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- 🌿 The Fashion Letter | #30 📩
🌿 The Fashion Letter | #30 📩
Discover inspiring brands, news, tips, books and stories towards a more sustainable fashion in this 5-minute edition newsletter and blog
The Global Fashion Agenda's launch of a "Reverse Logistics Roadmap" aimed at promoting circular fashion. This roadmap focuses on optimizing reverse logistics, which involves the processes needed to collect, recycle, and redistribute used clothing and materials.
By enhancing these systems, the initiative aims to support the transition towards circular fashion, where waste is minimized, and resources are reused. The roadmap offers actionable strategies for brands to improve their reverse logistics processes, helping them reduce waste and enhance sustainability.
It also emphasizes the importance of collaboration across the fashion industry to create efficient systems for garment collection, recycling, and redistribution, ultimately driving a more circular and sustainable future for fashion. Click here for details.
Discover how next-generation material startups are shifting their focus away from fashion to prioritize other industries. These startups, initially centered on developing sustainable materials for fashion, are now finding opportunities in areas such as automotive, packaging, and construction.
The reason for this shift is the slow pace of adoption within the fashion industry, which has proven resistant to integrating innovative, eco-friendly materials.
While fashion remains a key area for these startups, they are increasingly looking to sectors where sustainable materials are more readily embraced. Fashion brands need to accelerate their sustainability efforts or risk missing out on the benefits of these groundbreaking materials. Click here for details.
The Copenhagen Fashion Summit has raised the bar for sustainability in the fashion industry, prompting brands to rethink their practices.
The summit highlighted the urgent need for environmental and ethical reform, urging companies to commit to more transparent, sustainable methods. Brands are now being challenged to adopt practices that go beyond surface-level changes, with a focus on real progress in reducing waste, lowering emissions, and improving labor conditions.
While some brands are stepping up, others are lagging behind. As sustainability becomes a priority for consumers, brands are under increasing pressure to respond with tangible, meaningful actions. Click here for details.
Since 2019, Christy Dawn has been pouring the love and resources into their Farm-to-Closet initiative — a radical experiment in reciprocal relationships, and a conscious effort to deepen their intimacy with soil, farmer, and ultimately ourselves.
It uses a high proportion of eco-friendly materials including recycled fabrics. It produces long lasting products. It manufactures locally to reduce its carbon footprint. Its use of eco-friendly materials limits the amount of chemicals, water and wastewater used in production.
It sources its final stage of production from the USA, a medium risk country for labour abuse. It ensures payment of a living wage in some of its supply chain. It traces all of its supply chain.
It does not use fur, angora, down or exotic animal skin. It uses recycled leather, recycled wool and recycled exotic animal hair.
The best thing is when you shop Farm-to-Closet, you are actively joining the Regenerative Evolution. Each purchase helps replenish even more soil, sequester even more carbon. Plus, you’re wearing a garment with reciprocity stitched into every seam.
READ📘
Exposing Modern Slavery: The book highlights the harsh realities of modern slavery in the fashion industry, revealing the exploitation of workers in global supply chains.
Personal Stories: Minney shares firsthand accounts from people affected by forced labor and unethical working conditions, humanizing the issue of exploitation.
Call for Ethical Fashion: It emphasizes the importance of brands adopting ethical practices and consumers supporting sustainable fashion to combat modern slavery.
Solutions for Change: The book outlines actionable steps for governments, businesses, and consumers to help eradicate modern slavery in the fashion industry.
Raising Awareness: "Slave to Fashion" serves as a powerful advocacy tool, raising awareness about the need for fair labor practices and transparency in fashion.
WATCH📺
Brooklyn-based clothing designer, Daniel Silverstein is a pioneer in the fashion industry with his innovative and genderless zero-waste brand "ZeroWasteDaniel" which utilizes textile scraps and pre-consumer, post-production materials to create one-of-a-kind garments.
These apps provide a platform for buying and selling pre-loved clothing, helping to reduce waste and extend the life of garments.
By embracing secondhand shopping, consumers can make more eco-friendly fashion choices while finding unique, high-quality items at affordable prices.
The post highlights a variety of popular apps that make it easy to buy and sell used clothing, including user-friendly features and tools that encourage mindful consumption.
Ultimately, these platforms not only support sustainable fashion but also contribute to a more circular economy by keeping clothing out of landfills and in circulation longer. Check this apps.
Thank you for reading our letter today.
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