not necessarily translate into lower volumes of purchased units.[72] Maldini's studies expose how slow fashion, in the sense of long-lasting use phase of garments, tends to indicate that garments stay in the wardrobe longer, stored or hoarded, but does not mean fewer resources are used in producing garments. Thus, slowness comes to mean wardrobes with more lasting products, but the consumption volume and in-flow into the wardrobe/storage stay the same.[73]

Concerns

Environmental

The fashion industry has a disastrous impact on the environment. In fact, it is the second largest polluter in the world, just after the oil industry. And, the environmental damage is increasing as the industry grows.[74]

 
A factory emitting smoke into the sky.

The textiles and fashion industries are amongst the leading industries that affect the environment negatively. One of the industries that greatly jeopardize environmental sustainability is the textiles and fashion industry, which thus also bears great responsibilities. Globalization has made it possible to produce clothing at increasingly lower prices, prices so low, and collections shifting so fast, that many consumers consider fashion to be disposable.[22] However, fast, and thus disposable, fashion adds to pollution and generates environmental hazards, in production, use, and disposal.

Putting the environmental perspective at the center, rather than the logic of the industry, is thus an urgent concern if fashion is to become more sustainable. The Earth Logic fashion research action plan argues for "putting the health and survival of our planet earth and consequently the future security and health of all species including humans, before industry, business, and economic growth."[75] In making this argument the Earth Logic plan explicitly connects the global fashion system with the 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C.

Furthermore, the Earth Logic fashion research action plan sets out a range of possible areas for work in a sustainable fashion that scientific and research evidence suggests are the most likely to deliver a change of the scale and pace needed to respond to challenges like climate change. Earth Logic's point of departure is that the planet, and its people, must be put first, before profit. It replaces the logic of economic growth, which is arguably the single largest factor limiting change towards sustainable fashion, with the logic that puts earth at its center.[76]

Environmental hazards

The clothing industry has one of the highest impacts on the planet. Cotton requires approximately 15,000 liters of water to grow for a pair of jeans.[77] High water usage, pollution from chemical treatments used in dyeing and preparation and the disposal of large amounts of unsold clothing through incineration or landfill deposits are hazardous to the environment.[78] There is a growing water scarcity, the current usage level of fashion materials (79 billion cubic meters annually) is very concerning because textile production mostly takes place in areas of fresh water stress.[79] Only around 20% of clothing is recycled or reused, huge amounts of fashion product end up as waste in landfills or are incinerated.[79] It has been estimated that in the UK alone around 350,000 tons of clothing ends up as landfill every year. According to Earth Pledge, a non-profit organization committed to promoting and supporting sustainable development, "At least 8,000 chemicals are used to turn raw materials into textiles and 25% of the world's pesticides are used to grow non-organic cotton. This causes irreversible damage to people and the environment, and still two thirds of a garment's carbon footprint will occur after it is purchased."[80] The average American throws away nearly 70 pounds of clothing per year.[81]

Microfibers

There is increasing concern that microfibers from synthetic and cellulosic [82] fabrics are polluting the earths waters through the process of laundering. Microfibers are tiny threads that are shed from fabric. These microfibers are too small to be captured in wastewater treatment plants filtration systems and they end up entering our natural water systems and as a result, contaminating our food chain. One study found that 34.8% of Microplastics found in oceans come from the textile and clothing industry and the majority of them were made of polyester, polyethylene, acrylic, and elastane;[83] but a study off the coast of the UK and US by the Plymouth Marine Laboratory in May 2020 suggested there are at least double the number of particles as previously thought.[84] Eliminating synthetic materials used in clothing products can prevent harmful synthetics and microfibers from ending up in the natural environment. While some clothing companies and NGOs support the use of washing bags to filter out microfibers in washing machines and thus reduce microfiber release, microfibers are also shed during wear and disposal.[85]

"Fossil fashion"

In February 2021, Changing Markets Foundation released a report on the fashion industry's dependence on oil extraction. The report analyses the current production model across the fashion industry is dependent on massive fossil-fuel extraction to fuel the production of fibers.[86] The report spotlights how the production of the most popular fibers, primarily polyester, is reliant on oil extraction. Production of polyester has grown ninefold since the 1970s, and is the fastest growing component in fashion production. The popularity of polyester is due to its low price, but also the fiber's flexibility as a material. The report suggests, synthetic fibers in the textile industry currently accounts for 1.35% of global oil consumption, and this is projected to more than double in the coming years: "BP's energy scenario presumes plastic production will account for 95% of future growth in demand for oil demand, while the International Energy Agency (IEA) predicts petrochemicals will represent up to 50% of growth in oil demand by 2050 and 4% in the projected growth of gas demand." (p. 8)

Social

One of the main social issues related to fashion concerns labor. Since the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911, labor rights in the fashion industry has been at the center of this issue.[87] The 2013 Savar building collapse at Rana Plaza, where 1138 people died, put the spotlight once again on the lack of transparency, poor working conditions and hazards in fashion production.[88][89] Attention is increasingly being placed on labour rights violations in other parts of the whole fashion product lifecycle from textile production and processing,[90][91] retail and distribution[92] and modeling[93] to the recycling of textiles.[94] Whilst the majority of fashion and textiles are produced in Asia, Central America, Turkey, North Africa, the Caribbean and Mexico, there is still production across Europe where exploitative working conditions are also found such as in Leicester in the UK Midlands[95] and Central and Eastern Europe.[96]

The fashion industry benefits from racial, class and gender inequalities.[97] These inequalities and pressure from brands and retailers in the form of low prices and short lead times contribute to exploitative working conditions and low wages.[98] Also "local" production, such as garments labeled as "Made in Italy" are engaged in global sourcing of labor and worker exploitation, bypassing unions and social welfare contracts.[99]

The number of workers employed in textiles, clothing, and footwear is unknown due to the differences in statistical measures.[100] It is generally accepted that at least 25 million people, the majority women, work in garment manufacture and up to 300 million in cotton alone.[101]

The environmental impact of fashion also affects communities located close to production sites. There is little easily accessible information about these impacts, but it is known that water and land pollution from toxic chemicals used to produce and dye fabrics and have serious negative consequences for the people living near factories.[102]

The social costs of fast fashion are left on the laborers working long hours to mass produce the clothing. They bear the weight of the fast fashion industry as they work through environmental health hazards and cheap pay that does not compensate for the work, they put in.[103] This is a big reason why slow fashion is becoming so desirable. Unlike fast fashion, it places a big importance on ethical conduct and caring for people working throughout the supply chain.[104]

Transparency

Supply chain transparency has been a recurring controversy for the fashion industry, especially since the Rana Plaza accident. The issue has been pushed by many labor organizations, not least Clean Clothes Campaign and Fashion Revolution. Over the last years, over 150 major brands including Everlane, Filippa K, and H&M have answered by publicizing information about their factories online. Every year, Fashion Revolution publishes a Fashion Transparency Index[105][106] which rates the world's largest brands and retailers according to how much information they disclose about their suppliers, supply chain policies and practices, and social and environmental impact. The top scorers of the 2019 Fashion Transparency Index included Adidas, Reebok, Patagonia, and H&M.[107] The high place of several fast fashion retailers caused controversy regarding the parameters used for such rankings.[108]

Diversity and inclusion

In addition, fashion companies are criticized for the lack of size, age, physical ability, gender and racial diversity of models used in photo shoots and catwalks.[109] A more radical and systemic critique of social inequality in fashion concerns the exclusion and aesthetic supremacy inherent and accentuated through fashion that still remains unquestioned under the current environmentally focused discourse on sustainable fashion.[110][111]

While social "inclusivity" has become almost a norm amongst brands marketing ethical and sustainable fashion, the norm for what is considered a "beautiful" and "healthy" body keeps narrowing down under what researchers have called the current "wellness syndrome."[112] With the positive thinking of inclusivity, the assumption is that a consumer can be whatever he or she wants to be, and thus if the person is not living up to the ideals it is the person's own fault. This optimism hides the diktat of aesthetic wellness, which turns inclusion into an obligation to look good and be dressed in fashionable clothes, a "democratic" demand for aesthetic as well as ethical perfection, as argued by philosopher Heather Widdows.[113]

Global

The impact of fashion across the planet is unevenly distributed. Whereas much of the benefits of cheap and accessible clothes targets and benefits the socially mobile classes in metropolitan areas in the Global North, developing countries take a much higher proportion of the negative impact from the fashion system in terms of waste, pollution, and ecological injustices.

Global North

Across consumer societies, primarily located in the Global North, the current focus is on solutions related to "reduce, reuse, recycle," which are primarily promoted through brand initiatives. While this approach puts focus on the abundance of cheap and accessible goods, it fails to address the uneven global impact of the fashion system. The fashion situation differs widely between consumer societies and developing economies. The push for affecting overconsumption not only pushes responsibility for systemic issues onto the individual, but it also primarily positions fashion in a Western consumerism context, and puts Euro-centric models of status, individualism, and consumerism as universal models for social life and aspirations.[citation needed]

Asian

China has emerged as the largest exporter of fast fashion, accounting for 30% of world apparel exports.[114] However, some Chinese workers make as little as 12–18 cents per hour working in poor conditions.[114] Each year Americans purchase approximately 1 billion garments made in China. Today's biggest factories and mass scale of apparel production emerged from two developments in history. The first involved the opening up of China and Vietnam in the 1980s to private and foreign capital and investments in the creation of export-oriented manufacturing of garments, footwear, and plastics, part of a national effort to boost living standards, embrace modernity, and capitalism.[115] Second, the retail revolution within the U.S. (example Wal-Mart, Target, Nike) and Western Europe, where companies no longer manufactured but rather contracted out their production and transformed instead into key players in design, marketing, and logistics, introducing many new different product lines manufactured in foreign-owned factories in China.[115] It is the convergence of these two phenomena that has led to the largest factories in history from apparels to electronics. In contemporary global supply chains, it is the retailers and branders who have had the most power in establishing arrangements and terms of production, not factory owners.[116] Fierce global competition in the garment industry translates into poor working conditions for many laborers in developing nations. Developing countries aim to become a part of the world's apparel market despite poor working conditions and low pay. Countries such as Cambodia and Bangladesh export large amounts of clothing into the United States every year.[114]

Economic

At the heart of the controversy concerning "fast fashion" lies the acknowledgment that the "problem" of unsustainable fashion is that cheap, accessible, and on-trend clothes have become available to people of poorer means. This means more people across the world have adopted the consumption habits that in the mid-20th century were still reserved for the rich. To put it differently, the economic concern of fashion is that poor people, or populations in developing economies, now have access to updating their wardrobes as often as the rich, or consumers in Western economies. That is, "fast" fashion is only a problem when poor people engage in it. In alignment with this, the blame for the proliferation of poor-quality, high-quantity and cheap fashion is often put on poorer consumers.

The economic concerns of fashion also mean many of the sustainable solutions to fashion, such as buying high-quality goods to last longer, are not accessible to people with fewer means. From an economic perspective, sustainability thus remains a moralizing issue of educated classes teaching the less educated "responsible consumption," and a debate that mainly concerns promoting frugality and austerity to those with fewer means. It is seen as an opportunity by businesses that allow the resale of luxury goods.[117]

The distribution of value within the fashion industry is another economic concern, with garment workers and textile farmers and workers receiving low wages and prices.[118][119]

Business models for sustainable fashion

In order to promote more sustainable forms of consumption, there is a multitude of emerging business models that challenge the prevalent ready-to-wear model.

Circular fashion models

A number of emerging business models go under the name of "circular fashion," inspired by the circular economy. While there are many models under development, some are gaining more traction. Much of the work on circular fashion builds on ideas and initiatives explored in the 1990s and onwards, by scholars such as Lynda Grose,[120] Kate Fletcher,[121] Rebecca Earley,[122] Mathilda Tham, and Timo Rissanen,[123] especially the thinking around the "metabolism" of garments and wardrobes, "zero waste" production, and the focus on the whole life cycle of garments.[124] The popular terminology around circular fashion, reached the mainstream through a report that has come to define the field, the 2017 "A New Textile Economy: Redesigning Fashion's Future" by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.[125]

The "cradle-to-cradle" model, a circular system named after the influential 2002 book with the same name by German chemist Michael Braungart and US architect William McDonough has been a popular inspiration amongst proponents of circular fashion, it is not easy to achieve. Most textile fibers in consumer fashion are amalgamations of various materials to achieve flexible or aesthetic properties, and thus not optimal for circular reproduction. Industrially shredded fibers often need addition of new materials to achieve elasticity or durability. Up until now, most companies contributing to circular fashion are either mechanical or chemical textile recyclers such as Lenzing, Recover Textile Systems, Renewcell, Evrnu, Spinnova or Infinited Fiber Company.[126] Although all work with textile waste as their raw material, it is often from pre-consumer origins as it is easier to sort and process. More recently, some industry initiatives to develop and scale pre-consumer and post-consumer textile recycling have been emerging around the globe, particularly as a response to new legislation. On March 30, The European Commission published the EU Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles,[127] a new strategy that lays out key principles to drive change in the textiles industry. The European Commission’s vision of the future of the textiles industry in Europe lays on several pillars that include recycled textiles, ecodesigns, waste management, transparency, labelling, microplastics and extended producer responsibility (EPR).[128]

Biomimicry, natural cycles, and processes

Biomimicry suggests a perspective emphasizing the "Wisdom of Nature" where the industry looks into materials in tune with natural cycles.[129] Biomimicry replicates the cycles of nature, seeking to infinitely reuse materials to make commerce compatible with nature. Fashion from the viewpoint of biomimicry tries to make fashion work as a sustainable ecosystem, aligning with natural systems in harmony with the biosphere. Materials should be bio-compatible, combining biodegradable fibers with processes of fermentation and gasification, or materials that have been seen as waste could act as a more sustainable method to making new clothing.[130] Materials that can mitigate negative impacts from the industry. Whereas some biomimicry is about inventing new fibers and processes inspired by natural processes, biomimicry also connnotes traditional vegan and fossil-free materials, materials processed from the normal cycles of the natural environment, fibers "forgotten" or disregarded in agricultural business, or fibers made from regenerative agriculture, permaculture or sustainable techniques from indigenous cultures.

Rental and sharing models

Rental models are gaining popularity across the industry, a model that has traditionally been used in attire for masquerades or special events, such as weddings. The idea is that sharing garments ultimately lowers the volume of new purchases and disposal of clothing, which means less waste.[130] Rent the Runway is a company building on the "Rent a Closet" approach to consumption, where a consumer leases a garment instead of purchasing it. Fashion rental is a model expected to grow over 10% annually until 2027 across the fashion industry, thus also increasing sales (and expected waste) of garments.[131] Renting and sharing clothing is also known as CFC (collaborative fashion consumption) but its environmental impact and mitigation of pollution are debated.[132][133] While convenient for the consumer, reducing the number of items housed in the wardrobe, the environmental impact of rental may however not be reduced as much as advertised. Transportation between users and storage, dry-cleaning, and re-packaging causes more environmental impact than reselling or hand-me-downs.[134][135] As noted by Levänen et al. (2021), the lowest global warming impacts are achieved be reducing consumption, followed by reusing and recycling, whereas rental services are likely to increase customers’ consumption, logistics, and use, making sharing and rental scenarios having the highest Global Warming Potential.[133]

As noted by sustainability researcher Timo Rissanen, it is the total amount of clothing units in circulation that needs to be reduced, as well as their environmental impact during their life cycle, and rental services could, if improved, play a role in that.[136]

Vintage and resale models

The most sustainable fibers in fashion are the ones many people already have. Thus, to recirculate existing garments, new business models engage the resale, revival, and recirculation of used, second-hand or vintage clothing.[130] Purchasing second-hand, or vintage clothing is a way to lower the amount of new clothing that gets produced and disposed of and ends up in landfills.

Other resale models also contain elements of upcycling and repairs. Repairing and reselling used clothing has less environmental impact than creating, processing, dying, cutting, sewing, and shipping new clothing to the consumer.[citation needed]

Rethinking recycling

 
Community clothing and shoes donation bins.

A more technologically minded trend is "innovative recycling", which seeks to view waste itself as a source of value. Within the fashion industry, some[who?] manufacturers have created incentives for consumers to participate in the recycling of their clothing. Innovative recycling is also aimed at clothing stores themselves, who do not always have sustainable methods to properly dispose of boxes and plastic bags; innovative recycling also looks at the packaging that clothes come in having been sent from manufacturers. A change in approaches towards recycling within the fashion industry could potentially greatly impact the amount of waste the industry creates.[130]

From collective to connective

Using digital technologies and blockchain can promote more "Connected Clothes" which allows for more opportunities in digitalizing clothing for personalization, life-tracking, and traceability of its origin.[130]

Tailored resurgence

Tailored couture is another option for the future of a greener fashion industry, for those who can afford it, as it can potentially lead to less waste and more jobs improving the economy. Tailored couture is no longer desired because of the convenience of malls and stores provide but the consequence of the convenience is the pollution of the environment. The idea is that tailored clothing can reduce mass-production, while reusing and redesigning old clothes to fit could reduce the amount of old worn out unfitting clothes thrown out or given away.[137]

Open-source fashion

Open-source content has become a popular reference with designers sharing patterns and designs, connecting to the success of the open-source software movement. By sharing designs freely, using digital technology, the aim is to make consumers more engaged in the design, production, and lifetime use of the garment.[138] While the terminology is new, the concept builds on the sharing of patterns across European courts in 16th century (such as Kleidungsbüchlein or Trachtenbuch (usually translated as "Book of Clothes") of Melchior Lorck, and the wide range of sewing magazines, such as Burda Style, in the early 20th century. By making garments more open and adaptable across their lifecycle, the hope is that "garments can be multi-functional, beyond simply clothing our bodies; that fashion should be both useful and inventive; and that what we wear should relate to the world around us."[138] Examples of open-source fashion range from freely available patterns and production techniques, platforms for exchanging materials and patterns, and maker spaces.[139]

Technologies

Novel technologies for virtual try-ons of clothes sold via e-commerce may enable more sustainable fashion and reduce wasted clothes and related transportation and production expenses.[140][141]

Sustainable clothing

Sustainable clothing refers to fabrics derived from eco-friendly resources, such as sustainably grown fiber crops or recycled materials. Sustainable clothing includes the use of second-hand retail repair and often utilizes upcycling and recycling of clothing.[142] It also refers to how these fabrics are made. Historically, being environmentally conscious towards clothing meant (1), making clothes last long by caring for them, repairing and patching them, (2) inheriting and using hand-me-downs within ones expanded family and community, (3) buying clothes from thrift stores or any shops that sell second-hand clothing, or (4) donating used clothes to shops previously mentioned, for reuse or resale. In modern times, with a prominent trend towards sustainability and being 'green', sustainable clothing has expanded towards (5) reducing the amount of clothing overproduced, incinerated or discarded to landfills, and (6) decreasing the environmental impact of agrochemicals in producing conventional fiber crops (e.g. cotton).

 
The "three pillars" of sustainability bounded by the environment (earth, life)

Under the accordance of sustainability, recycled clothing upholds the principle of the "Three R's of the Environment": Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle, as well as the "Three Legs of Sustainability": Economics, Ecology, and Social Equity.

Through the utilization of recycled material for the manufacturing of clothing, provides an additional realm of economic world profit. Sustainable Clothing will provide a new market for additional job opportunities, the continuous net flow of money in the global economy, and the consumption reduction of raw materials and virgin resources. Source reduction or reducing the use of raw materials and virgin resources can ultimately reduce carbon emissions during the manufacturing process as well as the resources and carbon emissions that are related to the transportation process. This also prevents the unsustainable usage of extracting materials from the Earth by making use of what has already been used (i.e. recycling).

Sustainable clothing has many benefits. Some being that it uses less water, it reduces toxic waste, it reduces the amount of pesticides released into the environment, and the quality is higher.

Recycled clothing

Recycled or reclaimed fibers are recovered from either pre or post-consumer sources. Those falling into the category of 'pre-consumer' are unworn/unused textile wastes from all the various stages of manufacture. Post-consumer textile waste could be any product that has been worn/used and has (typically) been discarded or donated to charities. Once sorted for quality and color, they can be shredded (pulled, UK, or picked, US) into a fibrous state. According to the specification and end-use, these fibers can be blended together or with 'new' fiber.

While most textiles can be recycled, they are mainly downgraded almost immediately into low-quality end-uses, such as filling materials. The limited range of recycled materials available reflects the market dominance of cheap virgin fibers and the lack of technological innovation in the recycling industry. For over 200 years recycling technology has stayed the same; fibers are extracted from used fabric by mechanically tearing the fabric apart using carding machines. The process breaks the fibers, producing much shorter lengths that tend to result in a low-quality yarn. Textiles made from synthetic fibers can also be recycled chemically in a process that involves breaking down the fiber at the molecular level and then depolymerizing the feedstock. While chemical recycling is more energy-intensive than mechanical pulling, the resulting fiber tends to be of more predictable quality. The most commonly available recycled synthetic fibre is polyester made from plastic bottles, although recycled nylon is also available.[143]

 
Total MSW Generation by category, 2008, 250 million tons (before recycling)

In addition to promoting a sounder environment by producing newer clothing made with sustainable, innovative materials, clothing can also be donated to charities, sold into consignment shops, or recycled into other materials. These methods reduce the amount of landfill space occupied by discarded clothes. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency's 2008 Report on Municipal Solid Waste (MSW), Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the United States defines clothing as non-durable – generally lasts less than three years – textiles. In 2008, approximately 8.78 millions of tons of textiles were generated, 1.45 millions of tons were recovered and saved from landfills resulting in a rate of almost 17%. The EPA report also states that the amount of MSW being "Discarded" is 54%, "Recovered" is 33%, and "Combusted with Energy recovery" is 13%.[144] Approximately two-thirds of clothing materials are sent to landfills, making it the fastest-growing component of waste in the household waste stream. As of 2009, textiles disposed of in landfill sites have risen from 7% to 30% within the last five years.[145]

Upcycling

Upcycling in fashion signifies the process of reusing the unwanted and discarded materials (such as fabric scraps or clothes) into new materials or products without compromising the value and the quality of the used material. The definition of textile waste can be production waste, pre-consumer waste, and post-consumer waste.[146]

Typically, upcycling creates something new and better from the old, used or disposed of items. The process of upcycling requires a blend of factors like environmental awareness, creativity, innovation, and hard work and results in a unique sustainable product. Upcycling aims at the development of products truly sustainable, affordable, innovative, and creative. For example, shirts can be upcycled into a value-added product like a unique handmade braided rug, whereas the opposite of upcycling is downcycling such as cleaning rags made from worn T-shirts.[147]

Upcycling can be seen as one of the waste management strategies. There are different types of strategies. From least to most resource-intensive, the strategies are the reuse of product, repairing and reconditioning to keep products as long as possible, recycling the raw materials.[148] The reuse of textile products 'as is' brings significant environmental savings. In the case of clothing, the energy used to collect, sort and resell second-hand garments in between 10 and 20 times less than that needed to make a new item.[149]

It is meant to be innovative by making certain materials into something re-usable and improved, which gives companies and manufacturers higher values for their products. Recycling is a big factor in sustainability, so creating new materials to avoid mass pollution can help improve the economy.[150] An example of a brand that does this is Ecoalf. All clothing items are made from recycled items like used tires and plastic bottles. The manufacturing of their items also takes place wherever the materials are recycled from, ultimately reducing their carbon footprint.

The advantages of circular fashion include: reduced dependency on imported raw materials, creation of eco- friendly industries and jobs, eco-friendly brands benefit from a better public image, and reduction in environmental damage caused by resource extraction. On the other hand, disadvantages include dependency on the consumer's actions, creating a new business model on the basis of recycled is tough, and the entire cycle requires integrating product life cycle from raw material to disposal.[151]

Sustainable consumption practices for enhanced product life

There are negative social and environmental impacts at all stages of the fashion product life: materials production and processing, manufacture of garments, retail and marketing, use and maintenance, and at the discard phase. For some products, the environmental impact can be greater at the use phase than material production,[152] leading for instance to the suggestion to wash clothes less.

Consumer engagement

 
Sustainability and Style event held during Berlin Fashion Week 2016.

Consumer engagement challenges the "passive" mode of ready-to-wear fashion where consumers have few interfaces and little incentive to be active with their garments; to repair, change, update, swap, and learn from their wardrobe.[29] This type of consumer engagement, aiming to promote fashion as an ability rather than primarily as a commodity, has been referred to as "fashion-ability."[153] The term "folk fashion" has been used in the emphasis on craft engagements with garments where the community heritage of skills are in focus.[154] There are currently many designers trying to find ways that experiment with new models of action that deposes passivity and indifference while preserving the positive social dynamics and sensibilities fashion offers, often in relation to Alvin Toffler's notion of the "prosumer" (portmanteau of producer and consumer). Notions of participatory design, open source fashion, and fashion hacktivism are parts of such endeavors, mixing techniques of dissemination with empowerment, reenchantment and Paulo Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed."[13][155][156][157] An example of such consumer engagement can be Giana Gonzalez and her project "Hacking Couture", which has tested such methods across the world since 2006.[158] As highlighted in the research of Jennifer Ballie, there is also an increasing interest across industry to produce unique experiences amongst users, connecting co-design with social media apps and tools to enhance the user experience of consumers.[159] A recent example has been the Open Source Fashion Cookbook, by the New York-based brand ADIFF, showing how consumers can recycle materials, share and modify patterns, and co-create more engaging forms of fashion consumption.[160]

Enhancing the lifespan of products have been yet another approach to sustainability, yet still only in its infancy. Upmarket brands have long supported the lifespan of their products through product-service systems, such as re-waxing of classic outdoor jackets, or repairs of expensive handbags, yet more accessible brands do still not offer even spare buttons in their garments. One such approach concerns emotionally durable design, yet with fashion's dependency on continuous updates, and consumer's desire to follow trends, there is a significant challenge to make garments last long through emotional attachment. As with memories, not all are pleasant, and thus a focus on emotional attachment can result in favoring a normative approach to what is considered a good enough memory to manifest emotionally in a garment. Cultural theorist Peter Stallybrass approaches this challenge in his essay on poverty, textile memory, and the coat of Karl Marx.[161]

Clothing swapping

 
Clothes swap in Wrocław, Wyspa Tamka. Event is manifesting slow fashion movement, focusing on Fashion Revolution actions

Clothing swapping can further promote the reduction, reuse, and recycling clothing. By reusing clothing that has already been made and recycling clothing from one owner to another, source reduction can be achieved. This moves away from usage of new raw materials to make more clothing available for consumption. Through the method of clothing swapping, an alternative resource for consumers to ultimately save in regards to money and time is provided. It reduces transportation emissions, costs, and the time it takes to drive and search through the chaos of most clothing stores. Swapping clothes further promotes the use of sustainable online shopping and the internet as well as an increase of social bonds through online communication or effective personal communication in "clothing swap parties." The EPA states, that by reusing items, at the source waste can be diverted from ending up in landfills because it delays or avoids that item's entry in the waste collection and disposal system.[162]

Clothing donation to charities

People can opt to donate clothing to charities. In the UK, a charity is a non-profit organization that is given special tax form and distinct legal status.[163] A charity is "a foundation created to promote the public good".[164] People donating clothing to charitable organizations in America are often eligible for tax deductions, albeit the donations are itemized.[165]

Examples of charitable organization

The following is a list of few charitable organizations known for accepting clothing donations.

  • Centre for Sustainable Fashion – an organization that focuses on projects that explore knowledge exchange, research, and education.[166]
  • Goodwill Industries – a non-profit organization founded in 1902 in Boston. Originally started as an urban outreach.[167]
  • Oxfam – a non-profit organization founded in 1942 in Oxford. Originally established to mitigate famines in Greece caused by Allied naval blockades during World War II. Formerly Oxfam Committee for Famine Relief.[168]
  • Responsibility in Fashion – a non-profit organization bringing together sustainable, conscious, ethical, and eco-fashion organizations and government programs toward the goal of energizing and bringing innovation to the growing movement toward clean, safe and ethical fashion.[169]
  • Salvation Army – an Evangelical Christian-based non-profit organization founded in 1865 in London.[170]
  • Textile Exchange – a non-profit organization that focuses on minimizing the detrimental effects of the garment and textile industry and maximizing sustainability efforts.[171]
  • United Way Worldwide – a non-profit organization originally named Charity Organization Society, established in 1887 in Denver, Colorado. Currently a coalition of charitable organizations.[172]
  • Planet Aid - a non-profit organization founded in 1997.

Consignment

A clothing consignment shop sells clothes that are owned not by the shop's owner but by the individual who had given (or consigned) the items to the shop for the owner to sell.[173] The shop owner/seller is the consignee and the owner of the items is the consignor. Both the consignor and the consignee receive portions of the profit made from the item. However, the consignor will not be paid until the items are sold. Therefore, unlike donating clothing to charities, people who consign their clothes to shops can make a profit.

Textile recycling

Charities keep approximately 10% of all the donated clothing received.[174] These clothes tend to be good quality, fashionable, and high valued fabrics that can easily be sold in charities' thrift shops. Charities sell the other 90% of the clothing donations to textile recycling firms.[174]

Textile recycling firms process about 70% of the donated clothing into industrial items such as rags or cleaning cloths.[174] However, 20–25% of the second-hand clothing is sold into an international market.[174] Where possible, used jeans collected from America, for example, are sold to low-income customers in Africa for modest prices, yet most end up in landfill as the average US sized customer is several sizes bigger than the global average.[175]

Sustainable fashion organizations and companies

There is a broad range of organizations purporting to support sustainable fashion, some representing particular stakeholders, some addressing particular issues, and some seeking to increase the visibility of the sustainable fashion movement. They also range from the local to global. It is important to examine the interests and priorities of the organizations.

Organizations

  • Fashion Revolution is a not-for-profit global movement founded by Carry Somers and Orsola de Castro which highlights working conditions and the people behind the garments. With teams in over 100 countries around the world, Fashion Revolution campaigns for systemic reform of the fashion industry with a focus on the need for greater transparency in the fashion supply chain. Fashion Revolution has designated the anniversary of the Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh as Fashion Revolution Day. Fashion Revolution Week takes place annually during the week on which the anniversary falls. Over 1000 events take place around the world, with millions of people engaging online and offline.[176] Fashion Revolution publishes the Fashion Transparency Index annually, ranking the largest fashion brands in the world on how much they disclose about their policies, practices, procedures and social and environmental impact.[177]
 
Clothes swap in Wrocław, Wyspa Tamka. Event is manifesting slow fashion movement, focusing on Fashion Revolution actions

Companies

  • Eco Age, a consultancy company specializing in enabling businesses to achieve growth and add value through sustainability, is an organization that promotes sustainable fashion. Its creative director, Livia Firth, is also the founder of the Green Carpet Challenge which aims to promote ethically made outfits from fashion designers.[187]
  • Trans-America Trading Company is one of the biggest of about 3,000 textile recyclers in the United States.[114] Trans-America has processed more than 12 million pounds of post-consumer textiles per year since 1942. At its 80,000-square-foot sorting facility, workers separate used clothing into 300 different categories by type of item, size, and fiber content. About 30% of the textiles are turned into absorbent wiping rags for industrial uses, and another 25–30% are recycled into fiber for use as stuffing for upholstery, insulation, and the manufacture of paper products.[188]
  • ViaJoes – Sustainable clothing manufacturer producing eco-friendly fabrics from recycled cotton and other sustainable products confirmed to GOTS[189] – Global Organic Textile Standard International Working Group standard

Materials

In fashion, the consideration of sustainability of materials is critical. The renewability and source of a fiber, the process of how a raw fiber is turned into a textile, the impact of preparation and dyeing of the fibers, energy use in production and preparation, the working conditions of the people producing the materials, and the material's total carbon footprint, transportation between production plants, chemicals used to keep shipments fresh in containers, shipping to retail and consumer, how the material will be cared for and washed, the processes of repairs and updates, and what happens to it at the end of life. The indexing of the textile journeys is thus extremely complex. In sustainability, there is no such thing as a single-frame approach. Issues dealt with in single frames will almost by definition lead to unwanted and unforeseen effects elsewhere.[148]

Overall, diversity in the overall fiber mix is needed; in 2013 cotton and polyester accounted for almost 85% of all fibers, and thus their impacts were, and continue to be, disproportionately magnified.[190] Also, many fibers in the finished garments are mixed to acquire desired drape, flexibility or stretch, thus affecting both care and the possibility to recycle the material in the end.

Cellulose fibers

Natural fibers are fibers which are found in nature and are not petroleum-based. Natural fibers can be categorized into two main groups, cellulose or plant fiber and protein or animal fiber. Uses of these fibers can be anything from buttons to eyewear such as sunglasses.[191]

Other than cotton, the most common plant-based fiber, cellulose fibers include: jute, flax, hemp, ramie, abaca, bamboo (used for viscose), soy, corn, banana, pineapple, beechwood (used for rayon). Alternative fibers such as bamboo (in yarn) and hemp (of a variety that produces only a tiny amount of the psychoactive component found in cannabis) are coming into greater use in so-called eco-fashions.[114] Bacterial cellulose is currently being tested and better developed as a new fiber alternative.[192] These are the type of fibers that are made out of bacteria, yeasts, and other microorganisms that spins cellulose during the fermentation process. This material is easy for fashion designers to use because it compresses while drying, knits itself while evaporating, and take little to no effort to color.

Cotton

Cotton, also known as vegetable wool, is a major source of apparel fiber. Celebrated for its excellent absorbency, durability, and intrinsic softness, cotton accounts for over 50% of all clothing produced worldwide. This makes cotton the most widely used clothing fiber.[193] Up to 1 billion people worldwide depend on the cotton industry for their livelihoods, including 100 million smallholder farmers.[194]

Cotton is one of the most chemical-intensive crops in the world.[195] Conventionally grown cotton uses approximately 25% of the world's insecticides and more than 10% of the world's pesticides.[196] However, growing and processing this particular fiber crop is largely unsustainable. For every pound of cotton harvested, a farmer uses up 1/3 lb of chemical, synthetic fertilizer.[197] As a whole, the US cotton production makes up 25% of all pesticides deployed in the United States. Worldwide, cotton takes up 2.4% of all arable lands yet requires 16% of the world's pesticides.[198] The cotton hulls contain the most potent insecticide residues. They are often used as cattle feed, which means that consumers are purchasing meat containing a concentration of pesticides.[198] The processing of cotton into usable fibers also adds to the burden on the environment. Manufacturers prefer cotton to be white so that cotton can easily be synthetically dyed to any shade of color.[199] Natural cotton is actually beige-brown, and so during processing, manufacturers would add bleach and various other chemicals and heavy metal dyes to make cotton pure white.[200] Formaldehyde resins would be added in as well to form "easy care" cotton fabric.[200]

Bt cotton

To reduce the use of pesticides and other harmful chemicals, companies have produced genetically modified (GMO) cotton plants that are resistant to pest infestations. Among the GMO are cotton crops inserted with the Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) gene.[201] Bt cotton crops do not require insecticide applications. Insects that consume cotton containing Bt will stop feeding after a few hours, and die, leaving the cotton plants unharmed.[202]

As a result of the use of Bt cotton, the cost of pesticide applications decreased between $25 and $65 per acre.[203] Bt cotton crops yield 5% more cotton on average compared to traditional cotton crops.[203] Bt crops also lower the price of cotton by 0.8 cents per pound.[203]

However, there are concerns regarding Bt technology, mainly that insects will eventually develop resistance to the Bt strain. According to an article published in Science Daily, researchers have found that members from a cotton bollworm species, Helicoverpa zea, were Bt-resistant in some crop areas of Mississippi and Arkansas during 2003 and 2006.[204] Fortunately, the vast majority of other agricultural pests remain susceptible to Bt.[204]

Micha Peled's documentary exposé Bitter seeds on BT farming in India claimed to reveal the true impact of genetically modified cotton on India's farmers, with a suicide rate of over a quarter-million Bt cotton farmers since 1995 due to financial stress resulting from massive crop failure and the exorbitantly high price of Monsanto's proprietary BT seed, although the evidence doesn't support this claim as the suicide rate of Indian famers has decreased since the introduction of Bt cotton.[205] The film also refutes false claims purported by the biotech industry that Bt cotton requires less pesticide and empty promises of higher yields, as farmers discover the bitter truth that in reality, Bt cotton in fact requires a great deal more pesticide than organic cotton, and often suffer higher levels of infestation by Mealybug resulting in devastating crop losses, and extreme financial and psychological stress on cotton farmers. Due to the biotech seed monopoly in India, where Bt cotton seed has become the ubiquitous standard, and the organic seed has become absolutely unobtainable, thus coercing all cotton farmers into signing Bt cotton seed purchase agreements which enforce the intellectual property interests of the biotech multinational corporation Monsanto.[206]

Organic cotton

Organic cotton is grown without the use of any genetic modification to the crops, without the use of any fertilizers, pesticides, and other synthetic agro-chemicals harmful to the land.[207] All cotton marketed as organic in the United States is required to fulfill strict federal regulations regarding how the cotton is grown.[208] This is done with a combination of innovation, science, and tradition in order to encourage a good quality of life and environment for all involved.[209] Organic cotton uses 88% less water and 62% less energy than conventional cotton.[210]

Naturally colored cotton

Cotton is naturally grown in a variety of colors. Typically, cotton color can come as mauve, red, yellow, and orange hues.[199] The use of naturally colored cotton has long been historically suppressed, mainly due to the industrial revolution.[199] Back then, it was much cheaper to have uniformly white cotton as a raw source for mass-producing cloth and fabric items.[199] Currently, modern markets have revived a trend in using naturally colored cotton for its noted relevance in reducing harmful environmental impacts. One such example of markets opening to these cotton types would be Sally Fox and her Foxfiber business—naturally colored cotton that Fox has bred and marketed.[211] On an additional note, naturally colored cotton is already colored, and thus do not require synthetic dyes during process. Furthermore, the color of fabrics made from naturally colored cotton does not become worn and fade away compared to synthetically dyed cotton fabrics.[212]

Soy

 
Soybean plant

Soy fabrics are derived from the hulls of soybeans—a manufacturing byproduct. Soy fabrics can be blended (i.e. 30%) or made entirely out of soy fibers.[213] Soy clothing is largely biodegradable, so it has a minimal impact on environment and landfills. Although not as durable as cotton or hemp fabrics, soy clothing has a soft, elastic feel.[214] Soy clothing is known as the vegetable cashmere for its light and silky sensation.[214] Soy fabrics are moisture absorbent, anti-bacterial, and UV resistant.[214] However, soy fabrics fell out of public knowledge during World War II, when rayon, nylon, and cotton sales rose sharply.[215]

Hemp

 
Fibers from a Hemp plant

Hemp, like bamboo, is considered a sustainable crop. It requires little water to grow, and it is resistant to most pests and diseases.[216] The hemp plant's broad leaves shade out weeds and other plant competitors, and its deep taproot system allows it to draw moisture deep in the soil.[217] Unlike cotton, many parts of the hemp plant have a use. Hemp seeds, for example, are processed into oil or food.[216] Hemp fiber comes in two types: primary and secondary bast fibers. Hemp fibers are durable and are considered strong enough for construction uses.[217] Compared to cotton fiber, hemp fiber is approximately 8 times the tensile strength and 4 times the durability.[217]

Hemp fibers are traditionally coarse and have been historically used for ropes rather than for clothing. However, modern technology and breeding practices have made hemp fiber more pliable, softer, and finer.

Bamboo

Bamboo fabrics are made from heavily pulped bamboo grass. Making clothing and textile from bamboo is considered sustainable due to the lack of need for pesticides and agrochemicals.[218] Naturally disease and pest resistant, bamboo is also fast growing. Compared to trees, certain varieties of bamboo can grow 1–4 inches long per day, and can even branch and expand outward because of its underground rhizomes.[219] Like cotton fibers, bamboo fibers are naturally yellowish in color and are bleached white with chemicals during processing.

Kombucha (SCOBY)

Furnished by a grant from the US. Environmental Protection Agency, associate professor Young-A Lee and her team are growing vats of gel-like film composed of cellulose fiber, a byproduct of the same symbiotic colonies of bacteria and yeast (abbreviated SCOBY) found in another of the world's popular "live culture" foods: kombucha. Once harvested and dried, the resulting material has a look and feel much like leather.[220] The fibers are 100 percent biodegradable, they also foster a cradle-to-cradle cycle of reuse and regeneration that leaves behind virtually zero waste. However, this material takes a long time to grow about three to four weeks under lab-controlled conditions. Hence mass production is an issue. In addition, tests revealed that moisture absorption from the air softens this material makes it less durable. Researchers also discovered that cold conditions make it brittle.[220]

Other cellulose fibers

Other alternative biodegradable fibers being developed by small companies include:

  • leather alternative using pineapple leaves;[221]
  • bio-composites, fabrics,[221] and leather alternative[222][223] using various parts of coconut;
  • fabric and paper made from banana plant stalks and stems.[221]
  • garmets made from tencel fibers.[224]

Protein fibers

Protein fibers originate from animal sources and are made up of protein molecules. The basic elements in these protein molecules being carbon, hydrogen oxygen and nitrogen.[225] Natural protein fibers include: wool, silk, angora, camel, alpaca, llama, vicuna, cashmere, and mohair.

Wool

Just as in cotton production, pesticides are conventionally used in the cultivation of wool, although quantities are considerably smaller, and it is thought that good practices can significantly limit negative environmental impacts. Sheep are treated either with injectable insecticides, a pour-on preparation or dipped in a pesticide bath to control parasite infections, which if left untreated can have serious health implications for the flock. When managed badly, these pesticides can cause harm to human health and aquatic ecosystems both on the farm and in subsequent downstream processing.[148]

Silk

Most commercially produced silk is of the cultivated variety and involves feeding the worms a carefully controlled diet of mulberry leaves grown under special conditions. Selected mulberry trees are grown to act as homes for the silkworms. The fibers are extracted by steaming to kill the silk moth chrysalis and then washed in hot water to degum the silk. The silk fiber is known for its strength and is considered a prestigious fiber. Its use in textiles is limited due to its high cost.[226] Most silkworms used to produce silk are not harmed in the process and are grown in their natural habitat, essentially "free range". The silk industry also employs millions of people in rural China.[227]

Cashmere

Cashmere is obtained from the fine, soft hairs of a cashmere goat's underbelly coat. This specific breed of goat is found throughout Asia. Due to the rarity of the breed, four goats are needed to produce enough cashmere for one sweater. Initially, cashmere was relatively expensive, but due to increased demand, the industry is beginning to take a toll on animals and the land. More and more goats are needed which results in more mouths to feed. Overpopulation of the goats degrades the land due to increased grazing. The cashmere industry is becoming more and more controversial with the questioning of the working conditions of goat herders and the underpaying of farmers.[228] Oxfam reported in Spring 2021 on a project in Afghanistan being undertaken jointly with the Burberry Foundation and PUR Projet, working with goat farmers to improve their business operations and make the Afghan cashmere industry more sustainable.[229]

Other natural materials

MuSkin

Italian company Zero Grado Espace has developed MuSkin, an alternative to leather made from the cap of the phellinus ellipsoideus mushroom, a parasitic fungus that grows in subtropical forests. It is water repellent and contains natural penicillin substances which limit bacteria proliferation.[230]

Wild rubber

Wild Rubber, developed by Flavia Amadeu and Professor Floriano Pastore at the University of Brazil, is an initiative that promotes wild rubber material which comes from the sap or latex of the pará rubber tree that grows within a biodiverse ecosystem in the Amazon Rainforest, Acre, Brazil. It is tapped by local communities who typically have a close relationship the forest and will gather medicinal plants or wild food during their tapping rounds.[231]

Qmilk

Qmilch GmbH, a German company has innovated a process to produce a textile fiber from casein in milk but it cannot be used for consumption. Qmilk fiber is made from 100% renewable resources. In addition, for the production of 1 kg of fiber Qmilch GmbH needs only 5 minutes and max. 2 liters of water.[232] This implies a particular level of cost efficiency and ensures a minimum of CO2 emissions. Qmilk fiber is biodegradable and leaves no traces. In addition, it is naturally antibacterial, especially against the bacterial strains, Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and is ideal for people that suffer from textile allergies.

Fabrics made from Qmilk fiber provide high wearing comfort and a silky feel. The organic fiber is tested for harmful substances and dermatologically tested for the wearer's skin and body compatibility 0% chemical additives.[232]

Manufactured fibers

Manufactured fibers sit within three categories:[233] Manufactured cellulosic fibers, manufactured synthetic fibers and manufactured protein fiber (azlon). Manufactured cellulosic fibers include modal, Lyocell (also known under the brand name Tencel), rayon/viscose made from bamboo, rayon/viscose made from wood and polylactic acid (PLA). Manufactured synthetic fibers include polyester, nylon, spandex, acrylic fiber, polyethylene and polypropylene (PP). Azlon is a manufactured protein fiber. Rayon/ viscose is a fiber out of pulp highly used in fast fashion as it is cheaply manufactured. To extract rayon/viscose, plantations cut down 30% of endangered and ancient forests threatening the life of ecosystems.[234]

PET plastic

PET plastics are also known as Polyethylene terephthalate(PETE). PET's recycling code, the number within the three chasing arrows, is one. These plastics are usually beverage bottles (i.e. water, soda, and fruit juice bottles). According to the EPA, plastic accounts for 12% of the total amount of waste we produce.[144] Recycling plastic reduces air, water, and ground pollution. Recycling is only the first step; investing and purchasing products manufactured from recycled materials is the next of many steps to living sustainably.

 
Recyclables at transfer station, Gainesville, Florida

Clothing can be made from plastics. Seventy percent of plastic-derived fabrics come from polyester, and the type of polyester most used in fabrics is polyethylene terephthalate (PET).[235] PET plastic clothing come from reused plastics, often recycled plastic bottles.[236] The Coca-Cola Company, for example, created a "Drink2Wear" line of T-shirts made from recycled bottles.[237] Generally, PET plastic clothing are made from recycled bottles as follows: plastic bottles are collected, compressed, baled, and shipped into processing facilities where they will be chopped into flakes, and melted into small white pellets. Then, the pellets are processed again, and spun into yarn-like fiber where it can be made into clothing.[238] One main benefit of making clothes from recycled bottles is that it keep the bottles and other plastics from occupying landfill space. Another benefit is that it takes 30% less energy to make clothes from recycled plastics than from virgin polyesters.[239]

Fungal species

Alexander Bismarck and Mitchell Jones from the University of Vienna have conducted research on the possibility of using fungal species to create sustainable leather alternatives. Leather alternatives can be produced by using byproducts of agricultural products such as sawdust. The sawdust acts as a feedstock for the growth of fungal mycelium. After a few weeks, the fungal bacteria can be processed and chemically treated into a leather-like material. The researchers state that these fungal biomasses exhibit similar material and tactile properties as authentic leather. Using fungal biomass to create a leather alternative is sustainable as the entire process is carbon neutral and all the materials are completely biodegradable when they are done being used.[240]

Production

Whereas many producers have since the turn of the century been striving for a cradle-to-cradle model of production, or a circular economy, there has so far been no successful example of fully sustainable production, as there is environmental impact from all extractive production practices (in processes of material production, dying, assembly, accessorizing, shipping, retail, washing, recycling etc.) There are many small initiatives towards change, yet so far, all these incremental improvements have been drowned by the explosive popularity of "fast" fashion and its economy of extraction, consumption, waste.

Producers

The global political economy and legal system supports a fashion system that enables fashion that has devastating environmental, social, cultural and economic impacts to be priced at a lower price than fashion which involves efforts to minimize harm in the growth, manufacturing, and shipping of the products. This results in higher prices for fashion made from reduced impact materials than clothing produced in a socially and environmentally damaging way (sometimes referred to as conventional methods).[241]

Innovative fashion is being developed and made available to consumers at different levels of the fashion spectrum, from casual clothing to haute couture which has a reduced social and environmental impact at the materials and manufacture stages of production[114] and celebrities, models, and designers have recently drawn attention to socially conscious and environmentally friendly fashion.

3D seamless knitting

3D seamless knitting is a technology that allows an entire garment to be knit with no seams. This production method is considered a sustainable practice due to its reduction in waste and labor. By only using the necessary materials, the producers will be more efficient in their manufacturing process. This production method is similar to seamless knitting, although traditional seamless knitting requires stitching to complete the garment while 3D seamless knitting creates the entire garment, eliminating additional work. The garments are designed using 3D software unlike traditional flat patterns. Shima Seiki and Stoll are currently the two primary manufacturers of the technology. The technology is produced through the use of solar energy, and they are selling to brands like Max Mara.[242]

Zero waste

Zero waste design in fashion is a concept that aims to reduce material waste throughout the textile and fashion production process. Although the concept has existed for a number of years on the grounds of reducing costs through reducing waste, zero waste design is increasingly being integrated into fashion production for environmental reasons.[155] Zero-waste pattern making designs patterns for a garment so that when the pattern pieces are cut, no fabric is wasted.[243]

Dyeing

 
Examples of textiles that have used the AirDye process.

Traditional methods of dyeing textiles are incredibly harmful towards the earth's water supply, creating toxic chemicals that affect entire communities.[244] An alternative to traditional water dyeing is scCO2 dyeing (super critical carbon dioxide). This process creates no waste by using 100% of the dyes, reducing energy by 60% with no auxiliary chemicals, and leaving a quarter of the physical footprint of traditional dyeing. Different names for this process are Drydye and Colordry.[245] Another company called Colorep has patented Airdye, a similar process that they claim uses 95% less water and up to 86% less energy than traditional dyeing methods.[246]

Comparison websites and ecolabels

No brand is considered by environmental experts to be fully sustainable, and controversy exists over exactly how the concept of sustainability can be applied in relation to fashion, if it can be used at all, or if labels such as "slow" and "sustainable" fashion are inherently an oxymoron.[45] Brands that sell themselves as sustainable often lack systems to deal with oversupply, take back used clothes, fully recycle fibers, offer repair services, or even support the life of the garment during use (such as instructions on washing, care and repair). Almost no brands offer replacement parts, such as buttons, straps or pockets, for their garments.[citation needed]

Some comparison websites exist which compare fashion brands on their sustainability record, which give some indication to consumers about the sustainability of their products.[247]

There are many ecolabels in existence which focus on textile goods.[248] Some notable[249] ecolabels include:

Sustainable textile brands

Some brands that sell themselves as sustainable are listed below;

  • Eastern European prisoners are designing sustainable prison fashion in Latvia and Estonia under the Heavy Eco label,[250] part of a trend called "prison couture".[251]
  • Other sustainable fashion brands include Elena Garcia, Nancy Dee, By Stamo, Outsider Fashion, Beyond Skin, Oliberté, Hetty Rose, DaRousso, KSkye the Label,[252] and Eva Cassis.[181][253][254][255][256][257][258]
  • The brand Boll & Branch make all of their bedding products from organic cotton and have been certified by Fair Trade USA.[259]
  • The Hemp Trading Company is an ethically driven underground clothing label, specializing in environmentally friendly, politically conscious street wear made of hemp, bamboo, organic cotton and other sustainable fabrics.[260]
  • Patagonia, a major retailer in casual wear, has been selling fleece clothing made from post-consumer plastic soda bottles since 1993.[114]
  • Everlane, a brand that offered the customer a full breakdown of how much it would cost to make each product, from the price of the raw materials and transportation to exactly how much of a markup Everlane would take.[261]
  • Pact, a brand that produced Fair Trade Factory Certified™ clothing made out of organic cotton.[262]
  • People Tree is a brand that actively supports farmers, producers and artisans through 14 producer groups, in 6 countries. They are a part of the WFTO community and a representative of Fair Trade.[263]
  • Wrangler, a historic denim brand, launched a sustainable denim collection called Indigood that uses foam instead of water to dye denim, resulting in 100 per cent less water used, and 60 per cent less energy used.[264]
  • Big Frenchies is a French-inspired brand that produces sustainable clothing made in USA with GOTS-certified organic cotton.[265]

Designers

There is no certain stable model among the designers for how to be sustainable in practice, and the understanding of sustainability is always a process or a work-in-progress, and varies by who defines what is "sustainable;" farmers or animals, producers or consumers, managers or workers, local businesses or neighborhoods.[35] Thus critical scholars would label much of the business-driven discourse on sustainability as "greenwashing" as under the current economic paradigm, "sustainability" is primarily defined as keeping the wheels of perpetual production and consumption turning; to keep the "perpetuum mobile" of fashion running and in perpetual motion.[266]

 
The Golden Book Gown made of recycled and discarded paper book pages.

There are some designers that experiment in making fashion more sustainable, with various degrees of impact;

  • Ryan Jude Novelline created a ballroom gown constructed entirely from the pages of recycled and discarded children's books known as The Golden Book Gown that "prove[d] that green fashion can provide as rich a fantasia as can be imagined."[267][268]
  • Eco-couture designer Lucy Tammam uses eri silk (ahimsa/peace silk) and organic cotton to create her eco friendly couture evening and bridal wear collections.[269]
  • Amal Kiran Jana is a designer from India and the founder of Afterlife Project which is a sustainability development project supporting global and unique designers in 360 degrees.[270]
  • Stella McCartney pushes the agenda for sustainable fashion that is animal and eco-friendly. She also uses her name and her brand as a platform to push for a greener fashion industry. The brand uses the EP&L tool which was created to help companies understand their environmental impact by measuring greenhouse gas emissions, land use, water use, water pollution, air pollution and waste across the entire global supply chain.[271]

Controversies

A question at the foundation of sustainable fashion concerns exactly what is to be "sustained" of the current model of fashion. Controversies thus emerge what stakeholder agendas should be prioritized over others. There is also the associated concern of how to curb the practice of greenwashing on one hand, ad also ensure that firms that promote such practices are subject to increased scrutiny and criticism on the other.

Marketing controversies

The increase in western consumers' environmental interest is motivating companies to use sustainable and environmental arguments solely to increase sales. Because environmental and sustainability issues are complex, it is also easy to mislead consumers. Companies can use sustainability as a “marketing ploy” something that can be seen as greenwashing.[272] Greenwashing is the deceptive use of an eco-agenda in marketing strategies.[35] It refers mostly to corporations that make efforts to clean up their reputation because of social pressure or for the purpose of financial gain. Companies continuing to using greenwashing in turn hurts companies that are true to their environmental goals, losing their competitive edge to bigger corporations.[273]

Greenwashing

A major controversy on sustainable fashion concerns how the "green" imperative is used as a cover-up for systemic labor exploitation, social exclusion and environmental degradation, what is generally labelled as greenwashing. Market-driven sustainability can only address sustainability to a certain degree as brands still need to sell more products in order to be profitable. Thus almost any initiative towards addressing ecological and social issues still contributes to the damage. In a 2017 report, the industry projects that the overall apparel consumption will rise by 63%, from 62 million tons today to 102 million tons in 2030, thus effectively erasing any environmental gains made by current initiatives.[274] As long as the business models of fashion brands are based on growth as well as production and sales of high quantities of garment, almost all initiatives from the industry remain labelled as greenwashing.

Materials controversies

Though organic cotton is considered a more sustainable choice for fabric, as it uses fewer pesticides and chemical fertilizers, it remains less than 1% global cotton production. Hurdles to growth include cost of hand labor for hand weeding, reduced yields in comparison to conventional cotton and absence of fiber commitments from brands to farmers before planting seed. The up front financial risks and costs are therefore shouldered by the farmers, many of whom struggle to compete with economies of scale of corporate farms.

Though some designers have marketed bamboo fiber, as an alternative to conventional cotton, citing that it absorbs greenhouse gases during its life cycle and grows quickly and plentifully without pesticides, the conversion of bamboo fiber to fabric is the same as rayon and is highly toxic. The FTC ruled that labeling of bamboo fiber should read "rayon from bamboo". Bamboo fabric can cause environmental harm in production due to the chemicals used to create a soft viscose from hard bamboo.[275] Impacts regarding production of new materials make recycled, reclaimed, surplus, and vintage fabric arguably the most sustainable choice, as the raw material requires no agriculture and no manufacturing to produce.[276] However, these are indicative of a system of production and consumption that creates excessive volumes of waste.

Donation bin controversy

There are "charities" that are actually for-profit organizations. These organizations are often multibillion-dollar firms that keep profits accrued from selling donated clothing.[277] Monetary donations are given for public goodwill, but only at relatively few percentages.[277] Such organizations often use drop-off boxes to collect clothes. These drop-off boxes look similar to their non-profit counterparts, which mislead the public into donating their clothes to them.[278] Such public deception prompted backlash, such as when the mayor of Sedro-Woolley called for the city's removal of for-profit clothing donation bins.[279] Organisations such as Charity Navigator aim to provide people with a way of discerning how trustworthy a charity's activities are before they donate time, money or goods.[280]

Second-hand controversies

Used clothing is sold in more than 100 countries. In Tanzania, used clothing is sold at the mitumba (Swahili for "secondhand") markets. Most of the clothing is imported from the United States.[114] However, there are concerns that trade in secondhand clothing in African countries decreases development of local industries even as it creates employment in these countries.[281] While the reuse of materials brings resource savings, there are some concerns that the influx of cheap, second-hand clothing, particularly in Africa, has undermined indigenous textile industries, with the result that clothing collected in the West under the guise of 'charitable donations' could actually create more poverty.[148] The authors of Recycling of Low Grade Clothing Waste warn that in the long run, as prices and quality of new clothing continue to decline, the demand for used clothing will also diminish.[282]

Future of fashion sustainability

In the European Union, the Registration, Evaluation, Authorization and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) regulations required in 2007 that clothing manufacturers and importers identified and quantified the chemicals used in their products.[114]

On May 3, 2012, the world's largest summit on fashion sustainability was held in Copenhagen, gathering more than 1,000 key stakeholders in the industry to discuss the importance of making the fashion industry sustainable. Copenhagen Fashion Summit has since then gathered thousands of people from the fashion industry in their effort to create a movement within the industry.[283]

In July 2012, the Sustainable Apparel Coalition launched the Higg Index, a self-assessment standard designed to measure and promote sustainable supply chains in the apparel and footwear industries.[284][285] Founded in 2011, the Sustainable Apparel Coalition is a nonprofit organisation whose members include brands producing apparel or footwear, retailers, industry affiliates and trade associations, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, academic institutions and environmental nonprofits.[286][287][288] The Global Change Award, is an innovation challenge created by the H&M foundation.[130] It created a trend report in 2017 to look at the future of sustainable fashion.

In 2019, the UK Parliament's Environment Audit Committee published a report and recommendations on the future of fashion sustainability, suggesting wide-ranging systemic change, not least government regulation and tax-incentives for sustainable practices, such as lowered VAT for repair services.[39] The report highlights the need for wide political and social changes to push the fashion industry towards more sustainable practices and levels of consumption, with the goal of "less harm" being too low to be of any helpful consequence. The report finishes:

Retailers must take responsibility for the social and environmental cost of clothes. They should use their market power to demand higher environmental and labour standards from suppliers. Offering rental schemes, lifetime repair and providing the consumer with more information about the sourcing and true cost of clothing are all measures that can be more widely adopted. Shifting business practice in this way can not only improve a business' environmental and social impact but also offer market advantage as they respond to the growing consumer demand for responsible, sustainable clothing.[39]: 54 

This study investigates the challenges associated with implementing sustainability in fashion design by identifying the perceptions, attitudes, and involvement of fashion design practitioners in sustainability. Both design and designer roles are key to inspiring sustainable design practices; their role can contribute to sustainability by shaping design production practices and influencing consumption processes.[289]

See also

References

  1. ^ Alves, Ana (April 21, 2022). "What Exactly Is Sustainable Fashion And Why Is So Important?". The VOU. Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  2. ^ "Destination Zero: seven years of Detoxing the clothing industry" (PDF). Greenpeace. Retrieved September 30, 2020.
  3. ^ "Greenpeace Calls Out Nike, Adidas and Puma for Toxic Clothing". Reuters. August 9, 2011. Retrieved September 30, 2020.
  4. ^ Niu, Baozhuang; Chen, Lei; Zhang, Jie (November 2017). "Punishing or subsidizing? Regulation analysis of sustainable fashion procurement strategies". Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review. 107: 81–96. doi:10.1016/j.tre.2017.09.010.
  5. ^ "Increasing Green Credentials beyond Greenwash" (PDF). Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  6. ^ Dahl, Richard (June 2010). "Green Washing: Do You Know What You're Buying?". Environmental Health Perspectives. 118 (6): A246-52. doi:10.1289/ehp.118-a246. PMC 2898878. PMID 20515714.
  7. ^ Neuman, Salla (2019). "Sustainability in fashion production – How are the pioneers doing it?". www.theseus.fi.
  8. ^ Carson, Rachel (1963). Silent Spring. Hamish Hamilton.
  9. ^ Government of Canada, Innovation (May 16, 2013). "Sustainable development – Strategic Policy Sector". www.ic.gc.ca. from the original on May 12, 2019. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
  10. ^ Anon (1991). "Textiles and the Environment". International Textiles. 726: 40–41.
  11. ^ Anon (1993). "Rethinking Ecology". Textile View. 24: 201–207.
  12. ^ Meadows, Donella H. (1982). The Limits to growth : a report for the Club of Rome's project on the predicament of mankind. Universe Books. ISBN 0876631650. OCLC 977611718.
  13. ^ a b c d Fletcher, Kate (2008). Sustainable fashion and textiles: design journeys (2nd ed.). London; Washington, DC: Earthscan. ISBN 9780415644556.
  14. ^ Papanek, Victor (1995). The green imperative. Ecology and ethics in design and architecture. Thames and Hudson.
  15. ^ Merchant, Carolyn (1990). Death on Nature. Bravo.
  16. ^ Gablik, Suzi (1991). The Reenchantment of Art. Thames and Hudson.
  17. ^ Shiva, Vandana (1989). Staying Alive. Zed Books.
  18. ^ Gilligan, Carol (1982). In a different voice: psychological theory and women's development. Harvard University Press.
  19. ^ "Lynda Grose – PIONEERING ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS FOR THE CLOTHING INDUSTRY – CE NEWS". CE NEWS. from the original on March 12, 2017. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
  20. ^ "Don't Buy This Jacket, Black Friday and the New York Times - Patagonia". November 25, 2011.
  21. ^ Hethorn, Janet; Ulasewicz, Connie, eds. (2008). Sustainable Fashion: Why Now?. Fairchild Books.
  22. ^ a b Gwilt, Alison; Timo Rissanen (2011). Shaping Sustainable Fashion. Earthscan.
  23. ^ S. Walker; J. Giard, eds. (2013). The Handbook of Sustainable Design. Bloomsbury.
  24. ^ Fletcher, Kate; Mathilda Tham, eds. (2015). Routledge Handbook of Sustainability and Fashion. Routledge.
  25. ^ Niinimaki, Kirsi (2018). Sustainable Fashion in a Circular Economy. Aalto ARTIS Books.
  26. ^ Rissanen, Timo and Holly McQuillan (2018). Zero Waste Fashion Design. Bloomsbury.
  27. ^ Gardetti, Migel Angel & Ana Laura Torres (2013). Sustainability in Fashion and Textiles. Greenleaf.
  28. ^ a b Black, Sandy, ed. (2013). The sustainable fashion handbook. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 9780500290569. OCLC 800642264.
  29. ^ a b c Fletcher, Kate (2016). Craft of Use: Post Growth Fashion. London: Routledge.
  30. ^ "Researchers set out manifesto for fashion change". ecotextile.com. from the original on March 1, 2019. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  31. ^ Glover, Simon. "Award-winning researchers call for new sustainability approach". Ecotextile News. from the original on July 24, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  32. ^ (PDF). Global Fashion Agenda. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2019. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  33. ^ Fletcher, Kate; Tham, Mathilda (2019). Earth Logic Fashion Action Research Plan. London: JJ Charitable Trust. ISBN 978-1-5272-5415-2. from the original on February 26, 2020. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  34. ^ Brown, Sass (2010). Eco fashion. Laurence King.[page needed]
  35. ^ a b c Gurova, Olga; Morozova, Daria (August 2018). "A critical approach to sustainable fashion: Practices of clothing designers in the Kallio neighborhood of Helsinki". Journal of Consumer Culture. 18 (3): 397–413. doi:10.1177/1469540516668227. S2CID 151351581.
  36. ^ Lu, Xiaoqian; Sheng, Tong; Zhou, Xiaolan; Shen, Chaohai; Fang, Bingquan (October 19, 2022). "How Does Young Consumers' Greenwashing Perception Impact Their Green Purchase Intention in the Fast Fashion Industry? An Analysis from the Perspective of Perceived Risk Theory". Sustainability. 14 (20): 13473. doi:10.3390/su142013473.
  37. ^ Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2017). A new textiles economy: redesigning fashion's future (PDF). Ellen MacArthur Foundation. (PDF) from the original on June 9, 2020. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  38. ^ Prant, Dara. "Burberry Under Attack for Burning $37.8 Million Worth of Unsold Products". Fashionista. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  39. ^ a b c "Fixing fashion: clothing consumption and sustainability – Report Summary – Environmental Audit Committee". publications.parliament.uk. from the original on March 12, 2021. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  40. ^ "Statement on 2019 Copenhagen Fashion Summit". Union of Concerned Researchers in Fashion. May 5, 2019. from the original on May 10, 2019. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  41. ^ Black, Sandy (2008). Eco Chic The Fashion Paradox. Black Dog.
  42. ^ Fletcher, kate (2010). "Slow Fashion: an invitation for systems change". Journal of Fashion Practice. 2 (2): 259–266. doi:10.2752/175693810X12774625387594. S2CID 110000414.
  43. ^ Raworth, Kate (February 22, 2018). Doughnut economics : seven ways to think like a 21st-century economist. ISBN 9781847941398. OCLC 1038191528.
  44. ^ Dawson, Jonathan; J. T. Ross; Norberg-Hodge, Helena, eds. (2013). Gaian economics : living well within planetary limits. Permanent Publications. ISBN 9781856230568. OCLC 920340237.[page needed]
  45. ^ a b Clark, Hazel (December 1, 2008). "SLOW + FASHION—an Oxymoron—or a Promise for the Future …?". Fashion Theory. 12 (4): 427–446. doi:10.2752/175174108X346922. ISSN 1362-704X. S2CID 194180788.
  46. ^ Clark, Hazel (December 2008). "SLOW + FASHION—an Oxymoron—or a Promise for the Future …?". Fashion Theory. 12 (4): 427–446. doi:10.2752/175174108X346922. S2CID 218771542.
  47. ^ Thill, Brian. Waste. ISBN 9789386606891. OCLC 1066172530.[page needed]
  48. ^ Fletcher, Kate (November 2012). "Durability, Fashion, Sustainability: The Processes and Practices of Use". Fashion Practice. 4 (2): 221–238. doi:10.2752/175693812X13403765252389. S2CID 110677145.
  49. ^ Willett, Joanie; Saunders, Clare; Hackney, Fiona; Hill, Katie (September 2022). "The affective economy and fast fashion: Materiality, embodied learning and developing a sensibility for sustainable clothing" (PDF). Journal of Material Culture. 27 (3): 219–237. doi:10.1177/13591835221088524. S2CID 247823706.
  50. ^ "Fast Fashion Pollution and Climate Change". February 21, 2022.
  51. ^ McDonald, Charles Daniel (January 26, 2017). "THE HISTORY OF FAST FASHION | FORÇ Magazine". FORC. Retrieved May 4, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  52. ^ Millward-Pena, Isabel (2022). FROM FAST FASHION TO SUSTAINABLE SLOW FASHION (Thesis).
  53. ^ a b "Fashion Industry Waste Statistics". E D G E. July 20, 2016. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  54. ^ Nelson, Mariel. "Micro-Trends: The acceleration of fashion cycles and the rise in waste". Worldwide Responsible Accredited Production, May 17, 2021
  55. ^ Schlossberg, Tatiana (September 3, 2019). "How Fast Fashion Is Destroying the Planet". The New York Times.
  56. ^ a b Centobelli, Piera; Abbate, Stefano; Nadeem, Simon; Reyes, Jose (September 20, 2022). "Slowing the fast fashion industry: An all-round perspective". Current Opinion in Green and Sustainable Chemistry. 38: 100684. doi:10.1016/j.cogsc.2022.100684. S2CID 251697285.
  57. ^ "Shein factory workers get 35 cents per garment, work 18-hour days, a new report says".
  58. ^ "Story Map Journal". www.arcgis.com. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  59. ^ Petrini, Carlo. (2004). Slow food : the case for taste. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12845-2. OCLC 56645962.
  60. ^ "The Official Slow Food Manifesto", Slow Food, Columbia University Press, January 31, 2003, ISBN 978-0-231-50237-5, retrieved February 26, 2020
  61. ^ Fletcher, Kate (2010). "Slow Fashion: An Invitation for Systems Change". Fashion Practice. 2 (2): 259–265. doi:10.2752/175693810X12774625387594. S2CID 110000414.
  62. ^ "A Brief History of the Slow Food Movement".
  63. ^ "What is Slow Fashion? - Good on You". Goodonyou.eco. from the original on December 2, 2020. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  64. ^ Fletcher, K., & Grose, L. (2012). Fashion and sustainability: design for change. Laurence King.
  65. ^ Fletcher, Kate. Sustainable Fashion and Textiles- Design Journeys. Earthscan.
  66. ^ Barnard, Malcolm (2002). Fashion as Communication. Routledge.
  67. ^ "People Tree is first clothing brand to receive the new WFTO Fair Trade product mark!". The Thread. October 10, 2013.
  68. ^ von Busch, Otto (2020). "The chronopolitics of slow fashion" in S. Kipoz (ed) Slowness in Fashion. London: Dixi Books. pp. 169–177.
  69. ^ von Busch, Otto (2020). The Chronopolitics of Fashion, in S. Kipoz (ed) Slowness in Fashion. London: Dixi Books. p. 175.
  70. ^ Chapman, Adrian (2010). (PDF). MISTRA Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research. S2CID 30971880. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2020 – via Stockholm: MISTRA.
  71. ^ Chapman, Jonathan (2015). Emotionally durable design objects, experiences and empathy. Routledge. ISBN 9781315738802. OCLC 1086535559.
  72. ^ Maldini, Irene (2019). "From speed to volume: reframing clothing production and consumption for an environmentally sound apparel sector". PLATE. Product Lifetimes and the Environment Conference Proceedings – via PLATE 2019 Berlin.
  73. ^ Maldini, Irene (2019). Can design confront consumerism? A critical study of clothing volumes, personalization, and the wardrobe. Amsterdam: VU University Amsterdam. ISBN 9789083002415.
  74. ^ "Environmental Impacts of the Fashion Industry". SustainYourStyle. Retrieved August 4, 2021.
  75. ^ Fletcher, Kate; Tham, Mathilda (2019). Earth Logic Fashion Action Research Plan. London: JJ Charitable Trust. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-5272-5415-2.
  76. ^ Fletcher, Kate; Tham, Mathilda (2019). Earth Logic Fashion Action Research Plan. London: JJ Charitable Trust. p. 19. from the original on February 26, 2020. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  77. ^ Sanghani, Radhika (October 8, 2018). "Stacey Dooley Investigates: Are your clothes wrecking the planet?". BBC Three. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
  78. ^ "What Research Says About Sustainable Fashion Is Our Future!". Bit Slow Fashion. June 20, 2021. Retrieved June 27, 2021.
  79. ^ a b Pulse of the Fashion Industry 2017, Global Fashion Agenda & The Boston Consulting Group, 2017, p. 11
  80. ^ Haung, HC (1994). "Classification and general properties of textile fibres" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on March 28, 2018. Retrieved March 1, 2018.[verification needed]
  81. ^ Culp, Alice (July 11, 2014). "Thrift stores sell damaged items to textile recyclers". South Bend Tribune. from the original on November 7, 2019. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
  82. ^ Stanton, Thomas; Johnson, Matthew; Nathanail, Paul; MacNaughtan, William; Gomes, Rachel L. (2019). "Freshwater and airborne textile fibre populations are dominated by 'natural', not microplastic, fibres". Science of the Total Environment. 666: 377–389. Bibcode:2019ScTEn.666..377S. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.02.278. PMID 30798244. S2CID 73511816 – via ResearchGate.
  83. ^ Boucher, D.; Friot, D. (PDF). Primary micro plastics in the oceans: a global evaluation of sources. gland, Switzerland: IUCN. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 1, 2017. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
  84. ^ Carrington, Damian (May 22, 2020). "Microplastic pollution in oceans vastly underestimated – study". The Guardian.
  85. ^ Harding-Rolls, George. "Fossil fashion". Changing Markets. from the original on March 29, 2021. Retrieved April 16, 2021.
  86. ^ Changing Markets Foundation (February 2021). "Fossil Fashion". Changing Markets. from the original on February 17, 2021. Retrieved February 26, 2021.
  87. ^ Parker, Liz "Fashion brands and worker's rights" in Kate Fletcher & Mathilda Tham (2015) Routledge Handbook of Sustainability and Fashion, London: Routledge.
  88. ^ admin. . Clean Clothes Campaign. Archived from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  89. ^ "Welcome | Maquila Solidarity Network". www.maquilasolidarity.org. from the original on February 11, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  90. ^ "End Uzbek Cotton Crimes". Anti-Slavery International. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  91. ^ "Bangladesh: Billion Dollar Leather Industry Has a Problem with Child Labor and Toxic Chemicals". Pulitzer Center. March 30, 2017. from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  92. ^ Lawrence, Felicity (August 8, 2017). "How big brands including Sports Direct unwittingly used slave labour". The Guardian.
  93. ^ "Responsible Trust for Models". Responsible Trust for Models. from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  94. ^ . Archived from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  95. ^ "New report published on working conditions in Leicester garment sector — University of Leicester". www2.le.ac.uk. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  96. ^ . Clean Clothes Campaign. 2017. Archived from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  97. ^ Entwistle, J (2000). The fashioned body. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  98. ^ "Trading Away Our Rights: Women working in global supply chains | Oxfam Policy & Practice". Policy & Practice. from the original on August 28, 2011. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  99. ^ "Insight – Italy's Chinese garment workshops boom as workers suffer". Reuters. December 30, 2013. from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  100. ^ International Labour Office, Sectoral Activities Department (2014). Working Hours in the Textiles, Clothing, Leather and Footwear Industries. Geneva: ILO.
  101. ^ T: +44 (0)20 7405 5942; F: +44 (0)20 7977 0101; mail@fairtrade.org.uk, E. "Cotton farmers | Fairtrade Foundation". www.fairtrade.org.uk. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  102. ^ "Dirty fashion". Changing Markets. from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  103. ^ Bick, Rachel; Halsey, Erika; Ekenga, Christine C. (December 2018). "The global environmental injustice of fast fashion". Environmental Health. 17 (1): 92. doi:10.1186/s12940-018-0433-7. PMC 6307129. PMID 30591057.
  104. ^ Henninger, Claudia E.; Alevizou, Panayiota J.; Oates, Caroline J. (October 3, 2016). "What is sustainable fashion?" (PDF). Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management. 20 (4): 400–416. doi:10.1108/JFMM-07-2015-0052.
  105. ^ Marriott, Hannah (April 20, 2020). "H&M tops 2020 fashion transparency index as 10 brands score zero". The Guardian.
  106. ^ "The Fashion Transparency Index: 2019 report ranks world's biggest brands | Fashion | The Guardian". TheGuardian.com. April 24, 2019. from the original on September 20, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  107. ^ "Fashion Transparency Index 2019". Issuu. from the original on October 30, 2020. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  108. ^ Farmbrough, Heather. "H&M Is Pushing Sustainability Hard, But Not Everyone Is Convinced". Forbes. from the original on January 28, 2021. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  109. ^ "Diversity Report: The Fall 2018 Runways Were the Most Race and Transgender-Inclusive Ever; Not So Much for Age and Size Diversity". theFashionSpot. March 22, 2018. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  110. ^ Von Busch, Otto; Bjereld, Ylva (June 1, 2016). "A typology of fashion violence". Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty. 7: 89–107. doi:10.1386/csfb.7.1.89_1.
  111. ^ Busch, Otto von (September 2, 2018). "Inclusive Fashion—an Oxymoron—or a Possibility for Sustainable Fashion?". Fashion Practice. 10 (3): 311–327. doi:10.1080/17569370.2018.1507145. ISSN 1756-9370. S2CID 218771542.
  112. ^ Cederström, Carl (2015). Wellness Syndrome. Wiley. ISBN 9780745688718. OCLC 956676547.
  113. ^ Widdows, Heather (December 31, 2018). Perfect Me. Princeton: Princeton University Press. doi:10.23943/9781400889624. ISBN 9781400889624. S2CID 193961288.
  114. ^ a b c d e f g h i Luz, Claudio (2007), "Waste Couture: Environmental Impact of the Clothing Industry", Environmental Health Perspectives (published September 2007), 115 (9): A448-54, doi:10.1289/ehp.115-a449, PMC 1964887, PMID 17805407
  115. ^ a b Benjamin, Freeman, Joshua (2018). Behemoth : a history of the factory and the making of the modern world (First ed.). New York, NY. p. 274. ISBN 9780393246315. OCLC 988280720.
  116. ^ Edna., Bonacich (1994). Global production : the apparel industry in the Pacific Rim. Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1566391689. OCLC 28964324.
  117. ^ "Renting Luxury Fashion – Just A Technology-Driven Trend?". from the original on August 15, 2020. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
  118. ^ "Cotton farmers | Fairtrade Foundation". www.fairtrade.org.uk. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  119. ^ "Living Wage". Clean Clothes Campaign. from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  120. ^ Cernansky, Rachel (March 18, 2021). "Can an end-to-end sustainability standard change fashion?". Vogue Business.
  121. ^ Modefica (February 12, 2020). ""Slow Fashion is not a movement; it's a market": An Interview With Kate Fletcher". Modefica.
  122. ^ Earley, Rebecca (January 4, 2021). "Circular Fashion 2070: Clothing and Textile Cycles, Systems, and Services". National Academy of Engineering. 50.
  123. ^ Rissanen, Timo (2015). "Zero Waste Fashion Design", in J. Hethorn & C. Ulasewicz (eds.) Sustainable Fashion: What's Next?. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 179–203.
  124. ^ Von Busch, Otto (2021). Vistas of Vitality: Metabolisms, Circularity, Fashion-abilities. New York: SelfPassage.
  125. ^ Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2017). "A new textile economy". from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved February 26, 2021.
  126. ^ "14 Textile Recycling Companies Pushing for Circularity in Fashion". Conscious Fashion Collective. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  127. ^ "Textiles strategy". environment.ec.europa.eu. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  128. ^ "The EU Textiles Strategy in Motion - What does it mean for the future of this sector? | European Circular Economy Stakeholder Platform". circulareconomy.europa.eu. July 8, 2022. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  129. ^ Biomimicry Institute (2020). "The Nature of Fashion".
  130. ^ a b c d e f (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 21, 2018.
  131. ^ Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Angela (November 18, 2021). "Online fashion rental market to grow over 10 percent annually". FashionUnited.
  132. ^ Iran, Samira; Schrader, Ulf (September 11, 2017). "Collaborative fashion consumption and its environmental effects". Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management. 21 (4): 468–482. doi:10.1108/JFMM-09-2016-0086.
  133. ^ a b Levänen, Jarkko; Uusitalo, Ville; Härri, Anna; Kareinen, Elisa; Linnanen, Lassi (May 1, 2021). "Innovative recycling or extended use? Comparing the global warming potential of different ownership and end-of-life scenarios for textiles". Environmental Research Letters. 16 (5): 054069. Bibcode:2021ERL....16e4069L. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/abfac3. S2CID 235289414.
  134. ^ Elan, Priya (July 6, 2021). "Renting clothes is 'less green than throwing them away'". The Guardian.
  135. ^ Courier (December 27, 2021). "Inside fashion's rental market".
  136. ^ Rissanen, Timo (July 25, 2021). "brief thoughts on clothing rentals".
  137. ^ Maynard, Margaret (2004). Dress and Globalization. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719063893.
  138. ^ a b Farra, Emily (January 15, 2021). ""Open Source Fashion Cookbook Is Sharing "Recipes" for Upcycling at Home, With Patterns by Raeburn, Chromat, and More"". Vogue.
  139. ^ Danielepasi_38178 (December 15, 2015). ""5 Projects Leading the Open Source Revolution in Fashion"". Sharable.
  140. ^ Wills, Jennifer. "Saying farewell to a throwaway fashion industry". Horizon: The EU Research Innovation Magazine. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  141. ^ Fadelli, Ingrid. "DeepDraper: A technique that predicts how clothes would look on different people". Tech Xplore. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  142. ^ Centobelli, Piera; Abbate, Stefano; Nadeem, Simon Peter; Garza-Reyes, Jose Arturo (December 2022). "Slowing the fast fashion industry: An all-round perspective". Current Opinion in Green and Sustainable Chemistry. 38: 100684. doi:10.1016/j.cogsc.2022.100684. S2CID 251697285.
  143. ^ Fletcher, Kate. Sustainable fashion and textiles design journeys. Earthscan. ISBN 9781849772778.
  144. ^ a b "Municipal Solid Waste Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the United States: Facts and Figures for 2008" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency. November 2009. (PDF) from the original on January 28, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  145. ^ Lee, Matilda (February 6, 2009). "What's the Most Sustainable Fabric". The Ecologist. from the original on October 23, 2017. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  146. ^ Aus, Reet. "Trash to Trend". Issuu. from the original on August 7, 2020. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  147. ^ Muthu, Subramanian Senthilkannan (August 6, 2016). Textiles and clothing sustainability: recycled and upcycled textiles and fashion. ISBN 9789811021466.
  148. ^ a b c d Fletcher, K. (2013). Sustainable fashion and textiles: design journeys. Routledge.[page needed]
  149. ^ Laursen, S. E., Hansen, J., Bagh, J., Jensen, O. K., & Werther, I. (1997). Environmental assessment of textiles. Environmental project, (369).
  150. ^ Zimring, Carl A. (2016). "Upcycling in History: Is the Past a Prologue to a Zero-Waste Future? The Case of Aluminum". RCC Perspectives (3): 45–52. JSTOR 26241375.
  151. ^ "Moving Towards a Circular Fashion Economy". MOTIF. April 29, 2019. from the original on January 13, 2021.
  152. ^ "Well dressed? The present and future sustainability of clothing and textiles in the United Kingdom". www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk. from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  153. ^ von Busch, Otto (2008). Fashion-able: Hacktivism and Engaged Fashion Design. Gothenburg: ArtMonitor.
  154. ^ Twigger Holroyd, Amy. (2017). Folk fashion. Understanding homemade clothes. I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd. ISBN 9781784536497. OCLC 1019666656.
  155. ^ a b Rissanen, Timo (September 6, 2018). Zero waste fashion design. ISBN 978-1350094833. OCLC 1040994499.
  156. ^ Busch, Otto von (2009). Fashion-able : hacktivism and engaged fashion design. Camino. ISBN 9789197841108. OCLC 703595835.
  157. ^ Black, S.; et al. (2009). "Considerate Design for Personalized Fashion: Towards Sustainable Fashion Design and Consumption". Mass Matching - Customization, Configuration & Creativity: Proceedings of the MCPC 2009 – via Helsinki, Aalto University School of Art and Design.
  158. ^ Busch, Otto von (2014). "Fashion Hacking". Design as Future-Making. doi:10.5040/9781474293907-0009. ISBN 9781474293907.
  159. ^ Ballie, Jennifer (2014). e􏰅Co-Textile Design: How can textile design and making, combined with social media tools, achieve a more sustainable fast fashion future?. London: University of the Arts London.
  160. ^ Angela Luna & Loulwa Al Saad (2021). Open Source Fashion Cookbook. New York: ADIFF PBC.
  161. ^ Peter, Stallybrass (1998). Spyer, Patricia (ed.). "Marx' Coat" essay, in Border fetishisms : material objects in unstable spaces. Routledge. ISBN 0415918561. OCLC 37024820.
  162. ^ "Reduce & Reuse". United States Environmental Protection Agency. November 17, 2009. from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  163. ^ "What is a Charity?". Charity Facts. 2010. from the original on December 17, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  164. ^ "charity". Word Net – 3.1. from the original on April 1, 2012. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  165. ^ Perez, William (August 16, 2010). "Tax Deduction for Charity Donations". About.com. from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  166. ^ "Centre for Sustainable Fashion". 2020. from the original on October 19, 2020. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
  167. ^ "Goodwill History". Goodwill Industries. from the original on March 19, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  168. ^ "A History of Oxfam". Oxfam. 2010. from the original on December 31, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  169. ^ "Responsibility in Fashion". 2020. from the original on September 15, 2019. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
  170. ^ "The Salvation Army: Doing the Most Good". The Salvation Army. 2009. from the original on November 20, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  171. ^ "Textile Exchange". 2020. from the original on October 7, 2020. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
  172. ^ "History". United Way. 2010. from the original on December 14, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  173. ^ Piasecki, Dave (2004). "Consignment Inventory: What is it and When Does It Make Sense to Use It". inventoryops.com. from the original on December 12, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  174. ^ a b c d Lee, Mike (December 21, 2006). "The Truth About Where Your Donated Clothes End Up". ABC News. from the original on November 16, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  175. ^ Chapman, Dan (December 24, 2006). "Your Cast-Offs, Their Profits: Items donated to Goodwill and Salvation Army often end up as part of a $1 billion-a-year used-clothing business". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. gciatl.com. from the original on November 22, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  176. ^ Pinnock, Olivia (May 4, 2018). "The Best Answers To #WhoMadeMyClothes This Fashion Revolution Week". Forbes. from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  177. ^ Dazed Digital, Morgane Nyfeler (April 24, 2018). "Are fashion brands actually making progress at becoming ethical?". Dazed. from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  178. ^ Carlson, Jane (October 11, 2013). "Annual red carpet green dress contest kicks off once again". The Hollywood Reporter. from the original on December 12, 2015. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  179. ^ Dunn, Claire (April 8, 2013). "Ethical fashion pops up for fashion week". Sydney Morning Herald. from the original on January 25, 2018. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  180. ^ Sanders, Lorraine (April 24, 2013). "S.F. fashion cheerleader org chart". SF Gate. from the original on September 30, 2019. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  181. ^ a b Camilli, Sascha (February 21, 2014). "Chic With A Conscience: Ecoluxe At London Fashion Week". Vilda Magazine. from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  182. ^ Carter, Amber (February 20, 2013). . Ethical Fashion Forum. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  183. ^ . Businessoffashion.com. December 19, 2014. Archived from the original on December 24, 2014. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  184. ^ Groom, Avril (November 2014). "Sustainable and Ethical Fashion". Financial Times How to Spend It. from the original on January 8, 2015. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  185. ^ Menkes, Suzy. "The Beat of Africa Resounds on the Catwalk". Vogue – Conde Nast. from the original on January 10, 2015. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  186. ^ Maveau, Roger (December 18, 2014). "Afrique-Mode éthique : Simone Cipriani, le bon samaritain". Le Point Afrique. from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  187. ^ Menkes, Suzy (September 13, 2013). "Designing for the Green Carpet". The New York Times. from the original on November 7, 2017. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  188. ^ "Trans-Americas Trading Company – World Leader in Recycled Clothing Solutions". tranclo.com. from the original on October 14, 2018. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  189. ^ Bhajekar, Rahul. "Global Organic Textile Standard International Working Group (IWG) – Global Standard gGmbH". www.global-standard.org. from the original on December 1, 2018. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  190. ^ 1971–, Fletcher, Kate (2014). Sustainable fashion and textiles: design journeys (Second ed.). London. ISBN 9780415644556. OCLC 846847018.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  191. ^ Capulet, Ian (February 12, 2015). "Go wood: sunglasses for sustainable living". CEFashion.net. from the original on December 11, 2015. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  192. ^ Choi, Soon Mo; Kummara, Madhusudana Rao; Zo, Sun Mi; Shin, Eun Joo; Han, Sung Soo (2022). "Bacteria Cellulose and Its Applications". Polymers. 14 (6): 1080. doi:10.3390/polym14061080. PMC 8949969. PMID 35335411.
  193. ^ "Cotton Fabric". 2009. from the original on August 24, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  194. ^ Voora, V., Larrea, C., and Bermudez, S. (2020). "Global Market Report: Cotton". State of Sustainability Initiatives. from the original on February 12, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  195. ^ . Sustainablecotton.org. Archived from the original on February 14, 2005. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  196. ^ . Organic Trade Association. Archived from the original on April 16, 2015. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  197. ^ "Your Grandkids Will Thank You". sayitgreen.com. April 6, 2009. from the original on January 31, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  198. ^ a b . Organic Trade Association. 2009. Archived from the original on November 23, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  199. ^ a b c d Vreeland, James M. Jr. (April 1999). "The Revival of Colored Cotton". Scientific American. perunaturtex.com. from the original on July 15, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  200. ^ a b "What's the Problem With Cotton? Part I". savvybrown.com. May 10, 2010. from the original on July 10, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  201. ^ "Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO)". University of San Diego. from the original on December 5, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  202. ^ "How Does Bt Work?". University of San Diego. from the original on December 9, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  203. ^ a b c "Bt Cotton Data". University of San Diego. from the original on December 13, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  204. ^ a b "First Documented Case Of Pest Resistance To Biotech Cotton". Science Daily. February 8, 2008. from the original on December 12, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  205. ^ Plewis, Ian (May 13, 2014). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 13, 2014. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
  206. ^ "Bitter Seeds". iTVS. from the original on May 6, 2019.
  207. ^ . Central Coast Vineyard Team. Archived from the original on June 23, 2009. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  208. ^ "Production and Handling – Preamble". USDA. from the original on June 14, 2012. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  209. ^ "Find out all you need to know about organic cotton". aboutorganiccotton.org. from the original on December 2, 2019. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  210. ^ Mankus, Modestas (May 13, 2020). "Sustainable Fashion: What is Organic Cotton?". Our Culture. Our Culture. from the original on August 8, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  211. ^ "Vreisis Ltd". Vreisis Ltd. from the original on April 12, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  212. ^ Dickerson, Dianne K.; Lane, Eric; Rodriguez, Dolores (October 1999), (PDF), California Agricultural Technology Institute, p. 5, archived from the original (PDF) on July 19, 2011, retrieved December 7, 2010
  213. ^ "Soy Clothing: The Latest In Eco-Friendly Style". Natural Living for Women. 2010. from the original on January 3, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  214. ^ a b c "Soy Fabric". the-eco-market.com. 2009. from the original on February 3, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  215. ^ "Soy Clothing: Superior Softness Feels Like Your Second Skin". Cool Organic Clothing. 2008. from the original on November 21, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  216. ^ a b "Hemp Clothing". eartheasy.com. 2010. from the original on July 10, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  217. ^ a b c "Hemp Fibres". Natural Fibers. from the original on November 27, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  218. ^ "Bamboo vs. Cotton". D6 Clothing. 2010. from the original on April 11, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  219. ^ "Bamboo Clothing: A new choice in eco-fashion". Natural Living for Women. 2010. from the original on January 2, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  220. ^ a b "Clothing made from tea byproduct could improve health of fashion industry". Iowa State University. Iowa State University. April 2016. from the original on April 21, 2019. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  221. ^ a b c "Look Out Cotton, These 3 Fruits Are Shaking Up the Textile Industry". March 12, 2015. from the original on January 19, 2019. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  222. ^ "Designers Create Vegan Leather from Coconut Water". VegNews.com. from the original on January 19, 2019. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  223. ^ "Vegan Leather Made From Coconut Water Launches To Reduce Animal Cruelty". www.plantbasednews.org. May 20, 2018. from the original on January 19, 2019. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  224. ^ Carpenter, Susan (June 19, 2011). "Beyond cotton: Which alternative fabrics are eco-friendly?". Los Angeles Times.
  225. ^ Haung, HC (1994). "Classification and general properties of textile fibres" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on March 28, 2018. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
  226. ^ truents (October 27, 2010). "Natural Protein Fibres". Textile School. from the original on November 8, 2020. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  227. ^ "Material Guide: Is Silk Sustainable?". Good On You. October 3, 2018. from the original on November 4, 2020. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  228. ^ "Material Guide: How Ethical Is Cashmere?". Good On You. April 11, 2019. from the original on November 6, 2020. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  229. ^ Oxfam News, Spring 2021
  230. ^ "Grado Zero Espace – Mushroom layer Muskin". www.gzespace.com. from the original on December 9, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  231. ^ "Why go Wild". Wild Rubber. from the original on February 27, 2020. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  232. ^ a b "QMILK – The material of the future". www.qmilkfiber.eu. from the original on December 8, 2019. Retrieved March 4, 2020.
  233. ^ Annie, Gullingsrud (February 9, 2017). Fashion fibers : designing for sustainability. New York, NY, USA. ISBN 9781501306648. OCLC 915250289.
  234. ^ "What is Viscose? Is it sustainable?". August 25, 2021.
  235. ^ "Why is Recycled Polyester Considered a Sustainable Textile?". O Ecotextiles. July 14, 2009. from the original on August 24, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  236. ^ "What is Recycled Polyester?". Natural Environment. from the original on December 30, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  237. ^ "Creating Value Through Sustainable Fashion". The Coca-Cola Company. 2010. from the original on November 25, 2012. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  238. ^ "Clothing Made of Recycled Plastic". yesboleh.blogspot.com. May 8, 2008. from the original on July 8, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  239. ^ "Recycling Plastic into Fabric: Re-Wear Your Bottles". currentprotocols.com. June 23, 2010. from the original on September 12, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  240. ^ Jones, Mitchell; Gandia, Antoni; John, Sabu; Bismarck, Alexander (January 2021). "Leather-like material biofabrication using fungi". Nature Sustainability. 4 (1): 9–16. doi:10.1038/s41893-020-00606-1. S2CID 221522085.
  241. ^ Singer, Sally; Sullivan, Robert (May 2007). "Earth to fashion". Vogue. 197 (5): 128–132.
  242. ^ Mutha, Subramaniam (2017). SUSTAINABILITY IN THE TEXTILE INDUSTRY. Singer.
  243. ^ Rosenbloom, Stephanie (August 13, 2010). "Fashion Tries on Zero Waste Design". The New York Times.
  244. ^ Elmaaty, Tarek (March 26, 2017). "Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Green Media in Textile Dyeing: A Review". Textile Research Journal.
  245. ^ Fortunake, J., & Blackburn, R. (2017). Sustainablity Challenges of Textiles, Dyeing and Finishing Industries: Opportunities for Innovation. Lecture presented at ACS Webinars.
  246. ^ "air dyeing". textilecore.com. from the original on November 6, 2017. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
  247. ^ "Top brands failing on cotton sustainability | WWF". wwf.panda.org. from the original on February 13, 2020. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
  248. ^ "All ecolabels on textiles". from the original on August 1, 2019. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  249. ^ "Know your labels". from the original on August 2, 2019. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  250. ^ . Estonian Public Broadcasting. January 9, 2011. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  251. ^ de Leon, Christine (September 15, 2011). . Huffingtonpost.co.uk. Archived from the original on October 2, 2015. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  252. ^ "Ethical Style Journal, Issue 2, March 2017 – Page 26-27". view.publitas.com. from the original on January 18, 2018. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  253. ^ "By Stamo". Ecoluxe London. from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  254. ^ Wicker, Alden (June 23, 2014). "9 Ethical And Sustainable Brands I Found This Month That I Know You'll Love". Ecocult.com. from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  255. ^ "Competition: Design Beyond Skin's Next Vegan Shoe!". PETA. from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  256. ^ Klein, Victoria. "Hetty Rose Launches Ready-to-Wear Versions of Its Vintage-Kimono Shoes". Ecouterre. from the original on September 26, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  257. ^ Nini, Jennifer (April 16, 2015). "Simple, Stylish & Sustainable: Eva Cassis". ecowarriorprincess.net. from the original on May 27, 2015. Retrieved April 16, 2015.
  258. ^ Baker, Brandon (November 7, 2013). "Oliberté Becomes World's First Fair Trade USA Certified Shoemaker". Eco Watch. from the original on September 15, 2016. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
  259. ^ Gelles, David (June 16, 2016). "With Organic Cotton and Online Ads, Boll & Branch Helps Indian Farmers". The New York Times.
  260. ^ Roberts, Zoe. "THTC – Inspiring change; one Hip-Hop head at a time". B-Boy News. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  261. ^ "Everlane". Everlane. from the original on March 11, 2019. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  262. ^ "Comfy Clothing made with Organic Cotton | Pact". Wear PACT. from the original on March 24, 2019. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  263. ^ "People Tree". www.peopletree.co.uk. from the original on March 15, 2019. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  264. ^ "Wrangler". Wrangler. from the original on June 17, 2019. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  265. ^ "Big Frenchies Organic Clothing Made in USA". Big Frenchies. from the original on April 30, 2021. Retrieved April 30, 2021.
  266. ^ Bauman, Zygmunt (October 1, 2010). "Perpetuum mobile". Critical Studies in Fashion and Beauty. 1: 55–63. doi:10.1386/csfb.1.1.55_1.
  267. ^ Pham, Diane (October 1, 2012), , Chevrolet, archived from the original on October 3, 2012, retrieved January 23, 2014
  268. ^ Bluemle, Elizabeth (October 11, 2013), "A Talk with the Creator of the Gown Made of Golden Books", Publishers Weekly, from the original on October 11, 2014, retrieved June 11, 2014
  269. ^ Malik Chua, Jasmin. "House of Tammam Debuts U.K.'s Only Ethical Ready-to-Wear Bridal Gowns". Ecouterre. from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  270. ^ "HOME". afterlife project. from the original on January 11, 2020. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  271. ^ Landon, Peoples. "Is Stella McCartney the Queen of Sustainable Fashion". Refinery 29. Refinery 29. from the original on October 23, 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  272. ^ Niinimäki, Kirsi (December 2015). "Ethical foundations in sustainable fashion". Textiles and Clothing Sustainability. 1 (1): 3. doi:10.1186/s40689-015-0002-1.
  273. ^ Furlow, Nancy E. (March 2010). "Greenwashing in the New Millennium" (PDF). The Journal of Applied Business and Economics. 10 (6): 22–25. ProQuest 506504964.
  274. ^ (PDF). Global Fashion Agenda, Pulse Report. 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 4, 2019. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  275. ^ Smith, Ray A. (May 24, 2008). "Shades of green: decoding eco fashion's claims". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on April 28, 2016. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
  276. ^ Gould, Hannah (February 26, 2015). "Waste is so last season: recycling clothes in the fashion industry". The Guardian. from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
  277. ^ a b Weliver, David (July 16, 2008). "Donating Clothing? Beware For-Profit Drop Boxes". moneyunder30.com. from the original on December 6, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  278. ^ Bauer, Julia (October 16, 2010). "Goodwill warns fake donation bin scam is feeding 'billion-dollar for-profit industry'". The Grand Rapids Press. mlive.com. from the original on October 19, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  279. ^ Halsne, Chris (November 25, 2009). "Mayor Calls For Removal Of For-Profit Clothing Donation Bins". kirotv.com. from the original on April 6, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  280. ^ "Find a Charity You Can Trust". Charity Navigator. 2010. from the original on December 5, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  281. ^ Allwood, Julian M. (2006). Well dressed? : the present and future sustainability of clothing and textiles in the United Kingdom. Univ. of Cambridge Inst. for Manufacturing. ISBN 978-1902546520. OCLC 441247814.
  282. ^ "Science Search" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on October 11, 2012. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  283. ^ . Copenhagen Fashion Summit. May 3, 2012. Archived from the original on May 24, 2012. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  284. ^ Clark, Evan. "Sustainability Index Unveiled" 2016-05-29 at the Wayback Machine, Women's Wear Daily, 25 July 2012. Retrieved on 20 December 2012.
  285. ^ Binkley, Christina. "Which Outfit Is Greenest? A New Rating Tool" 2013-05-24 at the Wayback Machine, Wall Street Journal, 25 July 2012. Retrieved on 20 December 2012.
  286. ^ "AAFA, SAC Sign MoU" Archived 2013-02-03 at archive.today, Textile World Magazine, November/December 2012. Retrieved on 20 December 2012.
  287. ^ Gunther, Marc. "Behind the Scenes at the Sustainable Apparel Coalition" 2018-01-26 at the Wayback Machine, GreenBiz, 26 July 2012. Retrieved on 20 December 2012.
  288. ^ "Current Members" 2015-03-21 at the Wayback Machine, Sustainable Apparel Coalition. Retrieved on 20 December 2012.
  289. ^ Hur, Eunsuk; Cassidy, Tom (May 4, 2019). "Perceptions and attitudes towards sustainable fashion design: challenges and opportunities for implementing sustainability in fashion" (PDF). International Journal of Fashion Design, Technology and Education. 12 (2): 208–217. doi:10.1080/17543266.2019.1572789. S2CID 117248781.

Further reading

  • Black, Sandy (2008). Eco-chic : the fashion paradox, London: Black Dog. ISBN 1-906155-09-7. OCLC 966078563.
  • Black, Sandy (2013). The sustainable fashion handbook, New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 9780500290569. OCLC 939743661.
  • Choi, Tsan-Ming; Cheng, T. C. Edwin, eds. (2015). Sustainable fashion supply chain management: from sourcing to retailing. Springer series in supply chain management. New York: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-12703-3. ISBN 9783319127026. OCLC 907012044.
  • Farley, Jennifer; Hill, Colleen (2015). Sustainable fashion: past, present, and future. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9780857851857. OCLC 860754344.
  • Fletcher, Kate (2014) [2008]. Sustainable fashion and textiles: design journeys (2nd ed.). London; Washington, DC: Earthscan. ISBN 9780415644556. OCLC 846847018.
  • Fletcher, Kate; Grose, Lynda (2012). Fashion & sustainability: design for change. London: Laurence King Publishing. ISBN 9781856697545. OCLC 778610112.
  • Fletcher, Kate; Tham, Mathilda, eds. (2015). Routledge handbook of sustainability and fashion. Routledge international handbooks. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415828598. OCLC 820119510.
  • Gardetti, Miguel Ángel

sustainable, fashion, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writin. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Sustainable fashion also known as eco fashion is a term describing products processes activities and actors policymakers brands consumers aiming to achieve a carbon neutral fashion industry built on equality social justice animal welfare and ecological integrity 1 Sustainable fashion concerns more than addressing fashion textiles or products It addresses the entire process in which clothing is produced consumed and disposed who what how when where and the expected useful life of the product before entering landfill The sustainable movement looks to combat the large carbon footprint that fast fashion has created by reducing the environmental impact of fashion such as air pollution water pollution and overall climate change In 2020 it was found that an approach of voluntary self directed reform of textile manufacturing supply chains to reduce the environmental impact of fashion by large companies had failed 2 3 Measures to reform fashion beyond greenwashing needed to involve policies for the creation and enforcement of standardized certificates along with related import controls subsidies 4 and eco tariff like interventions 5 6 7 Contents 1 Background and history 2 Purpose 3 Temporal concerns related to fashion 3 1 Fast fashion 3 2 Slow fashion 3 3 Garment use and lifespan 4 Concerns 4 1 Environmental 4 1 1 Environmental hazards 4 1 2 Microfibers 4 1 3 Fossil fashion 4 2 Social 4 2 1 Transparency 4 2 2 Diversity and inclusion 4 3 Global 4 3 1 Global North 4 3 2 Asian 4 4 Economic 5 Business models for sustainable fashion 5 1 Circular fashion models 5 2 Biomimicry natural cycles and processes 5 3 Rental and sharing models 5 4 Vintage and resale models 5 5 Rethinking recycling 5 6 From collective to connective 5 7 Tailored resurgence 5 8 Open source fashion 6 Technologies 7 Sustainable clothing 7 1 Recycled clothing 7 1 1 Upcycling 8 Sustainable consumption practices for enhanced product life 8 1 Consumer engagement 8 2 Clothing swapping 8 3 Clothing donation to charities 8 3 1 Examples of charitable organization 8 4 Consignment 8 5 Textile recycling 9 Sustainable fashion organizations and companies 9 1 Organizations 9 2 Companies 10 Materials 10 1 Cellulose fibers 10 1 1 Cotton 10 1 1 1 Bt cotton 10 1 1 2 Organic cotton 10 1 1 3 Naturally colored cotton 10 1 2 Soy 10 1 3 Hemp 10 1 4 Bamboo 10 1 5 Kombucha SCOBY 10 1 6 Other cellulose fibers 10 2 Protein fibers 10 2 1 Wool 10 2 2 Silk 10 2 3 Cashmere 10 3 Other natural materials 10 3 1 MuSkin 10 3 2 Wild rubber 10 3 3 Qmilk 10 4 Manufactured fibers 10 4 1 PET plastic 10 5 Fungal species 11 Production 11 1 Producers 11 2 3D seamless knitting 11 3 Zero waste 11 4 Dyeing 11 5 Comparison websites and ecolabels 11 6 Sustainable textile brands 11 7 Designers 12 Controversies 12 1 Marketing controversies 12 1 1 Greenwashing 12 2 Materials controversies 12 3 Donation bin controversy 12 4 Second hand controversies 13 Future of fashion sustainability 14 See also 15 References 16 Further readingBackground and history EditThe origin of sustainable fashion movement is intertwined with the modern environmental movement with the publication in 1962 of the book Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson 8 Carson s book exposed the serious and widespread pollution associated with the use of agricultural chemicals a theme still relevant to the environmental and social impact of fashion today The decades which followed saw the result of human impact on the environment more systematically investigated notably the effects of industrial activity New concepts were introduced for discussing these effects such as sustainable development a term coined in 1987 by the Brundtland Report 9 In the early 1990s roughly coinciding with the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development popularly known as the Rio Earth Summit green issues as they were called at the time made their way into fashion and textiles publications 10 11 These publications featured well known companies such as Patagonia and ESPRIT who s founders Yvon Chouinard and Doug Tompkins were outdoorsmen who witnessed the environmental harm of overproduction and overconsumption Doug Tompkins and Yvon Chouinard were early to note that exponential growth and consumption are not sustainable 12 In the late 1980s they brought environmental concerns into their business models commissioning research into the impact of fibres used in their respective companies For Patagonia this resulted in a lifecycle assessment of four fibres cotton wool nylon and polyester For ESPRIT the focus was on cotton representing 90 of their production at the time and finding better alternatives to it A primary focus on materials provenance impact and selection fibre and fabric processing is still the norm in sustainable fashion 30 years on 13 The principles of green or eco fashion was based on the philosophy of the deep ecologists Arne Naess Fritjof Capra and Ernest Callenbach and design theorist Victor Papanek 14 This imperative is also linked to a feminist understanding of human nature relationships interconnectedness and ethics of care as advocated by Carolyn Merchant 15 Suzi Gablik 16 Vandana Shiva 17 and Carol Gilligan 18 The legacy of the early work of Patagonia and ESPRIT continues to shape the conversation around fashion sustainability today In 1990 ESPRIT placed an ad in Utne Reader making a plea for responsible consumption and ESPRIT and Patagonia co funded the first organic cotton conference held in 1991 in Visalia California aimed at broadening the movement to include many fashion brands In 1992 the ESPRIT e collection based on the Eco Audit guide by the Elmwood Institute was developed by head designer Lynda Grose 19 and launched at retail In 2011 the brand Patagonia ran an ad and a PR campaign called Don t Buy This Jacket with a picture of Patagonia merchandise This message was intended to encourage people to consider the effect that consumption has on the environment to purchase only what they need 20 In parallel with industry research around sustainable fashion has been in development since the early 1990s with the field now having its own history dynamics politics practices sub movements and evolution of analytical and critical language 21 22 23 24 25 26 The field is broad in scope including technical projects that seek to improve the resource efficiency of existing operations 27 the consideration of brands and designers working within currently understood frameworks 28 as well as those which look to fundamentally re imagine the fashion industry including the growth logic 29 In 2019 a group of researchers formed the Union for Concerned Researchers in Fashion UCRF to advocate for radical and coordinated research activity commensurate with the challenges of biodiversity loss and climate change 30 In the fall of 2019 the UCRF received the North Star Award at the Green Carpet Fashion Awards during Milan Fashion Week 31 Purpose EditAdherents of the sustainable fashion movement believe that the fashion industry has a clear opportunity to act differently pursuing profit and growth while also creating new value and deeper wealth for society and therefore for the world economy The goal of sustainable fashion is to create flourishing ecosystems and communities through its activity 28 The movement believes that clothing companies ought to place environmental social and ethical improvements on management s agenda 32 33 This may include increasing the value of local production and products prolonging the lifecycle of materials increasing the value of timeless garments reducing the amount of waste and reducing the harm to the environment as a result of production and consumption Another goal is to educate people to practice environmentally friendly consumption by promoting the green consumer which can allow for the company itself to gain more support and a larger following 34 35 Green consumerism is the shift in consumer behavior attitudes advocating for the efficient use of energy which ultimately helps in saving money reducing utility bills lowering emissions of greenhouse gas and enabling economies to meet the growing energy demands In recent years there has been an increase in research centered around consumer reactions to the advent of green products within fast fashion 36 Critics doubt the effectiveness that this has but companies have already begun slowly transitioning their business models to fit a more eco friendly and sustainable future Thus the industry has to change its basic premise for profit yet this is slow coming as it requires a large shift in business practices models and tools for assessment 37 This became apparent in the discussions following the Burberry report of the brand burning unsold goods worth around 28 6m about 37 8 million in 2018 38 exposing not only overproduction and subsequent destruction of unsold stock as a normal business practice but behavior amongst brands that actively undermine a sustainable fashion agenda 39 The challenge for making fashion more sustainable often requires systematic reinvention and this call for action is not new The UCRF has argued that the industry focus remains the same ideas originally mooted in the late 1980s and early 1990s The Union observes so far the mission of sustainable fashion has been an utter failure and all small and incremental changes have been drowned by an explosive economy of extraction consumption waste and continuous labor abuse 40 A frequently concern of those working in the area of sustainable fashion is whether the field itself is an oxymoron 41 This reflects the seemingly irreconcilable possibility of bringing together fashion understood as constant change and tied to business models based on continuous replacement of goods and sustainability understood as continuity and resourcefulness 13 The apparent paradox dissolves if fashion is seen more broadly as a process not only aligned to expansionist business models 42 43 and consumption but instead as mechanism that leads to more engaged ways of living 44 29 Temporal concerns related to fashion EditFashion is per definition a phenomenon related to time a popular expression in a certain time and context This also affects the perception of what is and should be made more sustainable if fashion should be fast or slow or if it should be more exclusive or inclusive 45 46 Like much other designs the objects of fashion exist in the inter zone between desire and discard along a temporal axis between the shimmering urge towards life and the thermodynamic fate of death As noted by cultural theorist Brian Thill waste is every object plus time 47 When it comes down to the garments themselves their durability depends on their use and metabolism certain garments are made to withstand long use ex outdoor and hiking wear winter jackets whereas other garments have a quicker turn around ex a party top This means some garments have properties and a use life that could be made more durable whereas others should be compostable or recyclable for quicker disintegration 48 Some garments age well and acquire a patina and a romantic enchantment not unlike the wonder fascination and grandeur of historical ruins whereas the derelict and discarded rags of last season is an eyesore and nuisance the first connotes a majesty of taste whereas the second is the underclass of waste Fast fashion Edit One of the most apparent reasons for the current unsustainable condition of the fashion system is related to the temporal aspects of fashion the continuous stream of new goods onto the market or what is popularly called fast fashion The term fast fashion is used to refer to the fast paced production of goods at an unethical level which often has a negative impact on the environment As a way to conform to the latest fashion styles and keep consumers wanting new garments current fast fashion trends pre suppose selling clothing in large quantities 49 Due to fast fashion being affordable and able to keep up with the trends there has been an increase in apparel consumption Consumption has risen to 62 million tonnes annually and is projected to reach 102 million tonnes by 2030 50 This type of fashion is produced in vast quantities with low quality materials and are sold through chains such as H amp M Zara Forever21 Shein etc A popular fast fashion retailer called Shein which is most notably advertised on social media platform TikTok is one of the most visited fast fashion websites in the world and ships to 220 countries however many people have begun to question how ethical and sustainable Shein is as it is responsible for about 706 billion kilograms of greenhouse gases in 2015 from the production of polyester textiles and makes up for hundreds of gallons of water being used for one garment 51 In January 2021 Shein offered over 121 000 garments made from polyester making up 61 of their clothing total 52 The fashion industry has a value of three trillion dollars It is two percent of the world s gross domestic product GDP the total monetary or market value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country s borders in a specific time period 53 Out of the three trillion dollars the majority is made of fast fashion However the fast aspect of consumption is primarily a problem for the environment when done on a massive scale As long as fast conspicuous consumption was reserved to the rich the global impact was not reaching public attention or seen as a problem That is fast shopping sprees of haute couture is not seen as a problem rather it is celebrated for example in movies such as Pretty Woman whereas when people with less means shop fast fashion it is seen as unethical and a problem Today the speed of fast fashion is common across the whole industry as exclusive fashion replicates the fast fashion chains with continuous releases of collections and product drops the quality of a garment does not necessarily translate to a slower pace of consumption and waste citation needed These releases are only exasperated by the acceleration of fashion trends As micro trends are only lasting an average of 3 years the demand for clothes has also accelerated 54 Fast fashion has negative effects on the environment and is unethical in terms of production In order to make clothing fast enough to keep up with the changing fashion trends the clothes are produced in harmful ways Fast clothing is made with synthetic fibers as opposed to natural fibers The synthetic fibers are made using the Earth s fossil fuels Almost sixty percent of clothes are made this way 55 Since people spend so much money on these types of clothes and purchase them so frequently landfills are filling up quickly Over sixty percent of clothes made every year end up in landfills as consumer waste and almost twenty percent of the world s waste is constituted by fashion products 53 Therefore because fast fashion frequently introduces new collections consumer consumption increases Consequently leading consumers to view low cost apparel as disposable since there are continuous releases of products 56 Production of these types of clothing is also commonly exploitative with most factories that produce fast clothing employing workers on low wages in exploitative environments Workers from Shein reported making as little as 35 cents per garment produced as well as operating on 18 hour workdays with 1 day off per month 57 Exploitative fast fashion production is prevalent in countries like China Bangladesh and Vietnam 58 Hard labor was always around in the fashion industry dating back to when slave labor helped factories gather their materials People making these clothes today suffer from harsh working conditions low wages and risks to health and safety Slow fashion Edit Slow fashion can be seen as an alternative approach against fast fashion based on principles of the slow food movement 59 60 Characteristics of sustainable fashion match the philosophies of slow fashion in that emotional ecological and ethical qualities are favored over uniform and bland convenience with minimal friction It requires a changed infrastructure and a reduced through put of goods Categorically slow fashion is neither business as usual nor just involving design classics Nor is it production as usual but with long lead times Slow fashion is a vision of the fashion sector built from a different starting point 61 Slow fashion is a fashion concept that reflects a perspective which respects human living conditions biological cultural diversity and scarce global resources and creates unique personalized products The term Slow Fashion came about quite organically It was coined by Kate Fletcher of the Centre for Sustainable Fashion following the phenomena of the slow food movement 62 As with the slow food movement Fletcher saw a need for a slower pace in the fashion industry 63 Slow fashion challenges growth fashion s obsession with mass production and globalized style It becomes a guardian of diversity and changes the power relations between fashion creators and consumers therefore forging new relationships and trust that are only possible at smaller scales It fosters a heightened state of awareness of the design process and its impacts on resource flows workers communities and ecosystems 64 Slow fashion often consists of durable products traditional production techniques or design concepts that strive to be season less or last aesthetically and materially for longer periods of time The impact of slowness aims to affect many points of the production chain For workers in the textile industry in developing countries slow fashion means higher wages For end users slow fashion means that the goods are designed and manufactured with greater care and high quality products From an environmental point of view it means that there are less clothing and industrial waste that is removed from use following transient trends 65 Emphasis is put on durability emotionally materially aesthetically and or through services that prolong the use life of garments New ideas and product innovations are constantly redefining slow fashion so using a static single definition would ignore the evolving nature of the concept Examples of stability of expression over long times are abundant in the history of dress not least in ethnic or folk dress ritual or coronation robes clerical dress or the uniforms of the Vatican Guard 66 The emphasis on slowness in branding is thus an approach that is specific for a niche in the market such as Western educated middle class that has since the 1990s become dominated by fast models One of the earliest brands that gained global fame with an explicit focus on slow fashion the Anglo Japanese brand People Tree embraces the concept of ethical trade manufactures all products in accordance with ethical commerce standards and supports local producers and craftsmen in developing countries The People Tree brand is known as the first fashion company to receive the World Fair Trade Organization product label in 2013 demonstrating their dedication to fair trade and the environment 67 The concept of slow fashion is however not without its controversies as the imperative of slowness is a mandate emerging from a position of privilege To stop consuming fast fashion strikes against low income consumers whose only means to access trends is through cheap and accessible goods Those who are already having a high position in society can afford to slow down and cement their status and position while those on their way up resent being told to stay at the lower rungs of the status hierarchy 68 The prestige of slowness allows a cultural signifier for those already have social positions to preserve and have time and money to take it easy and enjoy the pleasures of reflection and meditate over their moral superiority 69 Garment use and lifespan Edit The environmental impact of fashion also depends on how much and how long a garment is used With the fast fashion trend garments tend to be used half as much as compared to 15 years ago This is due to the inferior quality of fabrics used but also a result of a significant increase in collections that are being released by the fashion industry Typically a garment used daily over years has less impact than a garment used once to then be quickly discarded Studies have shown that the washing and drying process for pair of classic jeans is responsible for almost two thirds of the energy consumed through the whole of the jeans life and for underwear about 80 of total energy use comes from laundry processes 13 The dyeing process also contributes close to 15 20 of wastewater For this reason innovative techniques are being introduced to reduce energy and water consumption such as utilizing CO2 in the dyeing process 56 Thus use and wear practices affect the lifecycles of garments and needs to be addressed for larger systemic impact 70 However there is a significant difference between making a product last from making a long lasting product The quality of the product must reflect the appropriate fit into its lifecycle Certain garments of quality can be repaired and cultivated with emotional durability Low quality products that deteriorate rapidly are not as suitable to be enchanted with emotional bonds between user and product 71 It is important to notice that choosing and promoting emotional bonds with consumer objects is an endeavor more easily done under circumstances of excess as the needy have no other option than to keep and care for their belongings As highlighted in the research of Irene Maldini slowing down in the sense of keeping garments longer does not necessarily translate into lower volumes of purchased units 72 Maldini s studies expose how slow fashion in the sense of long lasting use phase of garments tends to indicate that garments stay in the wardrobe longer stored or hoarded but does not mean fewer resources are used in producing garments Thus slowness comes to mean wardrobes with more lasting products but the consumption volume and in flow into the wardrobe storage stay the same 73 Concerns EditEnvironmental Edit The fashion industry has a disastrous impact on the environment In fact it is the second largest polluter in the world just after the oil industry And the environmental damage is increasing as the industry grows 74 A factory emitting smoke into the sky The textiles and fashion industries are amongst the leading industries that affect the environment negatively One of the industries that greatly jeopardize environmental sustainability is the textiles and fashion industry which thus also bears great responsibilities Globalization has made it possible to produce clothing at increasingly lower prices prices so low and collections shifting so fast that many consumers consider fashion to be disposable 22 However fast and thus disposable fashion adds to pollution and generates environmental hazards in production use and disposal Putting the environmental perspective at the center rather than the logic of the industry is thus an urgent concern if fashion is to become more sustainable The Earth Logic fashion research action plan argues for putting the health and survival of our planet earth and consequently the future security and health of all species including humans before industry business and economic growth 75 In making this argument the Earth Logic plan explicitly connects the global fashion system with the 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1 5 C Furthermore the Earth Logic fashion research action plan sets out a range of possible areas for work in a sustainable fashion that scientific and research evidence suggests are the most likely to deliver a change of the scale and pace needed to respond to challenges like climate change Earth Logic s point of departure is that the planet and its people must be put first before profit It replaces the logic of economic growth which is arguably the single largest factor limiting change towards sustainable fashion with the logic that puts earth at its center 76 Environmental hazards Edit The clothing industry has one of the highest impacts on the planet Cotton requires approximately 15 000 liters of water to grow for a pair of jeans 77 High water usage pollution from chemical treatments used in dyeing and preparation and the disposal of large amounts of unsold clothing through incineration or landfill deposits are hazardous to the environment 78 There is a growing water scarcity the current usage level of fashion materials 79 billion cubic meters annually is very concerning because textile production mostly takes place in areas of fresh water stress 79 Only around 20 of clothing is recycled or reused huge amounts of fashion product end up as waste in landfills or are incinerated 79 It has been estimated that in the UK alone around 350 000 tons of clothing ends up as landfill every year According to Earth Pledge a non profit organization committed to promoting and supporting sustainable development At least 8 000 chemicals are used to turn raw materials into textiles and 25 of the world s pesticides are used to grow non organic cotton This causes irreversible damage to people and the environment and still two thirds of a garment s carbon footprint will occur after it is purchased 80 The average American throws away nearly 70 pounds of clothing per year 81 Microfibers Edit There is increasing concern that microfibers from synthetic and cellulosic 82 fabrics are polluting the earths waters through the process of laundering Microfibers are tiny threads that are shed from fabric These microfibers are too small to be captured in wastewater treatment plants filtration systems and they end up entering our natural water systems and as a result contaminating our food chain One study found that 34 8 of Microplastics found in oceans come from the textile and clothing industry and the majority of them were made of polyester polyethylene acrylic and elastane 83 but a study off the coast of the UK and US by the Plymouth Marine Laboratory in May 2020 suggested there are at least double the number of particles as previously thought 84 Eliminating synthetic materials used in clothing products can prevent harmful synthetics and microfibers from ending up in the natural environment While some clothing companies and NGOs support the use of washing bags to filter out microfibers in washing machines and thus reduce microfiber release microfibers are also shed during wear and disposal 85 Fossil fashion Edit In February 2021 Changing Markets Foundation released a report on the fashion industry s dependence on oil extraction The report analyses the current production model across the fashion industry is dependent on massive fossil fuel extraction to fuel the production of fibers 86 The report spotlights how the production of the most popular fibers primarily polyester is reliant on oil extraction Production of polyester has grown ninefold since the 1970s and is the fastest growing component in fashion production The popularity of polyester is due to its low price but also the fiber s flexibility as a material The report suggests synthetic fibers in the textile industry currently accounts for 1 35 of global oil consumption and this is projected to more than double in the coming years BP s energy scenario presumes plastic production will account for 95 of future growth in demand for oil demand while the International Energy Agency IEA predicts petrochemicals will represent up to 50 of growth in oil demand by 2050 and 4 in the projected growth of gas demand p 8 Social Edit One of the main social issues related to fashion concerns labor Since the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 labor rights in the fashion industry has been at the center of this issue 87 The 2013 Savar building collapse at Rana Plaza where 1138 people died put the spotlight once again on the lack of transparency poor working conditions and hazards in fashion production 88 89 Attention is increasingly being placed on labour rights violations in other parts of the whole fashion product lifecycle from textile production and processing 90 91 retail and distribution 92 and modeling 93 to the recycling of textiles 94 Whilst the majority of fashion and textiles are produced in Asia Central America Turkey North Africa the Caribbean and Mexico there is still production across Europe where exploitative working conditions are also found such as in Leicester in the UK Midlands 95 and Central and Eastern Europe 96 The fashion industry benefits from racial class and gender inequalities 97 These inequalities and pressure from brands and retailers in the form of low prices and short lead times contribute to exploitative working conditions and low wages 98 Also local production such as garments labeled as Made in Italy are engaged in global sourcing of labor and worker exploitation bypassing unions and social welfare contracts 99 The number of workers employed in textiles clothing and footwear is unknown due to the differences in statistical measures 100 It is generally accepted that at least 25 million people the majority women work in garment manufacture and up to 300 million in cotton alone 101 The environmental impact of fashion also affects communities located close to production sites There is little easily accessible information about these impacts but it is known that water and land pollution from toxic chemicals used to produce and dye fabrics and have serious negative consequences for the people living near factories 102 The social costs of fast fashion are left on the laborers working long hours to mass produce the clothing They bear the weight of the fast fashion industry as they work through environmental health hazards and cheap pay that does not compensate for the work they put in 103 This is a big reason why slow fashion is becoming so desirable Unlike fast fashion it places a big importance on ethical conduct and caring for people working throughout the supply chain 104 Transparency Edit Supply chain transparency has been a recurring controversy for the fashion industry especially since the Rana Plaza accident The issue has been pushed by many labor organizations not least Clean Clothes Campaign and Fashion Revolution Over the last years over 150 major brands including Everlane Filippa K and H amp M have answered by publicizing information about their factories online Every year Fashion Revolution publishes a Fashion Transparency Index 105 106 which rates the world s largest brands and retailers according to how much information they disclose about their suppliers supply chain policies and practices and social and environmental impact The top scorers of the 2019 Fashion Transparency Index included Adidas Reebok Patagonia and H amp M 107 The high place of several fast fashion retailers caused controversy regarding the parameters used for such rankings 108 Diversity and inclusion Edit In addition fashion companies are criticized for the lack of size age physical ability gender and racial diversity of models used in photo shoots and catwalks 109 A more radical and systemic critique of social inequality in fashion concerns the exclusion and aesthetic supremacy inherent and accentuated through fashion that still remains unquestioned under the current environmentally focused discourse on sustainable fashion 110 111 While social inclusivity has become almost a norm amongst brands marketing ethical and sustainable fashion the norm for what is considered a beautiful and healthy body keeps narrowing down under what researchers have called the current wellness syndrome 112 With the positive thinking of inclusivity the assumption is that a consumer can be whatever he or she wants to be and thus if the person is not living up to the ideals it is the person s own fault This optimism hides the diktat of aesthetic wellness which turns inclusion into an obligation to look good and be dressed in fashionable clothes a democratic demand for aesthetic as well as ethical perfection as argued by philosopher Heather Widdows 113 Global Edit The impact of fashion across the planet is unevenly distributed Whereas much of the benefits of cheap and accessible clothes targets and benefits the socially mobile classes in metropolitan areas in the Global North developing countries take a much higher proportion of the negative impact from the fashion system in terms of waste pollution and ecological injustices Global North Edit Across consumer societies primarily located in the Global North the current focus is on solutions related to reduce reuse recycle which are primarily promoted through brand initiatives While this approach puts focus on the abundance of cheap and accessible goods it fails to address the uneven global impact of the fashion system The fashion situation differs widely between consumer societies and developing economies The push for affecting overconsumption not only pushes responsibility for systemic issues onto the individual but it also primarily positions fashion in a Western consumerism context and puts Euro centric models of status individualism and consumerism as universal models for social life and aspirations citation needed Asian Edit China has emerged as the largest exporter of fast fashion accounting for 30 of world apparel exports 114 However some Chinese workers make as little as 12 18 cents per hour working in poor conditions 114 Each year Americans purchase approximately 1 billion garments made in China Today s biggest factories and mass scale of apparel production emerged from two developments in history The first involved the opening up of China and Vietnam in the 1980s to private and foreign capital and investments in the creation of export oriented manufacturing of garments footwear and plastics part of a national effort to boost living standards embrace modernity and capitalism 115 Second the retail revolution within the U S example Wal Mart Target Nike and Western Europe where companies no longer manufactured but rather contracted out their production and transformed instead into key players in design marketing and logistics introducing many new different product lines manufactured in foreign owned factories in China 115 It is the convergence of these two phenomena that has led to the largest factories in history from apparels to electronics In contemporary global supply chains it is the retailers and branders who have had the most power in establishing arrangements and terms of production not factory owners 116 Fierce global competition in the garment industry translates into poor working conditions for many laborers in developing nations Developing countries aim to become a part of the world s apparel market despite poor working conditions and low pay Countries such as Cambodia and Bangladesh export large amounts of clothing into the United States every year 114 Economic Edit At the heart of the controversy concerning fast fashion lies the acknowledgment that the problem of unsustainable fashion is that cheap accessible and on trend clothes have become available to people of poorer means This means more people across the world have adopted the consumption habits that in the mid 20th century were still reserved for the rich To put it differently the economic concern of fashion is that poor people or populations in developing economies now have access to updating their wardrobes as often as the rich or consumers in Western economies That is fast fashion is only a problem when poor people engage in it In alignment with this the blame for the proliferation of poor quality high quantity and cheap fashion is often put on poorer consumers The economic concerns of fashion also mean many of the sustainable solutions to fashion such as buying high quality goods to last longer are not accessible to people with fewer means From an economic perspective sustainability thus remains a moralizing issue of educated classes teaching the less educated responsible consumption and a debate that mainly concerns promoting frugality and austerity to those with fewer means It is seen as an opportunity by businesses that allow the resale of luxury goods 117 The distribution of value within the fashion industry is another economic concern with garment workers and textile farmers and workers receiving low wages and prices 118 119 Business models for sustainable fashion EditIn order to promote more sustainable forms of consumption there is a multitude of emerging business models that challenge the prevalent ready to wear model Circular fashion models Edit A number of emerging business models go under the name of circular fashion inspired by the circular economy While there are many models under development some are gaining more traction Much of the work on circular fashion builds on ideas and initiatives explored in the 1990s and onwards by scholars such as Lynda Grose 120 Kate Fletcher 121 Rebecca Earley 122 Mathilda Tham and Timo Rissanen 123 especially the thinking around the metabolism of garments and wardrobes zero waste production and the focus on the whole life cycle of garments 124 The popular terminology around circular fashion reached the mainstream through a report that has come to define the field the 2017 A New Textile Economy Redesigning Fashion s Future by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation 125 The cradle to cradle model a circular system named after the influential 2002 book with the same name by German chemist Michael Braungart and US architect William McDonough has been a popular inspiration amongst proponents of circular fashion it is not easy to achieve Most textile fibers in consumer fashion are amalgamations of various materials to achieve flexible or aesthetic properties and thus not optimal for circular reproduction Industrially shredded fibers often need addition of new materials to achieve elasticity or durability Up until now most companies contributing to circular fashion are either mechanical or chemical textile recyclers such as Lenzing Recover Textile Systems Renewcell Evrnu Spinnova or Infinited Fiber Company 126 Although all work with textile waste as their raw material it is often from pre consumer origins as it is easier to sort and process More recently some industry initiatives to develop and scale pre consumer and post consumer textile recycling have been emerging around the globe particularly as a response to new legislation On March 30 The European Commission published the EU Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles 127 a new strategy that lays out key principles to drive change in the textiles industry The European Commission s vision of the future of the textiles industry in Europe lays on several pillars that include recycled textiles ecodesigns waste management transparency labelling microplastics and extended producer responsibility EPR 128 Biomimicry natural cycles and processes Edit Biomimicry suggests a perspective emphasizing the Wisdom of Nature where the industry looks into materials in tune with natural cycles 129 Biomimicry replicates the cycles of nature seeking to infinitely reuse materials to make commerce compatible with nature Fashion from the viewpoint of biomimicry tries to make fashion work as a sustainable ecosystem aligning with natural systems in harmony with the biosphere Materials should be bio compatible combining biodegradable fibers with processes of fermentation and gasification or materials that have been seen as waste could act as a more sustainable method to making new clothing 130 Materials that can mitigate negative impacts from the industry Whereas some biomimicry is about inventing new fibers and processes inspired by natural processes biomimicry also connnotes traditional vegan and fossil free materials materials processed from the normal cycles of the natural environment fibers forgotten or disregarded in agricultural business or fibers made from regenerative agriculture permaculture or sustainable techniques from indigenous cultures Rental and sharing models Edit Rental models are gaining popularity across the industry a model that has traditionally been used in attire for masquerades or special events such as weddings The idea is that sharing garments ultimately lowers the volume of new purchases and disposal of clothing which means less waste 130 Rent the Runway is a company building on the Rent a Closet approach to consumption where a consumer leases a garment instead of purchasing it Fashion rental is a model expected to grow over 10 annually until 2027 across the fashion industry thus also increasing sales and expected waste of garments 131 Renting and sharing clothing is also known as CFC collaborative fashion consumption but its environmental impact and mitigation of pollution are debated 132 133 While convenient for the consumer reducing the number of items housed in the wardrobe the environmental impact of rental may however not be reduced as much as advertised Transportation between users and storage dry cleaning and re packaging causes more environmental impact than reselling or hand me downs 134 135 As noted by Levanen et al 2021 the lowest global warming impacts are achieved be reducing consumption followed by reusing and recycling whereas rental services are likely to increase customers consumption logistics and use making sharing and rental scenarios having the highest Global Warming Potential 133 As noted by sustainability researcher Timo Rissanen it is the total amount of clothing units in circulation that needs to be reduced as well as their environmental impact during their life cycle and rental services could if improved play a role in that 136 Vintage and resale models Edit The most sustainable fibers in fashion are the ones many people already have Thus to recirculate existing garments new business models engage the resale revival and recirculation of used second hand or vintage clothing 130 Purchasing second hand or vintage clothing is a way to lower the amount of new clothing that gets produced and disposed of and ends up in landfills Other resale models also contain elements of upcycling and repairs Repairing and reselling used clothing has less environmental impact than creating processing dying cutting sewing and shipping new clothing to the consumer citation needed Rethinking recycling Edit Community clothing and shoes donation bins A more technologically minded trend is innovative recycling which seeks to view waste itself as a source of value Within the fashion industry some who manufacturers have created incentives for consumers to participate in the recycling of their clothing Innovative recycling is also aimed at clothing stores themselves who do not always have sustainable methods to properly dispose of boxes and plastic bags innovative recycling also looks at the packaging that clothes come in having been sent from manufacturers A change in approaches towards recycling within the fashion industry could potentially greatly impact the amount of waste the industry creates 130 From collective to connective Edit Using digital technologies and blockchain can promote more Connected Clothes which allows for more opportunities in digitalizing clothing for personalization life tracking and traceability of its origin 130 Tailored resurgence Edit Tailored couture is another option for the future of a greener fashion industry for those who can afford it as it can potentially lead to less waste and more jobs improving the economy Tailored couture is no longer desired because of the convenience of malls and stores provide but the consequence of the convenience is the pollution of the environment The idea is that tailored clothing can reduce mass production while reusing and redesigning old clothes to fit could reduce the amount of old worn out unfitting clothes thrown out or given away 137 Open source fashion Edit Open source content has become a popular reference with designers sharing patterns and designs connecting to the success of the open source software movement By sharing designs freely using digital technology the aim is to make consumers more engaged in the design production and lifetime use of the garment 138 While the terminology is new the concept builds on the sharing of patterns across European courts in 16th century such as Kleidungsbuchlein or Trachtenbuch usually translated as Book of Clothes of Melchior Lorck and the wide range of sewing magazines such as Burda Style in the early 20th century By making garments more open and adaptable across their lifecycle the hope is that garments can be multi functional beyond simply clothing our bodies that fashion should be both useful and inventive and that what we wear should relate to the world around us 138 Examples of open source fashion range from freely available patterns and production techniques platforms for exchanging materials and patterns and maker spaces 139 Technologies EditSee also Manufacture on demand and Clothing technology Novel technologies for virtual try ons of clothes sold via e commerce may enable more sustainable fashion and reduce wasted clothes and related transportation and production expenses 140 141 Sustainable clothing EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sustainable clothing refers to fabrics derived from eco friendly resources such as sustainably grown fiber crops or recycled materials Sustainable clothing includes the use of second hand retail repair and often utilizes upcycling and recycling of clothing 142 It also refers to how these fabrics are made Historically being environmentally conscious towards clothing meant 1 making clothes last long by caring for them repairing and patching them 2 inheriting and using hand me downs within ones expanded family and community 3 buying clothes from thrift stores or any shops that sell second hand clothing or 4 donating used clothes to shops previously mentioned for reuse or resale In modern times with a prominent trend towards sustainability and being green sustainable clothing has expanded towards 5 reducing the amount of clothing overproduced incinerated or discarded to landfills and 6 decreasing the environmental impact of agrochemicals in producing conventional fiber crops e g cotton The three pillars of sustainability bounded by the environment earth life Under the accordance of sustainability recycled clothing upholds the principle of the Three R s of the Environment Reduce Reuse and Recycle as well as the Three Legs of Sustainability Economics Ecology and Social Equity Through the utilization of recycled material for the manufacturing of clothing provides an additional realm of economic world profit Sustainable Clothing will provide a new market for additional job opportunities the continuous net flow of money in the global economy and the consumption reduction of raw materials and virgin resources Source reduction or reducing the use of raw materials and virgin resources can ultimately reduce carbon emissions during the manufacturing process as well as the resources and carbon emissions that are related to the transportation process This also prevents the unsustainable usage of extracting materials from the Earth by making use of what has already been used i e recycling Sustainable clothing has many benefits Some being that it uses less water it reduces toxic waste it reduces the amount of pesticides released into the environment and the quality is higher Recycled clothing Edit See also Global trade of secondhand clothing and Circular economy Textile industry Recycled or reclaimed fibers are recovered from either pre or post consumer sources Those falling into the category of pre consumer are unworn unused textile wastes from all the various stages of manufacture Post consumer textile waste could be any product that has been worn used and has typically been discarded or donated to charities Once sorted for quality and color they can be shredded pulled UK or picked US into a fibrous state According to the specification and end use these fibers can be blended together or with new fiber While most textiles can be recycled they are mainly downgraded almost immediately into low quality end uses such as filling materials The limited range of recycled materials available reflects the market dominance of cheap virgin fibers and the lack of technological innovation in the recycling industry For over 200 years recycling technology has stayed the same fibers are extracted from used fabric by mechanically tearing the fabric apart using carding machines The process breaks the fibers producing much shorter lengths that tend to result in a low quality yarn Textiles made from synthetic fibers can also be recycled chemically in a process that involves breaking down the fiber at the molecular level and then depolymerizing the feedstock While chemical recycling is more energy intensive than mechanical pulling the resulting fiber tends to be of more predictable quality The most commonly available recycled synthetic fibre is polyester made from plastic bottles although recycled nylon is also available 143 Total MSW Generation by category 2008 250 million tons before recycling In addition to promoting a sounder environment by producing newer clothing made with sustainable innovative materials clothing can also be donated to charities sold into consignment shops or recycled into other materials These methods reduce the amount of landfill space occupied by discarded clothes According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency s 2008 Report on Municipal Solid Waste MSW Generation Recycling and Disposal in the United States defines clothing as non durable generally lasts less than three years textiles In 2008 approximately 8 78 millions of tons of textiles were generated 1 45 millions of tons were recovered and saved from landfills resulting in a rate of almost 17 The EPA report also states that the amount of MSW being Discarded is 54 Recovered is 33 and Combusted with Energy recovery is 13 144 Approximately two thirds of clothing materials are sent to landfills making it the fastest growing component of waste in the household waste stream As of 2009 update textiles disposed of in landfill sites have risen from 7 to 30 within the last five years 145 Upcycling Edit Upcycling in fashion signifies the process of reusing the unwanted and discarded materials such as fabric scraps or clothes into new materials or products without compromising the value and the quality of the used material The definition of textile waste can be production waste pre consumer waste and post consumer waste 146 Typically upcycling creates something new and better from the old used or disposed of items The process of upcycling requires a blend of factors like environmental awareness creativity innovation and hard work and results in a unique sustainable product Upcycling aims at the development of products truly sustainable affordable innovative and creative For example shirts can be upcycled into a value added product like a unique handmade braided rug whereas the opposite of upcycling is downcycling such as cleaning rags made from worn T shirts 147 Upcycling can be seen as one of the waste management strategies There are different types of strategies From least to most resource intensive the strategies are the reuse of product repairing and reconditioning to keep products as long as possible recycling the raw materials 148 The reuse of textile products as is brings significant environmental savings In the case of clothing the energy used to collect sort and resell second hand garments in between 10 and 20 times less than that needed to make a new item 149 It is meant to be innovative by making certain materials into something re usable and improved which gives companies and manufacturers higher values for their products Recycling is a big factor in sustainability so creating new materials to avoid mass pollution can help improve the economy 150 An example of a brand that does this is Ecoalf All clothing items are made from recycled items like used tires and plastic bottles The manufacturing of their items also takes place wherever the materials are recycled from ultimately reducing their carbon footprint The advantages of circular fashion include reduced dependency on imported raw materials creation of eco friendly industries and jobs eco friendly brands benefit from a better public image and reduction in environmental damage caused by resource extraction On the other hand disadvantages include dependency on the consumer s actions creating a new business model on the basis of recycled is tough and the entire cycle requires integrating product life cycle from raw material to disposal 151 Sustainable consumption practices for enhanced product life EditThere are negative social and environmental impacts at all stages of the fashion product life materials production and processing manufacture of garments retail and marketing use and maintenance and at the discard phase For some products the environmental impact can be greater at the use phase than material production 152 leading for instance to the suggestion to wash clothes less Consumer engagement Edit Sustainability and Style event held during Berlin Fashion Week 2016 Consumer engagement challenges the passive mode of ready to wear fashion where consumers have few interfaces and little incentive to be active with their garments to repair change update swap and learn from their wardrobe 29 This type of consumer engagement aiming to promote fashion as an ability rather than primarily as a commodity has been referred to as fashion ability 153 The term folk fashion has been used in the emphasis on craft engagements with garments where the community heritage of skills are in focus 154 There are currently many designers trying to find ways that experiment with new models of action that deposes passivity and indifference while preserving the positive social dynamics and sensibilities fashion offers often in relation to Alvin Toffler s notion of the prosumer portmanteau of producer and consumer Notions of participatory design open source fashion and fashion hacktivism are parts of such endeavors mixing techniques of dissemination with empowerment reenchantment and Paulo Freire s Pedagogy of the Oppressed 13 155 156 157 An example of such consumer engagement can be Giana Gonzalez and her project Hacking Couture which has tested such methods across the world since 2006 158 As highlighted in the research of Jennifer Ballie there is also an increasing interest across industry to produce unique experiences amongst users connecting co design with social media apps and tools to enhance the user experience of consumers 159 A recent example has been the Open Source Fashion Cookbook by the New York based brand ADIFF showing how consumers can recycle materials share and modify patterns and co create more engaging forms of fashion consumption 160 Enhancing the lifespan of products have been yet another approach to sustainability yet still only in its infancy Upmarket brands have long supported the lifespan of their products through product service systems such as re waxing of classic outdoor jackets or repairs of expensive handbags yet more accessible brands do still not offer even spare buttons in their garments One such approach concerns emotionally durable design yet with fashion s dependency on continuous updates and consumer s desire to follow trends there is a significant challenge to make garments last long through emotional attachment As with memories not all are pleasant and thus a focus on emotional attachment can result in favoring a normative approach to what is considered a good enough memory to manifest emotionally in a garment Cultural theorist Peter Stallybrass approaches this challenge in his essay on poverty textile memory and the coat of Karl Marx 161 Clothing swapping Edit Clothes swap in Wroclaw Wyspa Tamka Event is manifesting slow fashion movement focusing on Fashion Revolution actions Main article Clothing swap Clothing swapping can further promote the reduction reuse and recycling clothing By reusing clothing that has already been made and recycling clothing from one owner to another source reduction can be achieved This moves away from usage of new raw materials to make more clothing available for consumption Through the method of clothing swapping an alternative resource for consumers to ultimately save in regards to money and time is provided It reduces transportation emissions costs and the time it takes to drive and search through the chaos of most clothing stores Swapping clothes further promotes the use of sustainable online shopping and the internet as well as an increase of social bonds through online communication or effective personal communication in clothing swap parties The EPA states that by reusing items at the source waste can be diverted from ending up in landfills because it delays or avoids that item s entry in the waste collection and disposal system 162 Clothing donation to charities Edit People can opt to donate clothing to charities In the UK a charity is a non profit organization that is given special tax form and distinct legal status 163 A charity is a foundation created to promote the public good 164 People donating clothing to charitable organizations in America are often eligible for tax deductions albeit the donations are itemized 165 Examples of charitable organization Edit The following is a list of few charitable organizations known for accepting clothing donations Centre for Sustainable Fashion an organization that focuses on projects that explore knowledge exchange research and education 166 Goodwill Industries a non profit organization founded in 1902 in Boston Originally started as an urban outreach 167 Oxfam a non profit organization founded in 1942 in Oxford Originally established to mitigate famines in Greece caused by Allied naval blockades during World War II Formerly Oxfam Committee for Famine Relief 168 Responsibility in Fashion a non profit organization bringing together sustainable conscious ethical and eco fashion organizations and government programs toward the goal of energizing and bringing innovation to the growing movement toward clean safe and ethical fashion 169 Salvation Army an Evangelical Christian based non profit organization founded in 1865 in London 170 Textile Exchange a non profit organization that focuses on minimizing the detrimental effects of the garment and textile industry and maximizing sustainability efforts 171 United Way Worldwide a non profit organization originally named Charity Organization Society established in 1887 in Denver Colorado Currently a coalition of charitable organizations 172 Planet Aid a non profit organization founded in 1997 Consignment Edit Main article Consignment A clothing consignment shop sells clothes that are owned not by the shop s owner but by the individual who had given or consigned the items to the shop for the owner to sell 173 The shop owner seller is the consignee and the owner of the items is the consignor Both the consignor and the consignee receive portions of the profit made from the item However the consignor will not be paid until the items are sold Therefore unlike donating clothing to charities people who consign their clothes to shops can make a profit Textile recycling Edit Main article Textile recycling Charities keep approximately 10 of all the donated clothing received 174 These clothes tend to be good quality fashionable and high valued fabrics that can easily be sold in charities thrift shops Charities sell the other 90 of the clothing donations to textile recycling firms 174 Textile recycling firms process about 70 of the donated clothing into industrial items such as rags or cleaning cloths 174 However 20 25 of the second hand clothing is sold into an international market 174 Where possible used jeans collected from America for example are sold to low income customers in Africa for modest prices yet most end up in landfill as the average US sized customer is several sizes bigger than the global average 175 Sustainable fashion organizations and companies EditThere is a broad range of organizations purporting to support sustainable fashion some representing particular stakeholders some addressing particular issues and some seeking to increase the visibility of the sustainable fashion movement They also range from the local to global It is important to examine the interests and priorities of the organizations Organizations Edit Fashion Revolution is a not for profit global movement founded by Carry Somers and Orsola de Castro which highlights working conditions and the people behind the garments With teams in over 100 countries around the world Fashion Revolution campaigns for systemic reform of the fashion industry with a focus on the need for greater transparency in the fashion supply chain Fashion Revolution has designated the anniversary of the Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh as Fashion Revolution Day Fashion Revolution Week takes place annually during the week on which the anniversary falls Over 1000 events take place around the world with millions of people engaging online and offline 176 Fashion Revolution publishes the Fashion Transparency Index annually ranking the largest fashion brands in the world on how much they disclose about their policies practices procedures and social and environmental impact 177 Clothes swap in Wroclaw Wyspa Tamka Event is manifesting slow fashion movement focusing on Fashion Revolution actions Red Carpet Green Dress founded by Suzy Amis Cameron is a global initiative showcasing sustainable fashion on the red carpet at the Oscars 178 Talent supporting the project includes Naomie Harris Missi Pyle Kellan Lutz and Olga Kurylenko Undress Brisbane is an Australian fashion show that sheds light on sustainable designers in Australia 179 Global Action Through Fashion is an Oakland California based ethical fashion organization working to advocate for sustainable fashion 180 Ecoluxe London a not for profit platform supports luxury with ethos through hosting a biannual exhibition during London Fashion Week and showcasing eco sustainable and ethical designers 181 182 The Ethical Fashion Initiative a flagship program of the International Trade Centre a joint agency of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD and World Trade Organization enables artisans living in urban and rural poverty to connect with the global fashion chain 183 184 The Initiative also works with the rising generation of fashion talent from Africa encouraging the forging sustainable and fulfilling creative collaborations with artisans on the continent 185 186 The Ethical Fashion Initiative is headed by Simone Cipriani Companies Edit Eco Age a consultancy company specializing in enabling businesses to achieve growth and add value through sustainability is an organization that promotes sustainable fashion Its creative director Livia Firth is also the founder of the Green Carpet Challenge which aims to promote ethically made outfits from fashion designers 187 Trans America Trading Company is one of the biggest of about 3 000 textile recyclers in the United States 114 Trans America has processed more than 12 million pounds of post consumer textiles per year since 1942 At its 80 000 square foot sorting facility workers separate used clothing into 300 different categories by type of item size and fiber content About 30 of the textiles are turned into absorbent wiping rags for industrial uses and another 25 30 are recycled into fiber for use as stuffing for upholstery insulation and the manufacture of paper products 188 ViaJoes Sustainable clothing manufacturer producing eco friendly fabrics from recycled cotton and other sustainable products confirmed to GOTS 189 Global Organic Textile Standard International Working Group standardMaterials EditIn fashion the consideration of sustainability of materials is critical The renewability and source of a fiber the process of how a raw fiber is turned into a textile the impact of preparation and dyeing of the fibers energy use in production and preparation the working conditions of the people producing the materials and the material s total carbon footprint transportation between production plants chemicals used to keep shipments fresh in containers shipping to retail and consumer how the material will be cared for and washed the processes of repairs and updates and what happens to it at the end of life The indexing of the textile journeys is thus extremely complex In sustainability there is no such thing as a single frame approach Issues dealt with in single frames will almost by definition lead to unwanted and unforeseen effects elsewhere 148 Overall diversity in the overall fiber mix is needed in 2013 cotton and polyester accounted for almost 85 of all fibers and thus their impacts were and continue to be disproportionately magnified 190 Also many fibers in the finished garments are mixed to acquire desired drape flexibility or stretch thus affecting both care and the possibility to recycle the material in the end Cellulose fibers Edit Natural fibers are fibers which are found in nature and are not petroleum based Natural fibers can be categorized into two main groups cellulose or plant fiber and protein or animal fiber Uses of these fibers can be anything from buttons to eyewear such as sunglasses 191 Other than cotton the most common plant based fiber cellulose fibers include jute flax hemp ramie abaca bamboo used for viscose soy corn banana pineapple beechwood used for rayon Alternative fibers such as bamboo in yarn and hemp of a variety that produces only a tiny amount of the psychoactive component found in cannabis are coming into greater use in so called eco fashions 114 Bacterial cellulose is currently being tested and better developed as a new fiber alternative 192 These are the type of fibers that are made out of bacteria yeasts and other microorganisms that spins cellulose during the fermentation process This material is easy for fashion designers to use because it compresses while drying knits itself while evaporating and take little to no effort to color Cotton Edit Main article Cotton Cotton also known as vegetable wool is a major source of apparel fiber Celebrated for its excellent absorbency durability and intrinsic softness cotton accounts for over 50 of all clothing produced worldwide This makes cotton the most widely used clothing fiber 193 Up to 1 billion people worldwide depend on the cotton industry for their livelihoods including 100 million smallholder farmers 194 Cotton is one of the most chemical intensive crops in the world 195 Conventionally grown cotton uses approximately 25 of the world s insecticides and more than 10 of the world s pesticides 196 However growing and processing this particular fiber crop is largely unsustainable For every pound of cotton harvested a farmer uses up 1 3 lb of chemical synthetic fertilizer 197 As a whole the US cotton production makes up 25 of all pesticides deployed in the United States Worldwide cotton takes up 2 4 of all arable lands yet requires 16 of the world s pesticides 198 The cotton hulls contain the most potent insecticide residues They are often used as cattle feed which means that consumers are purchasing meat containing a concentration of pesticides 198 The processing of cotton into usable fibers also adds to the burden on the environment Manufacturers prefer cotton to be white so that cotton can easily be synthetically dyed to any shade of color 199 Natural cotton is actually beige brown and so during processing manufacturers would add bleach and various other chemicals and heavy metal dyes to make cotton pure white 200 Formaldehyde resins would be added in as well to form easy care cotton fabric 200 Bt cotton Edit Main article Bt cotton To reduce the use of pesticides and other harmful chemicals companies have produced genetically modified GMO cotton plants that are resistant to pest infestations Among the GMO are cotton crops inserted with the Bt Bacillus thuringiensis gene 201 Bt cotton crops do not require insecticide applications Insects that consume cotton containing Bt will stop feeding after a few hours and die leaving the cotton plants unharmed 202 As a result of the use of Bt cotton the cost of pesticide applications decreased between 25 and 65 per acre 203 Bt cotton crops yield 5 more cotton on average compared to traditional cotton crops 203 Bt crops also lower the price of cotton by 0 8 cents per pound 203 However there are concerns regarding Bt technology mainly that insects will eventually develop resistance to the Bt strain According to an article published in Science Daily researchers have found that members from a cotton bollworm species Helicoverpa zea were Bt resistant in some crop areas of Mississippi and Arkansas during 2003 and 2006 204 Fortunately the vast majority of other agricultural pests remain susceptible to Bt 204 Micha Peled s documentary expose Bitter seeds on BT farming in India claimed to reveal the true impact of genetically modified cotton on India s farmers with a suicide rate of over a quarter million Bt cotton farmers since 1995 due to financial stress resulting from massive crop failure and the exorbitantly high price of Monsanto s proprietary BT seed although the evidence doesn t support this claim as the suicide rate of Indian famers has decreased since the introduction of Bt cotton 205 The film also refutes false claims purported by the biotech industry that Bt cotton requires less pesticide and empty promises of higher yields as farmers discover the bitter truth that in reality Bt cotton in fact requires a great deal more pesticide than organic cotton and often suffer higher levels of infestation by Mealybug resulting in devastating crop losses and extreme financial and psychological stress on cotton farmers Due to the biotech seed monopoly in India where Bt cotton seed has become the ubiquitous standard and the organic seed has become absolutely unobtainable thus coercing all cotton farmers into signing Bt cotton seed purchase agreements which enforce the intellectual property interests of the biotech multinational corporation Monsanto 206 Organic cotton Edit Main article Organic cotton Organic cotton yarn Organic cotton is grown without the use of any genetic modification to the crops without the use of any fertilizers pesticides and other synthetic agro chemicals harmful to the land 207 All cotton marketed as organic in the United States is required to fulfill strict federal regulations regarding how the cotton is grown 208 This is done with a combination of innovation science and tradition in order to encourage a good quality of life and environment for all involved 209 Organic cotton uses 88 less water and 62 less energy than conventional cotton 210 Naturally colored cotton Edit Main article Naturally colored cotton Cotton is naturally grown in a variety of colors Typically cotton color can come as mauve red yellow and orange hues 199 The use of naturally colored cotton has long been historically suppressed mainly due to the industrial revolution 199 Back then it was much cheaper to have uniformly white cotton as a raw source for mass producing cloth and fabric items 199 Currently modern markets have revived a trend in using naturally colored cotton for its noted relevance in reducing harmful environmental impacts One such example of markets opening to these cotton types would be Sally Fox and her Foxfiber business naturally colored cotton that Fox has bred and marketed 211 On an additional note naturally colored cotton is already colored and thus do not require synthetic dyes during process Furthermore the color of fabrics made from naturally colored cotton does not become worn and fade away compared to synthetically dyed cotton fabrics 212 Soy Edit Main article Soy Soybean plant Soy fabrics are derived from the hulls of soybeans a manufacturing byproduct Soy fabrics can be blended i e 30 or made entirely out of soy fibers 213 Soy clothing is largely biodegradable so it has a minimal impact on environment and landfills Although not as durable as cotton or hemp fabrics soy clothing has a soft elastic feel 214 Soy clothing is known as the vegetable cashmere for its light and silky sensation 214 Soy fabrics are moisture absorbent anti bacterial and UV resistant 214 However soy fabrics fell out of public knowledge during World War II when rayon nylon and cotton sales rose sharply 215 Hemp Edit Main article Hemp Fibers from a Hemp plant Hemp like bamboo is considered a sustainable crop It requires little water to grow and it is resistant to most pests and diseases 216 The hemp plant s broad leaves shade out weeds and other plant competitors and its deep taproot system allows it to draw moisture deep in the soil 217 Unlike cotton many parts of the hemp plant have a use Hemp seeds for example are processed into oil or food 216 Hemp fiber comes in two types primary and secondary bast fibers Hemp fibers are durable and are considered strong enough for construction uses 217 Compared to cotton fiber hemp fiber is approximately 8 times the tensile strength and 4 times the durability 217 Hemp fibers are traditionally coarse and have been historically used for ropes rather than for clothing However modern technology and breeding practices have made hemp fiber more pliable softer and finer Bamboo Edit Main article Bamboo BambooBamboo fabrics are made from heavily pulped bamboo grass Making clothing and textile from bamboo is considered sustainable due to the lack of need for pesticides and agrochemicals 218 Naturally disease and pest resistant bamboo is also fast growing Compared to trees certain varieties of bamboo can grow 1 4 inches long per day and can even branch and expand outward because of its underground rhizomes 219 Like cotton fibers bamboo fibers are naturally yellowish in color and are bleached white with chemicals during processing See also Bamboo textiles Kombucha SCOBY Edit Main article SCOBY Furnished by a grant from the US Environmental Protection Agency associate professor Young A Lee and her team are growing vats of gel like film composed of cellulose fiber a byproduct of the same symbiotic colonies of bacteria and yeast abbreviated SCOBY found in another of the world s popular live culture foods kombucha Once harvested and dried the resulting material has a look and feel much like leather 220 The fibers are 100 percent biodegradable they also foster a cradle to cradle cycle of reuse and regeneration that leaves behind virtually zero waste However this material takes a long time to grow about three to four weeks under lab controlled conditions Hence mass production is an issue In addition tests revealed that moisture absorption from the air softens this material makes it less durable Researchers also discovered that cold conditions make it brittle 220 Other cellulose fibers Edit Other alternative biodegradable fibers being developed by small companies include leather alternative using pineapple leaves 221 bio composites fabrics 221 and leather alternative 222 223 using various parts of coconut fabric and paper made from banana plant stalks and stems 221 garmets made from tencel fibers 224 Protein fibers Edit Protein fibers originate from animal sources and are made up of protein molecules The basic elements in these protein molecules being carbon hydrogen oxygen and nitrogen 225 Natural protein fibers include wool silk angora camel alpaca llama vicuna cashmere and mohair Wool Edit Just as in cotton production pesticides are conventionally used in the cultivation of wool although quantities are considerably smaller and it is thought that good practices can significantly limit negative environmental impacts Sheep are treated either with injectable insecticides a pour on preparation or dipped in a pesticide bath to control parasite infections which if left untreated can have serious health implications for the flock When managed badly these pesticides can cause harm to human health and aquatic ecosystems both on the farm and in subsequent downstream processing 148 Silk Edit Most commercially produced silk is of the cultivated variety and involves feeding the worms a carefully controlled diet of mulberry leaves grown under special conditions Selected mulberry trees are grown to act as homes for the silkworms The fibers are extracted by steaming to kill the silk moth chrysalis and then washed in hot water to degum the silk The silk fiber is known for its strength and is considered a prestigious fiber Its use in textiles is limited due to its high cost 226 Most silkworms used to produce silk are not harmed in the process and are grown in their natural habitat essentially free range The silk industry also employs millions of people in rural China 227 Cashmere Edit Cashmere is obtained from the fine soft hairs of a cashmere goat s underbelly coat This specific breed of goat is found throughout Asia Due to the rarity of the breed four goats are needed to produce enough cashmere for one sweater Initially cashmere was relatively expensive but due to increased demand the industry is beginning to take a toll on animals and the land More and more goats are needed which results in more mouths to feed Overpopulation of the goats degrades the land due to increased grazing The cashmere industry is becoming more and more controversial with the questioning of the working conditions of goat herders and the underpaying of farmers 228 Oxfam reported in Spring 2021 on a project in Afghanistan being undertaken jointly with the Burberry Foundation and PUR Projet working with goat farmers to improve their business operations and make the Afghan cashmere industry more sustainable 229 Other natural materials Edit MuSkin Edit Italian company Zero Grado Espace has developed MuSkin an alternative to leather made from the cap of the phellinus ellipsoideus mushroom a parasitic fungus that grows in subtropical forests It is water repellent and contains natural penicillin substances which limit bacteria proliferation 230 Wild rubber Edit Wild Rubber developed by Flavia Amadeu and Professor Floriano Pastore at the University of Brazil is an initiative that promotes wild rubber material which comes from the sap or latex of the para rubber tree that grows within a biodiverse ecosystem in the Amazon Rainforest Acre Brazil It is tapped by local communities who typically have a close relationship the forest and will gather medicinal plants or wild food during their tapping rounds 231 Qmilk Edit Qmilch GmbH a German company has innovated a process to produce a textile fiber from casein in milk but it cannot be used for consumption Qmilk fiber is made from 100 renewable resources In addition for the production of 1 kg of fiber Qmilch GmbH needs only 5 minutes and max 2 liters of water 232 This implies a particular level of cost efficiency and ensures a minimum of CO2 emissions Qmilk fiber is biodegradable and leaves no traces In addition it is naturally antibacterial especially against the bacterial strains Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and is ideal for people that suffer from textile allergies Fabrics made from Qmilk fiber provide high wearing comfort and a silky feel The organic fiber is tested for harmful substances and dermatologically tested for the wearer s skin and body compatibility 0 chemical additives 232 Manufactured fibers Edit Manufactured fibers sit within three categories 233 Manufactured cellulosic fibers manufactured synthetic fibers and manufactured protein fiber azlon Manufactured cellulosic fibers include modal Lyocell also known under the brand name Tencel rayon viscose made from bamboo rayon viscose made from wood and polylactic acid PLA Manufactured synthetic fibers include polyester nylon spandex acrylic fiber polyethylene and polypropylene PP Azlon is a manufactured protein fiber Rayon viscose is a fiber out of pulp highly used in fast fashion as it is cheaply manufactured To extract rayon viscose plantations cut down 30 of endangered and ancient forests threatening the life of ecosystems 234 PET plastic Edit Main article PET plastic PET plastics are also known as Polyethylene terephthalate PETE PET s recycling code the number within the three chasing arrows is one These plastics are usually beverage bottles i e water soda and fruit juice bottles According to the EPA plastic accounts for 12 of the total amount of waste we produce 144 Recycling plastic reduces air water and ground pollution Recycling is only the first step investing and purchasing products manufactured from recycled materials is the next of many steps to living sustainably Recyclables at transfer station Gainesville FloridaClothing can be made from plastics Seventy percent of plastic derived fabrics come from polyester and the type of polyester most used in fabrics is polyethylene terephthalate PET 235 PET plastic clothing come from reused plastics often recycled plastic bottles 236 The Coca Cola Company for example created a Drink2Wear line of T shirts made from recycled bottles 237 Generally PET plastic clothing are made from recycled bottles as follows plastic bottles are collected compressed baled and shipped into processing facilities where they will be chopped into flakes and melted into small white pellets Then the pellets are processed again and spun into yarn like fiber where it can be made into clothing 238 One main benefit of making clothes from recycled bottles is that it keep the bottles and other plastics from occupying landfill space Another benefit is that it takes 30 less energy to make clothes from recycled plastics than from virgin polyesters 239 See also Synthetic fiber and Plastic clothing Fungal species Edit Alexander Bismarck and Mitchell Jones from the University of Vienna have conducted research on the possibility of using fungal species to create sustainable leather alternatives Leather alternatives can be produced by using byproducts of agricultural products such as sawdust The sawdust acts as a feedstock for the growth of fungal mycelium After a few weeks the fungal bacteria can be processed and chemically treated into a leather like material The researchers state that these fungal biomasses exhibit similar material and tactile properties as authentic leather Using fungal biomass to create a leather alternative is sustainable as the entire process is carbon neutral and all the materials are completely biodegradable when they are done being used 240 Production EditWhereas many producers have since the turn of the century been striving for a cradle to cradle model of production or a circular economy there has so far been no successful example of fully sustainable production as there is environmental impact from all extractive production practices in processes of material production dying assembly accessorizing shipping retail washing recycling etc There are many small initiatives towards change yet so far all these incremental improvements have been drowned by the explosive popularity of fast fashion and its economy of extraction consumption waste Producers Edit The global political economy and legal system supports a fashion system that enables fashion that has devastating environmental social cultural and economic impacts to be priced at a lower price than fashion which involves efforts to minimize harm in the growth manufacturing and shipping of the products This results in higher prices for fashion made from reduced impact materials than clothing produced in a socially and environmentally damaging way sometimes referred to as conventional methods 241 Innovative fashion is being developed and made available to consumers at different levels of the fashion spectrum from casual clothing to haute couture which has a reduced social and environmental impact at the materials and manufacture stages of production 114 and celebrities models and designers have recently drawn attention to socially conscious and environmentally friendly fashion 3D seamless knitting Edit 3D seamless knitting is a technology that allows an entire garment to be knit with no seams This production method is considered a sustainable practice due to its reduction in waste and labor By only using the necessary materials the producers will be more efficient in their manufacturing process This production method is similar to seamless knitting although traditional seamless knitting requires stitching to complete the garment while 3D seamless knitting creates the entire garment eliminating additional work The garments are designed using 3D software unlike traditional flat patterns Shima Seiki and Stoll are currently the two primary manufacturers of the technology The technology is produced through the use of solar energy and they are selling to brands like Max Mara 242 Zero waste Edit Zero waste design in fashion is a concept that aims to reduce material waste throughout the textile and fashion production process Although the concept has existed for a number of years on the grounds of reducing costs through reducing waste zero waste design is increasingly being integrated into fashion production for environmental reasons 155 Zero waste pattern making designs patterns for a garment so that when the pattern pieces are cut no fabric is wasted 243 Dyeing Edit Examples of textiles that have used the AirDye process Traditional methods of dyeing textiles are incredibly harmful towards the earth s water supply creating toxic chemicals that affect entire communities 244 An alternative to traditional water dyeing is scCO2 dyeing super critical carbon dioxide This process creates no waste by using 100 of the dyes reducing energy by 60 with no auxiliary chemicals and leaving a quarter of the physical footprint of traditional dyeing Different names for this process are Drydye and Colordry 245 Another company called Colorep has patented Airdye a similar process that they claim uses 95 less water and up to 86 less energy than traditional dyeing methods 246 Comparison websites and ecolabels Edit No brand is considered by environmental experts to be fully sustainable and controversy exists over exactly how the concept of sustainability can be applied in relation to fashion if it can be used at all or if labels such as slow and sustainable fashion are inherently an oxymoron 45 Brands that sell themselves as sustainable often lack systems to deal with oversupply take back used clothes fully recycle fibers offer repair services or even support the life of the garment during use such as instructions on washing care and repair Almost no brands offer replacement parts such as buttons straps or pockets for their garments citation needed Some comparison websites exist which compare fashion brands on their sustainability record which give some indication to consumers about the sustainability of their products 247 There are many ecolabels in existence which focus on textile goods 248 Some notable 249 ecolabels include EU Ecolabel Fair Trade Certified Global Organic Textile Standard Oeko Tex Standard 1000Sustainable textile brands Edit Some brands that sell themselves as sustainable are listed below Eastern European prisoners are designing sustainable prison fashion in Latvia and Estonia under the Heavy Eco label 250 part of a trend called prison couture 251 Other sustainable fashion brands include Elena Garcia Nancy Dee By Stamo Outsider Fashion Beyond Skin Oliberte Hetty Rose DaRousso KSkye the Label 252 and Eva Cassis 181 253 254 255 256 257 258 The brand Boll amp Branch make all of their bedding products from organic cotton and have been certified by Fair Trade USA 259 The Hemp Trading Company is an ethically driven underground clothing label specializing in environmentally friendly politically conscious street wear made of hemp bamboo organic cotton and other sustainable fabrics 260 Patagonia a major retailer in casual wear has been selling fleece clothing made from post consumer plastic soda bottles since 1993 114 Everlane a brand that offered the customer a full breakdown of how much it would cost to make each product from the price of the raw materials and transportation to exactly how much of a markup Everlane would take 261 Pact a brand that produced Fair Trade Factory Certified clothing made out of organic cotton 262 People Tree is a brand that actively supports farmers producers and artisans through 14 producer groups in 6 countries They are a part of the WFTO community and a representative of Fair Trade 263 Wrangler a historic denim brand launched a sustainable denim collection called Indigood that uses foam instead of water to dye denim resulting in 100 per cent less water used and 60 per cent less energy used 264 Big Frenchies is a French inspired brand that produces sustainable clothing made in USA with GOTS certified organic cotton 265 Designers Edit There is no certain stable model among the designers for how to be sustainable in practice and the understanding of sustainability is always a process or a work in progress and varies by who defines what is sustainable farmers or animals producers or consumers managers or workers local businesses or neighborhoods 35 Thus critical scholars would label much of the business driven discourse on sustainability as greenwashing as under the current economic paradigm sustainability is primarily defined as keeping the wheels of perpetual production and consumption turning to keep the perpetuum mobile of fashion running and in perpetual motion 266 The Golden Book Gown made of recycled and discarded paper book pages There are some designers that experiment in making fashion more sustainable with various degrees of impact Ryan Jude Novelline created a ballroom gown constructed entirely from the pages of recycled and discarded children s books known as The Golden Book Gown that prove d that green fashion can provide as rich a fantasia as can be imagined 267 268 Eco couture designer Lucy Tammam uses eri silk ahimsa peace silk and organic cotton to create her eco friendly couture evening and bridal wear collections 269 Amal Kiran Jana is a designer from India and the founder of Afterlife Project which is a sustainability development project supporting global and unique designers in 360 degrees 270 Stella McCartney pushes the agenda for sustainable fashion that is animal and eco friendly She also uses her name and her brand as a platform to push for a greener fashion industry The brand uses the EP amp L tool which was created to help companies understand their environmental impact by measuring greenhouse gas emissions land use water use water pollution air pollution and waste across the entire global supply chain 271 Controversies EditA question at the foundation of sustainable fashion concerns exactly what is to be sustained of the current model of fashion Controversies thus emerge what stakeholder agendas should be prioritized over others There is also the associated concern of how to curb the practice of greenwashing on one hand ad also ensure that firms that promote such practices are subject to increased scrutiny and criticism on the other Marketing controversies Edit The increase in western consumers environmental interest is motivating companies to use sustainable and environmental arguments solely to increase sales Because environmental and sustainability issues are complex it is also easy to mislead consumers Companies can use sustainability as a marketing ploy something that can be seen as greenwashing 272 Greenwashing is the deceptive use of an eco agenda in marketing strategies 35 It refers mostly to corporations that make efforts to clean up their reputation because of social pressure or for the purpose of financial gain Companies continuing to using greenwashing in turn hurts companies that are true to their environmental goals losing their competitive edge to bigger corporations 273 Greenwashing Edit Main article Greenwashing A major controversy on sustainable fashion concerns how the green imperative is used as a cover up for systemic labor exploitation social exclusion and environmental degradation what is generally labelled as greenwashing Market driven sustainability can only address sustainability to a certain degree as brands still need to sell more products in order to be profitable Thus almost any initiative towards addressing ecological and social issues still contributes to the damage In a 2017 report the industry projects that the overall apparel consumption will rise by 63 from 62 million tons today to 102 million tons in 2030 thus effectively erasing any environmental gains made by current initiatives 274 As long as the business models of fashion brands are based on growth as well as production and sales of high quantities of garment almost all initiatives from the industry remain labelled as greenwashing Materials controversies Edit Though organic cotton is considered a more sustainable choice for fabric as it uses fewer pesticides and chemical fertilizers it remains less than 1 global cotton production Hurdles to growth include cost of hand labor for hand weeding reduced yields in comparison to conventional cotton and absence of fiber commitments from brands to farmers before planting seed The up front financial risks and costs are therefore shouldered by the farmers many of whom struggle to compete with economies of scale of corporate farms Though some designers have marketed bamboo fiber as an alternative to conventional cotton citing that it absorbs greenhouse gases during its life cycle and grows quickly and plentifully without pesticides the conversion of bamboo fiber to fabric is the same as rayon and is highly toxic The FTC ruled that labeling of bamboo fiber should read rayon from bamboo Bamboo fabric can cause environmental harm in production due to the chemicals used to create a soft viscose from hard bamboo 275 Impacts regarding production of new materials make recycled reclaimed surplus and vintage fabric arguably the most sustainable choice as the raw material requires no agriculture and no manufacturing to produce 276 However these are indicative of a system of production and consumption that creates excessive volumes of waste Donation bin controversy Edit There are charities that are actually for profit organizations These organizations are often multibillion dollar firms that keep profits accrued from selling donated clothing 277 Monetary donations are given for public goodwill but only at relatively few percentages 277 Such organizations often use drop off boxes to collect clothes These drop off boxes look similar to their non profit counterparts which mislead the public into donating their clothes to them 278 Such public deception prompted backlash such as when the mayor of Sedro Woolley called for the city s removal of for profit clothing donation bins 279 Organisations such as Charity Navigator aim to provide people with a way of discerning how trustworthy a charity s activities are before they donate time money or goods 280 Second hand controversies Edit Used clothing is sold in more than 100 countries In Tanzania used clothing is sold at the mitumba Swahili for secondhand markets Most of the clothing is imported from the United States 114 However there are concerns that trade in secondhand clothing in African countries decreases development of local industries even as it creates employment in these countries 281 While the reuse of materials brings resource savings there are some concerns that the influx of cheap second hand clothing particularly in Africa has undermined indigenous textile industries with the result that clothing collected in the West under the guise of charitable donations could actually create more poverty 148 The authors of Recycling of Low Grade Clothing Waste warn that in the long run as prices and quality of new clothing continue to decline the demand for used clothing will also diminish 282 Future of fashion sustainability EditIn the European Union the Registration Evaluation Authorization and Restriction of Chemicals REACH regulations required in 2007 that clothing manufacturers and importers identified and quantified the chemicals used in their products 114 On May 3 2012 the world s largest summit on fashion sustainability was held in Copenhagen gathering more than 1 000 key stakeholders in the industry to discuss the importance of making the fashion industry sustainable Copenhagen Fashion Summit has since then gathered thousands of people from the fashion industry in their effort to create a movement within the industry 283 In July 2012 the Sustainable Apparel Coalition launched the Higg Index a self assessment standard designed to measure and promote sustainable supply chains in the apparel and footwear industries 284 285 Founded in 2011 the Sustainable Apparel Coalition is a nonprofit organisation whose members include brands producing apparel or footwear retailers industry affiliates and trade associations the U S Environmental Protection Agency academic institutions and environmental nonprofits 286 287 288 The Global Change Award is an innovation challenge created by the H amp M foundation 130 It created a trend report in 2017 to look at the future of sustainable fashion In 2019 the UK Parliament s Environment Audit Committee published a report and recommendations on the future of fashion sustainability suggesting wide ranging systemic change not least government regulation and tax incentives for sustainable practices such as lowered VAT for repair services 39 The report highlights the need for wide political and social changes to push the fashion industry towards more sustainable practices and levels of consumption with the goal of less harm being too low to be of any helpful consequence The report finishes Retailers must take responsibility for the social and environmental cost of clothes They should use their market power to demand higher environmental and labour standards from suppliers Offering rental schemes lifetime repair and providing the consumer with more information about the sourcing and true cost of clothing are all measures that can be more widely adopted Shifting business practice in this way can not only improve a business environmental and social impact but also offer market advantage as they respond to the growing consumer demand for responsible sustainable clothing 39 54 This study investigates the challenges associated with implementing sustainability in fashion design by identifying the perceptions attitudes and involvement of fashion design practitioners in sustainability Both design and designer roles are key to inspiring sustainable design practices their role can contribute to sustainability by shaping design production practices and influencing consumption processes 289 See also EditEcodesign Pollution in the fashion industry Reusable shopping bag Trashion Product tracing systems which allow consumers to see the source factory of a product Fashion activism Textile industry Industry processReferences Edit Alves Ana April 21 2022 What Exactly Is Sustainable Fashion And Why Is So Important The VOU Retrieved May 22 2022 Destination Zero seven years of Detoxing the clothing industry PDF Greenpeace Retrieved September 30 2020 Greenpeace Calls Out Nike Adidas and Puma for Toxic Clothing Reuters August 9 2011 Retrieved September 30 2020 Niu Baozhuang Chen Lei Zhang Jie November 2017 Punishing or subsidizing Regulation analysis of sustainable fashion procurement strategies Transportation Research Part E Logistics and Transportation Review 107 81 96 doi 10 1016 j tre 2017 09 010 Increasing Green Credentials beyond Greenwash PDF Retrieved November 22 2021 Dahl Richard June 2010 Green Washing Do You Know What You re Buying Environmental Health Perspectives 118 6 A246 52 doi 10 1289 ehp 118 a246 PMC 2898878 PMID 20515714 Neuman Salla 2019 Sustainability in fashion production How are the pioneers doing it www theseus fi Carson Rachel 1963 Silent Spring Hamish Hamilton Government of Canada Innovation May 16 2013 Sustainable development Strategic Policy Sector www ic gc ca Archived from the original on May 12 2019 Retrieved March 11 2019 Anon 1991 Textiles and the Environment International Textiles 726 40 41 Anon 1993 Rethinking Ecology Textile View 24 201 207 Meadows Donella H 1982 The Limits to growth a report for the Club of Rome s project on the predicament of mankind Universe Books ISBN 0876631650 OCLC 977611718 a b c d Fletcher Kate 2008 Sustainable fashion and textiles design journeys 2nd ed London Washington DC Earthscan ISBN 9780415644556 Papanek Victor 1995 The green imperative Ecology and ethics in design and architecture Thames and Hudson Merchant Carolyn 1990 Death on Nature Bravo Gablik Suzi 1991 The Reenchantment of Art Thames and Hudson Shiva Vandana 1989 Staying Alive Zed Books Gilligan Carol 1982 In a different voice psychological theory and women s development Harvard University Press Lynda Grose PIONEERING ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS FOR THE CLOTHING INDUSTRY CE NEWS CE NEWS Archived from the original on March 12 2017 Retrieved March 11 2017 Don t Buy This Jacket Black Friday and the New York Times Patagonia November 25 2011 Hethorn Janet Ulasewicz Connie eds 2008 Sustainable Fashion Why Now Fairchild Books a b Gwilt Alison Timo Rissanen 2011 Shaping Sustainable Fashion Earthscan S Walker J Giard eds 2013 The Handbook of Sustainable Design Bloomsbury Fletcher Kate Mathilda Tham eds 2015 Routledge Handbook of Sustainability and Fashion Routledge Niinimaki Kirsi 2018 Sustainable Fashion in a Circular Economy Aalto ARTIS Books Rissanen Timo and Holly McQuillan 2018 Zero Waste Fashion Design Bloomsbury Gardetti Migel Angel amp Ana Laura Torres 2013 Sustainability in Fashion and Textiles Greenleaf a b Black Sandy ed 2013 The sustainable fashion handbook Thames amp Hudson ISBN 9780500290569 OCLC 800642264 a b c Fletcher Kate 2016 Craft of Use Post Growth Fashion London Routledge Researchers set out manifesto for fashion change ecotextile com Archived from the original on March 1 2019 Retrieved February 28 2019 Glover Simon Award winning researchers call for new sustainability approach Ecotextile News Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved July 24 2020 Pulse of The Fashion Industry PDF Global Fashion Agenda Archived from the original PDF on March 22 2019 Retrieved October 13 2018 Fletcher Kate Tham Mathilda 2019 Earth Logic Fashion Action Research Plan London JJ Charitable Trust ISBN 978 1 5272 5415 2 Archived from the original on February 26 2020 Retrieved February 26 2020 Brown Sass 2010 Eco fashion Laurence King page needed a b c Gurova Olga Morozova Daria August 2018 A critical approach to sustainable fashion Practices of clothing designers in the Kallio neighborhood of Helsinki Journal of Consumer Culture 18 3 397 413 doi 10 1177 1469540516668227 S2CID 151351581 Lu Xiaoqian Sheng Tong Zhou Xiaolan Shen Chaohai Fang Bingquan October 19 2022 How Does Young Consumers Greenwashing Perception Impact Their Green Purchase Intention in the Fast Fashion Industry An Analysis from the Perspective of Perceived Risk Theory Sustainability 14 20 13473 doi 10 3390 su142013473 Ellen MacArthur Foundation 2017 A new textiles economy redesigning fashion s future PDF Ellen MacArthur Foundation Archived PDF from the original on June 9 2020 Retrieved February 26 2020 Prant Dara Burberry Under Attack for Burning 37 8 Million Worth of Unsold Products Fashionista Retrieved March 12 2019 a b c Fixing fashion clothing consumption and sustainability Report Summary Environmental Audit Committee publications parliament uk Archived from the original on March 12 2021 Retrieved February 26 2019 Statement on 2019 Copenhagen Fashion Summit Union of Concerned Researchers in Fashion May 5 2019 Archived from the original on May 10 2019 Retrieved May 21 2019 Black Sandy 2008 Eco Chic The Fashion Paradox Black Dog Fletcher kate 2010 Slow Fashion an invitation for systems change Journal of Fashion Practice 2 2 259 266 doi 10 2752 175693810X12774625387594 S2CID 110000414 Raworth Kate February 22 2018 Doughnut economics seven ways to think like a 21st century economist ISBN 9781847941398 OCLC 1038191528 Dawson Jonathan J T Ross Norberg Hodge Helena eds 2013 Gaian economics living well within planetary limits Permanent Publications ISBN 9781856230568 OCLC 920340237 page needed a b Clark Hazel December 1 2008 SLOW FASHION an Oxymoron or a Promise for the Future Fashion Theory 12 4 427 446 doi 10 2752 175174108X346922 ISSN 1362 704X S2CID 194180788 Clark Hazel December 2008 SLOW FASHION an Oxymoron or a Promise for the Future Fashion Theory 12 4 427 446 doi 10 2752 175174108X346922 S2CID 218771542 Thill Brian Waste ISBN 9789386606891 OCLC 1066172530 page needed Fletcher Kate November 2012 Durability Fashion Sustainability The Processes and Practices of Use Fashion Practice 4 2 221 238 doi 10 2752 175693812X13403765252389 S2CID 110677145 Willett Joanie Saunders Clare Hackney Fiona Hill Katie September 2022 The affective economy and fast fashion Materiality embodied learning and developing a sensibility for sustainable clothing PDF Journal of Material Culture 27 3 219 237 doi 10 1177 13591835221088524 S2CID 247823706 Fast Fashion Pollution and Climate Change February 21 2022 McDonald Charles Daniel January 26 2017 THE HISTORY OF FAST FASHION FORC Magazine FORC Retrieved May 4 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Millward Pena Isabel 2022 FROM FAST FASHION TO SUSTAINABLE SLOW FASHION Thesis a b Fashion Industry Waste Statistics E D G E July 20 2016 Retrieved May 4 2021 Nelson Mariel Micro Trends The acceleration of fashion cycles and the rise in waste Worldwide Responsible Accredited Production May 17 2021 Schlossberg Tatiana September 3 2019 How Fast Fashion Is Destroying the Planet The New York Times a b Centobelli Piera Abbate Stefano Nadeem Simon Reyes Jose September 20 2022 Slowing the fast fashion industry An all round perspective Current Opinion in Green and Sustainable Chemistry 38 100684 doi 10 1016 j cogsc 2022 100684 S2CID 251697285 Shein factory workers get 35 cents per garment work 18 hour days a new report says Story Map Journal www arcgis com Retrieved May 4 2021 Petrini Carlo 2004 Slow food the case for taste Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12845 2 OCLC 56645962 The Official Slow Food Manifesto Slow Food Columbia University Press January 31 2003 ISBN 978 0 231 50237 5 retrieved February 26 2020 Fletcher Kate 2010 Slow Fashion An Invitation for Systems Change Fashion Practice 2 2 259 265 doi 10 2752 175693810X12774625387594 S2CID 110000414 A Brief History of the Slow Food Movement What is Slow Fashion Good on You Goodonyou eco Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved March 4 2021 Fletcher K amp Grose L 2012 Fashion and sustainability design for change Laurence King Fletcher Kate Sustainable Fashion and Textiles Design Journeys Earthscan Barnard Malcolm 2002 Fashion as Communication Routledge People Tree is first clothing brand to receive the new WFTO Fair Trade product mark The Thread October 10 2013 von Busch Otto 2020 The chronopolitics of slow fashion in S Kipoz ed Slowness in Fashion London Dixi Books pp 169 177 von Busch Otto 2020 The Chronopolitics of Fashion in S Kipoz ed Slowness in Fashion London Dixi Books p 175 Chapman Adrian 2010 Review of Life Cycle Assessments of Clothing PDF MISTRA Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research S2CID 30971880 Archived from the original PDF on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2020 via Stockholm MISTRA Chapman Jonathan 2015 Emotionally durable design objects experiences and empathy Routledge ISBN 9781315738802 OCLC 1086535559 Maldini Irene 2019 From speed to volume reframing clothing production and consumption for an environmentally sound apparel sector PLATE Product Lifetimes and the Environment Conference Proceedings via PLATE 2019 Berlin Maldini Irene 2019 Can design confront consumerism A critical study of clothing volumes personalization and the wardrobe Amsterdam VU University Amsterdam ISBN 9789083002415 Environmental Impacts of the Fashion Industry SustainYourStyle Retrieved August 4 2021 Fletcher Kate Tham Mathilda 2019 Earth Logic Fashion Action Research Plan London JJ Charitable Trust p 33 ISBN 978 1 5272 5415 2 Fletcher Kate Tham Mathilda 2019 Earth Logic Fashion Action Research Plan London JJ Charitable Trust p 19 Archived from the original on February 26 2020 Retrieved February 26 2020 Sanghani Radhika October 8 2018 Stacey Dooley Investigates Are your clothes wrecking the planet BBC Three Retrieved June 30 2021 What Research Says About Sustainable Fashion Is Our Future Bit Slow Fashion June 20 2021 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b Pulse of the Fashion Industry 2017 Global Fashion Agenda amp The Boston Consulting Group 2017 p 11 Haung HC 1994 Classification and general properties of textile fibres PDF Archived PDF from the original on March 28 2018 Retrieved March 1 2018 verification needed Culp Alice July 11 2014 Thrift stores sell damaged items to textile recyclers South Bend Tribune Archived from the original on November 7 2019 Retrieved April 25 2016 Stanton Thomas Johnson Matthew Nathanail Paul MacNaughtan William Gomes Rachel L 2019 Freshwater and airborne textile fibre populations are dominated by natural not microplastic fibres Science of the Total Environment 666 377 389 Bibcode 2019ScTEn 666 377S doi 10 1016 j scitotenv 2019 02 278 PMID 30798244 S2CID 73511816 via ResearchGate Boucher D Friot D Primary microplastics in the oceans a global evaluation of sources PDF Primary micro plastics in the oceans a global evaluation of sources gland Switzerland IUCN Archived from the original PDF on March 1 2017 Retrieved February 28 2018 Carrington Damian May 22 2020 Microplastic pollution in oceans vastly underestimated study The Guardian Harding Rolls George Fossil fashion Changing Markets Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved April 16 2021 Changing Markets Foundation February 2021 Fossil Fashion Changing Markets Archived from the original on February 17 2021 Retrieved February 26 2021 Parker Liz Fashion brands and worker s rights in Kate Fletcher amp Mathilda Tham 2015 Routledge Handbook of Sustainability and Fashion London Routledge admin Clean Clothes Campaign Clean Clothes Campaign Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Welcome Maquila Solidarity Network www maquilasolidarity org Archived from the original on February 11 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 End Uzbek Cotton Crimes Anti Slavery International Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Bangladesh Billion Dollar Leather Industry Has a Problem with Child Labor and Toxic Chemicals Pulitzer Center March 30 2017 Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Lawrence Felicity August 8 2017 How big brands including Sports Direct unwittingly used slave labour The Guardian Responsible Trust for Models Responsible Trust for Models Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Lucy Norris Anthropologies of Reuse and Recycling Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 New report published on working conditions in Leicester garment sector University of Leicester www2 le ac uk Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Living Wage in Eastern Europe and Turkey Clean Clothes Campaign 2017 Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Entwistle J 2000 The fashioned body Cambridge Polity Press Trading Away Our Rights Women working in global supply chains Oxfam Policy amp Practice Policy amp Practice Archived from the original on August 28 2011 Retrieved February 26 2019 Insight Italy s Chinese garment workshops boom as workers suffer Reuters December 30 2013 Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 International Labour Office Sectoral Activities Department 2014 Working Hours in the Textiles Clothing Leather and Footwear Industries Geneva ILO T 44 0 20 7405 5942 F 44 0 20 7977 0101 mail fairtrade org uk E Cotton farmers Fairtrade Foundation www fairtrade org uk Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Dirty fashion Changing Markets Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Bick Rachel Halsey Erika Ekenga Christine C December 2018 The global environmental injustice of fast fashion Environmental Health 17 1 92 doi 10 1186 s12940 018 0433 7 PMC 6307129 PMID 30591057 Henninger Claudia E Alevizou Panayiota J Oates Caroline J October 3 2016 What is sustainable fashion PDF Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management 20 4 400 416 doi 10 1108 JFMM 07 2015 0052 Marriott Hannah April 20 2020 H amp M tops 2020 fashion transparency index as 10 brands score zero The Guardian The Fashion Transparency Index 2019 report ranks world s biggest brands Fashion The Guardian TheGuardian com April 24 2019 Archived from the original on September 20 2019 Retrieved September 20 2019 Fashion Transparency Index 2019 Issuu Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Retrieved October 31 2020 Farmbrough Heather H amp M Is Pushing Sustainability Hard But Not Everyone Is Convinced Forbes Archived from the original on January 28 2021 Retrieved February 14 2021 Diversity Report The Fall 2018 Runways Were the Most Race and Transgender Inclusive Ever Not So Much for Age and Size Diversity theFashionSpot March 22 2018 Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Von Busch Otto Bjereld Ylva June 1 2016 A typology of fashion violence Critical Studies in Fashion amp Beauty 7 89 107 doi 10 1386 csfb 7 1 89 1 Busch Otto von September 2 2018 Inclusive Fashion an Oxymoron or a Possibility for Sustainable Fashion Fashion Practice 10 3 311 327 doi 10 1080 17569370 2018 1507145 ISSN 1756 9370 S2CID 218771542 Cederstrom Carl 2015 Wellness Syndrome Wiley ISBN 9780745688718 OCLC 956676547 Widdows Heather December 31 2018 Perfect Me Princeton Princeton University Press doi 10 23943 9781400889624 ISBN 9781400889624 S2CID 193961288 a b c d e f g h i Luz Claudio 2007 Waste Couture Environmental Impact of the Clothing Industry Environmental Health Perspectives published September 2007 115 9 A448 54 doi 10 1289 ehp 115 a449 PMC 1964887 PMID 17805407 a b Benjamin Freeman Joshua 2018 Behemoth a history of the factory and the making of the modern world First ed New York NY p 274 ISBN 9780393246315 OCLC 988280720 Edna Bonacich 1994 Global production the apparel industry in the Pacific Rim Temple University Press ISBN 978 1566391689 OCLC 28964324 Renting Luxury Fashion Just A Technology Driven Trend Archived from the original on August 15 2020 Retrieved April 28 2020 Cotton farmers Fairtrade Foundation www fairtrade org uk Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Living Wage Clean Clothes Campaign Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Cernansky Rachel March 18 2021 Can an end to end sustainability standard change fashion Vogue Business Modefica February 12 2020 Slow Fashion is not a movement it s a market An Interview With Kate Fletcher Modefica Earley Rebecca January 4 2021 Circular Fashion 2070 Clothing and Textile Cycles Systems and Services National Academy of Engineering 50 Rissanen Timo 2015 Zero Waste Fashion Design in J Hethorn amp C Ulasewicz eds Sustainable Fashion What s Next London Bloomsbury pp 179 203 Von Busch Otto 2021 Vistas of Vitality Metabolisms Circularity Fashion abilities New York SelfPassage Ellen MacArthur Foundation 2017 A new textile economy Archived from the original on April 26 2021 Retrieved February 26 2021 14 Textile Recycling Companies Pushing for Circularity in Fashion Conscious Fashion Collective Retrieved August 30 2022 Textiles strategy environment ec europa eu Retrieved August 30 2022 The EU Textiles Strategy in Motion What does it mean for the future of this sector European Circular Economy Stakeholder Platform circulareconomy europa eu July 8 2022 Retrieved August 30 2022 Biomimicry Institute 2020 The Nature of Fashion a b c d e f Trend report Future of Sustainable Fashion PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 21 2018 Gonzalez Rodriguez Angela November 18 2021 Online fashion rental market to grow over 10 percent annually FashionUnited Iran Samira Schrader Ulf September 11 2017 Collaborative fashion consumption and its environmental effects Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management 21 4 468 482 doi 10 1108 JFMM 09 2016 0086 a b Levanen Jarkko Uusitalo Ville Harri Anna Kareinen Elisa Linnanen Lassi May 1 2021 Innovative recycling or extended use Comparing the global warming potential of different ownership and end of life scenarios for textiles Environmental Research Letters 16 5 054069 Bibcode 2021ERL 16e4069L doi 10 1088 1748 9326 abfac3 S2CID 235289414 Elan Priya July 6 2021 Renting clothes is less green than throwing them away The Guardian Courier December 27 2021 Inside fashion s rental market Rissanen Timo July 25 2021 brief thoughts on clothing rentals Maynard Margaret 2004 Dress and Globalization Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0719063893 a b Farra Emily January 15 2021 Open Source Fashion Cookbook Is Sharing Recipes for Upcycling at Home With Patterns by Raeburn Chromat and More Vogue Danielepasi 38178 December 15 2015 5 Projects Leading the Open Source Revolution in Fashion Sharable Wills Jennifer Saying farewell to a throwaway fashion industry Horizon The EU Research Innovation Magazine Retrieved November 15 2021 Fadelli Ingrid DeepDraper A technique that predicts how clothes would look on different people Tech Xplore Retrieved November 15 2021 Centobelli Piera Abbate Stefano Nadeem Simon Peter Garza Reyes Jose Arturo December 2022 Slowing the fast fashion industry An all round perspective Current Opinion in Green and Sustainable Chemistry 38 100684 doi 10 1016 j cogsc 2022 100684 S2CID 251697285 Fletcher Kate Sustainable fashion and textiles design journeys Earthscan ISBN 9781849772778 a b Municipal Solid Waste Generation Recycling and Disposal in the United States Facts and Figures for 2008 PDF United States Environmental Protection Agency November 2009 Archived PDF from the original on January 28 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 Lee Matilda February 6 2009 What s the Most Sustainable Fabric The Ecologist Archived from the original on October 23 2017 Retrieved April 30 2019 Aus Reet Trash to Trend Issuu Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved February 26 2019 Muthu Subramanian Senthilkannan August 6 2016 Textiles and clothing sustainability recycled and upcycled textiles and fashion ISBN 9789811021466 a b c d Fletcher K 2013 Sustainable fashion and textiles design journeys Routledge page needed Laursen S E Hansen J Bagh J Jensen O K amp Werther I 1997 Environmental assessment of textiles Environmental project 369 Zimring Carl A 2016 Upcycling in History Is the Past a Prologue to a Zero Waste Future The Case of Aluminum RCC Perspectives 3 45 52 JSTOR 26241375 Moving Towards a Circular Fashion Economy MOTIF April 29 2019 Archived from the original on January 13 2021 Well dressed The present and future sustainability of clothing and textiles in the United Kingdom www ifm eng cam ac uk Archived from the original on February 27 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 von Busch Otto 2008 Fashion able Hacktivism and Engaged Fashion Design Gothenburg ArtMonitor Twigger Holroyd Amy 2017 Folk fashion Understanding homemade clothes I B Tauris amp Co Ltd ISBN 9781784536497 OCLC 1019666656 a b Rissanen Timo September 6 2018 Zero waste fashion design ISBN 978 1350094833 OCLC 1040994499 Busch Otto von 2009 Fashion able hacktivism and engaged fashion design Camino ISBN 9789197841108 OCLC 703595835 Black S et al 2009 Considerate Design for Personalized Fashion Towards Sustainable Fashion Design and Consumption Mass Matching Customization Configuration amp Creativity Proceedings of the MCPC 2009 via Helsinki Aalto University School of Art and Design Busch Otto von 2014 Fashion Hacking Design as Future Making doi 10 5040 9781474293907 0009 ISBN 9781474293907 Ballie Jennifer 2014 e Co Textile Design How can textile design and making combined with social media tools achieve a more sustainable fast fashion future London University of the Arts London Angela Luna amp Loulwa Al Saad 2021 Open Source Fashion Cookbook New York ADIFF PBC Peter Stallybrass 1998 Spyer Patricia ed Marx Coat essay in Border fetishisms material objects in unstable spaces Routledge ISBN 0415918561 OCLC 37024820 Reduce amp Reuse United States Environmental Protection Agency November 17 2009 Archived from the original on April 26 2021 Retrieved December 7 2010 What is a Charity Charity Facts 2010 Archived from the original on December 17 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 charity Word Net 3 1 Archived from the original on April 1 2012 Retrieved December 7 2010 Perez William August 16 2010 Tax Deduction for Charity Donations About com Archived from the original on April 26 2021 Retrieved April 30 2019 Centre for Sustainable Fashion 2020 Archived from the original on October 19 2020 Retrieved October 14 2020 Goodwill History Goodwill Industries Archived from the original on March 19 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 A History of Oxfam Oxfam 2010 Archived from the original on December 31 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Responsibility in Fashion 2020 Archived from the original on September 15 2019 Retrieved October 14 2020 The Salvation Army Doing the Most Good The Salvation Army 2009 Archived from the original on November 20 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Textile Exchange 2020 Archived from the original on October 7 2020 Retrieved October 14 2020 History United Way 2010 Archived from the original on December 14 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Piasecki Dave 2004 Consignment Inventory What is it and When Does It Make Sense to Use It inventoryops com Archived from the original on December 12 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b c d Lee Mike December 21 2006 The Truth About Where Your Donated Clothes End Up ABC News Archived from the original on November 16 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Chapman Dan December 24 2006 Your Cast Offs Their Profits Items donated to Goodwill and Salvation Army often end up as part of a 1 billion a year used clothing business The Atlanta Journal Constitution gciatl com Archived from the original on November 22 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Pinnock Olivia May 4 2018 The Best Answers To WhoMadeMyClothes This Fashion Revolution Week Forbes Archived from the original on September 27 2020 Retrieved March 10 2019 Dazed Digital Morgane Nyfeler April 24 2018 Are fashion brands actually making progress at becoming ethical Dazed Archived from the original on September 27 2020 Retrieved March 10 2019 Carlson Jane October 11 2013 Annual red carpet green dress contest kicks off once again The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on December 12 2015 Retrieved December 9 2015 Dunn Claire April 8 2013 Ethical fashion pops up for fashion week Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on January 25 2018 Retrieved December 9 2015 Sanders Lorraine April 24 2013 S F fashion cheerleader org chart SF Gate Archived from the original on September 30 2019 Retrieved September 30 2019 a b Camilli Sascha February 21 2014 Chic With A Conscience Ecoluxe At London Fashion Week Vilda Magazine Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Carter Amber February 20 2013 Event Review Ecoluxe London A W 2013 Ethical Fashion Forum Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 The year fashion woke up Businessoffashion com December 19 2014 Archived from the original on December 24 2014 Retrieved December 9 2015 Groom Avril November 2014 Sustainable and Ethical Fashion Financial Times How to Spend It Archived from the original on January 8 2015 Retrieved January 4 2015 Menkes Suzy The Beat of Africa Resounds on the Catwalk Vogue Conde Nast Archived from the original on January 10 2015 Retrieved January 4 2015 Maveau Roger December 18 2014 Afrique Mode ethique Simone Cipriani le bon samaritain Le Point Afrique Archived from the original on December 27 2014 Retrieved January 4 2015 Menkes Suzy September 13 2013 Designing for the Green Carpet The New York Times Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved December 9 2015 Trans Americas Trading Company World Leader in Recycled Clothing Solutions tranclo com Archived from the original on October 14 2018 Retrieved October 13 2018 Bhajekar Rahul Global Organic Textile Standard International Working Group IWG Global Standard gGmbH www global standard org Archived from the original on December 1 2018 Retrieved December 3 2018 1971 Fletcher Kate 2014 Sustainable fashion and textiles design journeys Second ed London ISBN 9780415644556 OCLC 846847018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Capulet Ian February 12 2015 Go wood sunglasses for sustainable living CEFashion net Archived from the original on December 11 2015 Retrieved December 9 2015 Choi Soon Mo Kummara Madhusudana Rao Zo Sun Mi Shin Eun Joo Han Sung Soo 2022 Bacteria Cellulose and Its Applications Polymers 14 6 1080 doi 10 3390 polym14061080 PMC 8949969 PMID 35335411 Cotton Fabric 2009 Archived from the original on August 24 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Voora V Larrea C and Bermudez S 2020 Global Market Report Cotton State of Sustainability Initiatives Archived from the original on February 12 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sustainable Cotton Project Who we are Sustainablecotton org Archived from the original on February 14 2005 Retrieved May 19 2012 Cotton and the environment Organic Trade Association Archived from the original on April 16 2015 Retrieved December 9 2015 Your Grandkids Will Thank You sayitgreen com April 6 2009 Archived from the original on January 31 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b Cotton and the Environment Organic Trade Association 2009 Archived from the original on November 23 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b c d Vreeland James M Jr April 1999 The Revival of Colored Cotton Scientific American perunaturtex com Archived from the original on July 15 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b What s the Problem With Cotton Part I savvybrown com May 10 2010 Archived from the original on July 10 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Genetically Modified Organisms GMO University of San Diego Archived from the original on December 5 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 How Does Bt Work University of San Diego Archived from the original on December 9 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b c Bt Cotton Data University of San Diego Archived from the original on December 13 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b First Documented Case Of Pest Resistance To Biotech Cotton Science Daily February 8 2008 Archived from the original on December 12 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Plewis Ian May 13 2014 Gm Cotton And Suicide Rates For Indian Farmers PDF Archived from the original PDF on May 13 2014 Retrieved November 30 2021 Bitter Seeds iTVS Archived from the original on May 6 2019 Sustainable Ag Q amp A Central Coast Vineyard Team Archived from the original on June 23 2009 Retrieved December 7 2010 Production and Handling Preamble USDA Archived from the original on June 14 2012 Retrieved December 7 2010 Find out all you need to know about organic cotton aboutorganiccotton org Archived from the original on December 2 2019 Retrieved November 19 2019 Mankus Modestas May 13 2020 Sustainable Fashion What is Organic Cotton Our Culture Our Culture Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved May 13 2020 Vreisis Ltd Vreisis Ltd Archived from the original on April 12 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 Dickerson Dianne K Lane Eric Rodriguez Dolores October 1999 Naturally Colored Cotton Resistance to changes in color and durability when refurbished with selected laundry aids PDF California Agricultural Technology Institute p 5 archived from the original PDF on July 19 2011 retrieved December 7 2010 Soy Clothing The Latest In Eco Friendly Style Natural Living for Women 2010 Archived from the original on January 3 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b c Soy Fabric the eco market com 2009 Archived from the original on February 3 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 Soy Clothing Superior Softness Feels Like Your Second Skin Cool Organic Clothing 2008 Archived from the original on November 21 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b Hemp Clothing eartheasy com 2010 Archived from the original on July 10 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b c Hemp Fibres Natural Fibers Archived from the original on November 27 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Bamboo vs Cotton D6 Clothing 2010 Archived from the original on April 11 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Bamboo Clothing A new choice in eco fashion Natural Living for Women 2010 Archived from the original on January 2 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 a b Clothing made from tea byproduct could improve health of fashion industry Iowa State University Iowa State University April 2016 Archived from the original on April 21 2019 Retrieved April 30 2019 a b c Look Out Cotton These 3 Fruits Are Shaking Up the Textile Industry March 12 2015 Archived from the original on January 19 2019 Retrieved January 18 2019 Designers Create Vegan Leather from Coconut Water VegNews com Archived from the original on January 19 2019 Retrieved April 23 2019 Vegan Leather Made From Coconut Water Launches To Reduce Animal Cruelty www plantbasednews org May 20 2018 Archived from the original on January 19 2019 Retrieved April 23 2019 Carpenter Susan June 19 2011 Beyond cotton Which alternative fabrics are eco friendly Los Angeles Times Haung HC 1994 Classification and general properties of textile fibres PDF Archived PDF from the original on March 28 2018 Retrieved March 1 2018 truents October 27 2010 Natural Protein Fibres Textile School Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved October 31 2020 Material Guide Is Silk Sustainable Good On You October 3 2018 Archived from the original on November 4 2020 Retrieved October 31 2020 Material Guide How Ethical Is Cashmere Good On You April 11 2019 Archived from the original on November 6 2020 Retrieved October 31 2020 Oxfam News Spring 2021 Grado Zero Espace Mushroom layer Muskin www gzespace com Archived from the original on December 9 2019 Retrieved February 27 2020 Why go Wild Wild Rubber Archived from the original on February 27 2020 Retrieved February 27 2020 a b QMILK The material of the future www qmilkfiber eu Archived from the original on December 8 2019 Retrieved March 4 2020 Annie Gullingsrud February 9 2017 Fashion fibers designing for sustainability New York NY USA ISBN 9781501306648 OCLC 915250289 What is Viscose Is it sustainable August 25 2021 Why is Recycled Polyester Considered a Sustainable Textile O Ecotextiles July 14 2009 Archived from the original on August 24 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 What is Recycled Polyester Natural Environment Archived from the original on December 30 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Creating Value Through Sustainable Fashion The Coca Cola Company 2010 Archived from the original on November 25 2012 Retrieved December 7 2010 Clothing Made of Recycled Plastic yesboleh blogspot com May 8 2008 Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 Recycling Plastic into Fabric Re Wear Your Bottles currentprotocols com June 23 2010 Archived from the original on September 12 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Jones Mitchell Gandia Antoni John Sabu Bismarck Alexander January 2021 Leather like material biofabrication using fungi Nature Sustainability 4 1 9 16 doi 10 1038 s41893 020 00606 1 S2CID 221522085 Singer Sally Sullivan Robert May 2007 Earth to fashion Vogue 197 5 128 132 Mutha Subramaniam 2017 SUSTAINABILITY IN THE TEXTILE INDUSTRY Singer Rosenbloom Stephanie August 13 2010 Fashion Tries on Zero Waste Design The New York Times Elmaaty Tarek March 26 2017 Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Green Media in Textile Dyeing A Review Textile Research Journal Fortunake J amp Blackburn R 2017 Sustainablity Challenges of Textiles Dyeing and Finishing Industries Opportunities for Innovation Lecture presented at ACS Webinars air dyeing textilecore com Archived from the original on November 6 2017 Retrieved November 5 2017 Top brands failing on cotton sustainability WWF wwf panda org Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved July 16 2019 All ecolabels on textiles Archived from the original on August 1 2019 Retrieved August 2 2019 Know your labels Archived from the original on August 2 2019 Retrieved August 2 2019 Prison Couture mainlines eco ethics Estonian Public Broadcasting January 9 2011 Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved May 19 2012 de Leon Christine September 15 2011 The Malcolm X T shirt Revisited Huffingtonpost co uk Archived from the original on October 2 2015 Retrieved May 19 2012 Ethical Style Journal Issue 2 March 2017 Page 26 27 view publitas com Archived from the original on January 18 2018 Retrieved January 22 2018 By Stamo Ecoluxe London Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Wicker Alden June 23 2014 9 Ethical And Sustainable Brands I Found This Month That I Know You ll Love Ecocult com Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Competition Design Beyond Skin s Next Vegan Shoe PETA Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Klein Victoria Hetty Rose Launches Ready to Wear Versions of Its Vintage Kimono Shoes Ecouterre Archived from the original on September 26 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Nini Jennifer April 16 2015 Simple Stylish amp Sustainable Eva Cassis ecowarriorprincess net Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved April 16 2015 Baker Brandon November 7 2013 Oliberte Becomes World s First Fair Trade USA Certified Shoemaker Eco Watch Archived from the original on September 15 2016 Retrieved September 12 2016 Gelles David June 16 2016 With Organic Cotton and Online Ads Boll amp Branch Helps Indian Farmers The New York Times Roberts Zoe THTC Inspiring change one Hip Hop head at a time B Boy News Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved September 17 2015 Everlane Everlane Archived from the original on March 11 2019 Retrieved March 12 2019 Comfy Clothing made with Organic Cotton Pact Wear PACT Archived from the original on March 24 2019 Retrieved March 12 2019 People Tree www peopletree co uk Archived from the original on March 15 2019 Retrieved March 12 2019 Wrangler Wrangler Archived from the original on June 17 2019 Retrieved June 17 2019 Big Frenchies Organic Clothing Made in USA Big Frenchies Archived from the original on April 30 2021 Retrieved April 30 2021 Bauman Zygmunt October 1 2010 Perpetuum mobile Critical Studies in Fashion and Beauty 1 55 63 doi 10 1386 csfb 1 1 55 1 Pham Diane October 1 2012 High Fashion as Eco Friendly Child s Play Chevrolet archived from the original on October 3 2012 retrieved January 23 2014 Bluemle Elizabeth October 11 2013 A Talk with the Creator of the Gown Made of Golden Books Publishers Weekly archived from the original on October 11 2014 retrieved June 11 2014 Malik Chua Jasmin House of Tammam Debuts U K s Only Ethical Ready to Wear Bridal Gowns Ecouterre Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 HOME afterlife project Archived from the original on January 11 2020 Retrieved January 11 2020 Landon Peoples Is Stella McCartney the Queen of Sustainable Fashion Refinery 29 Refinery 29 Archived from the original on October 23 2018 Retrieved October 23 2018 Niinimaki Kirsi December 2015 Ethical foundations in sustainable fashion Textiles and Clothing Sustainability 1 1 3 doi 10 1186 s40689 015 0002 1 Furlow Nancy E March 2010 Greenwashing in the New Millennium PDF The Journal of Applied Business and Economics 10 6 22 25 ProQuest 506504964 Pulse Fashion Report 2017 PDF Global Fashion Agenda Pulse Report 2017 Archived from the original PDF on October 4 2019 Retrieved May 14 2019 Smith Ray A May 24 2008 Shades of green decoding eco fashion s claims The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on April 28 2016 Retrieved April 25 2016 Gould Hannah February 26 2015 Waste is so last season recycling clothes in the fashion industry The Guardian Archived from the original on March 2 2018 Retrieved March 1 2018 a b Weliver David July 16 2008 Donating Clothing Beware For Profit Drop Boxes moneyunder30 com Archived from the original on December 6 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Bauer Julia October 16 2010 Goodwill warns fake donation bin scam is feeding billion dollar for profit industry The Grand Rapids Press mlive com Archived from the original on October 19 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Halsne Chris November 25 2009 Mayor Calls For Removal Of For Profit Clothing Donation Bins kirotv com Archived from the original on April 6 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Find a Charity You Can Trust Charity Navigator 2010 Archived from the original on December 5 2010 Retrieved December 7 2010 Allwood Julian M 2006 Well dressed the present and future sustainability of clothing and textiles in the United Kingdom Univ of Cambridge Inst for Manufacturing ISBN 978 1902546520 OCLC 441247814 Science Search PDF Archived PDF from the original on October 11 2012 Retrieved October 13 2018 Copenhagen Fashion Summit Copenhagen Fashion Summit May 3 2012 Archived from the original on May 24 2012 Retrieved May 19 2012 Clark Evan Sustainability Index Unveiled Archived 2016 05 29 at the Wayback Machine Women s Wear Daily 25 July 2012 Retrieved on 20 December 2012 Binkley Christina Which Outfit Is Greenest A New Rating Tool Archived 2013 05 24 at the Wayback Machine Wall Street Journal 25 July 2012 Retrieved on 20 December 2012 AAFA SAC Sign MoU Archived 2013 02 03 at archive today Textile World Magazine November December 2012 Retrieved on 20 December 2012 Gunther Marc Behind the Scenes at the Sustainable Apparel Coalition Archived 2018 01 26 at the Wayback Machine GreenBiz 26 July 2012 Retrieved on 20 December 2012 Current Members Archived 2015 03 21 at the Wayback Machine Sustainable Apparel Coalition Retrieved on 20 December 2012 Hur Eunsuk Cassidy Tom May 4 2019 Perceptions and attitudes towards sustainable fashion design challenges and opportunities for implementing sustainability in fashion PDF International Journal of Fashion Design Technology and Education 12 2 208 217 doi 10 1080 17543266 2019 1572789 S2CID 117248781 Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sustainable fashion Black Sandy 2008 Eco chic the fashion paradox London Black Dog ISBN 1 906155 09 7 OCLC 966078563 Black Sandy 2013 The sustainable fashion handbook New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 9780500290569 OCLC 939743661 Choi Tsan Ming Cheng T C Edwin eds 2015 Sustainable fashion supply chain management from sourcing to retailing Springer series in supply chain management New York Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 319 12703 3 ISBN 9783319127026 OCLC 907012044 Farley Jennifer Hill Colleen 2015 Sustainable fashion past present and future New York Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 9780857851857 OCLC 860754344 Fletcher Kate 2014 2008 Sustainable fashion and textiles design journeys 2nd ed London Washington DC Earthscan ISBN 9780415644556 OCLC 846847018 Fletcher Kate Grose Lynda 2012 Fashion amp sustainability design for change London Laurence King Publishing ISBN 9781856697545 OCLC 778610112 Fletcher Kate Tham Mathilda eds 2015 Routledge handbook of sustainability and fashion Routledge international handbooks London New York Routledge ISBN 9780415828598 OCLC 820119510 Gardetti Miguel Angel, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.