Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts

20.1.10

candy coated & bubbly

the solution for my workspace needs and the answer to the bubbly reconstruction question... recycled corks can be more than just peg boards!







2.2.09

How to fix a flat tire

Adding this Officio Cyclus Bag to the wish list! Not only are Officio bags Eco friendly, made from recycled inner tubes, shop awnings and umbrellas but they are functional, waterproof and very durable. The ultimate recycled accessory for uber cool designers, bike messengers, laptop users and you!

Cyclus is based in Bogota, Colombia. They also incorporate fabrics woven by indigenous tribes with a profit payback scheme to ensure that money is paid back to grass roots development. They are an ethical organisation using local people and with an excellent working environment and pay.

Buy one now at www.junkfunk.com, along with many other brilliant things!

www.cyclus.com.co

Overindulging Consumption

A quick synopsis:

Fashion and textiles account for one sixth of the employment sector ranging from factories to fields, or 6 billion worldwide with 2.7 billion in EU along as reported by the Cambridge University Report. Additionally, over the past decade fashion and textile sales have increased 60 percent by volume.

Grocery stores such as Matalan, Marks & Spencers and Primark in the UK have replicated the US giant Walmarts' model by additionally offering apparel and this phenomenon has added substantial consumption to the market. As a result, there has been a 20-30percent price decrease in selected clothing categories over the past 5 yrs which now puts all but the most luxurious designer brands within reach of a majority of the population (Shaw D "Fashion Clothing Manufacture" pg84).

Which bring to mind the question, what are designers doing to help reduce and reuse textiles?

Common trends by designers include repairing or offering remodeling services for garments to increase longevity, using Eco labeling, reconstruction,

A few designers who promote Eco friendliness:
Kate Goldsworthy
People Tree
Katharine Hamnett
THTC a.k.a. The Hemp Trading Company
Gossypium
Edun
Terra Plana

As a consumer, Oxfam is a great place to donate second hand clothes. To find out more about Oxfam and their mission go to www.oxfam.org.

Click here to buy the book:
Eco-chic the Fashion Paradox, Sandy Black