InStyle | The Human Hair in Your Wig May Have Been Pulled from Shower Drains

The grossest moment in Just Extensions, the self-produced documentary by L.A. serial entrepreneur Riqua Hailes that investigates the global human hair trade, is probably the scene where she arrives at a human hair market after a 17-hour drive through rural China and ends up picking through a large burlap sack filled with matted hair balls for sale.

In the trade, they call this “fallen hair,” or hair that has been pulled out of hair brushes, shower drains, and even the trash in rural villages and cities alike in Asia. And if you wear extensions, you might have it on your head right now.

Read more

InStyle | American Fashion Changed After the Depression, and It's About to Reinvent Itself Again

If we draw on the expertise of fashion historians and trend forecasters, we can learn from the social, financial, and fashion upheaval of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s to predict how our style will change in the coming months and years. In short? It’s not going to be all leggings all the time: Dressier days are on the horizon already.

Read more

The Cut | Fashion Week Is Simply Not Sustainable

Why are we still doing this? Of course, runway shows create but a sliver of the environmental impact of the fashion industry, but they represent everything that is wrong with it. They’re inherently wasteful, with glossy sets built, torn down, and landfilled after a ten-minute spectacle. Attendees fly first-class from fashion capital to fashion capital, where they jump into black cars that ferry them around, leaving trails of disposable water bottles and gift-bag swag behind.

Read more

Vogue Business | Fashion Brands Turn to Hackathons to Crack Sustainability Strategies

In an effort to think and operate more like tech companies, fashion has embraced hackathons, once reserved for intensive digital prototyping by coders and software engineers. Now, the practice is becoming more targeted. In addition to Kering, LVMH, Prada Group and German online retailer Zalando have held hackathons centred on sustainability, as pressure surrounding the environmental impact of luxury fashion mounts.

Read more

Vox | Fashion has a misinformation problem. That’s bad for the environment.

Whenever a fashion brand makes a commitment to offset its carbon emissions, it needs to explain why it matters. Whenever a journalist like me writes a story about, say, activists protesting London Fashion Week, I also need to tell you why you should care and should keep reading. After all, there are so many other worthy things that demand our attention these days. So consider the following harrowing, commonly repeated facts:

  • Eight to 10 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions comes from the fashion industry, which is more than the aviation and maritime shipping industries combined.

  • The fashion industry produces and sells somewhere between 80 billion and 150 billion garments a year globally.

  • Nearly three-fifths of all clothing produced ends up in incinerators or landfills within years of being made.

It’s clear that the fashion industry is a big, stinking mess. But if you take a moment to ponder these facts, you realize that something is … off. An estimated range of 80 billion to 150 billion garments a year is ridiculously wide. The two most common estimates for fashion’s greenhouse gas emissions vary by a billion tons, a huge margin of error. And saying three-fifths of clothing will be trashed within “years” is a meaningless statement.

READ IT ON THE GOODS BY VOX

Vogue Business | Does Luxury Fashion Still Need Wholesale Showrooms?

When Nicholas and Christopher Kunz launched Nicholas K in 2003, like most upscale brands, the sister-brother duo worked with showrooms to build up their wholesale business. For 11 years, as the label developed through gothic leather-and-silk draped dresses and undyed alpaca wrap sweaters, showrooms sold their product on the East and West coasts and occasionally pitched in on PR. But in 2014, the siblings realised it no longer worked for them.

READ IT ON VOGUE BUSINESS

Vogue Business | African-made luxury fashion is making a comeback

In 2016, Suno shuttered after a decade of creating critically acclaimed collections in Africa. The next year, Maiyet, whose Nairobi artisans were once featured in a glossy New York spread, stopped making its own products and became an ethical-wear boutique in London. Edun, which Bono and his wife Ali Hewson founded in 2004, held on until last year when LVMH divested, and operations ceased in the US. It had suffered about $80 million in accumulated losses.

Read more

New York Magazine | Where to Donate Your Old Clothes in NYC

If you’re trying to do the right thing, your best bet is to shop more sustainably. Buy fewer, better pieces of fashion, so that your future closet clean-outs yield fewer, better donations that people actually want. But in the meantime, if you’re trying to dispose of a garbage bag full of Forever 21 that you just Kondo’d, here are the best ways to do it.

Read more

Vox | The Complicated Gender Politics of Going Zero Waste

“Zero waste” isn’t just an influencer meme, it’s a movement whose practitioners share the serious goal of sending as little to landfill as possible. They studiously avoid the plastic packaging, disposable coffee cups, and paper towels that many of us never give a thought to before stuffing in the trash. They are experts in refusing, reusing, and recycling.

Read more

Vox | No Online Shopping Company Can Figure Out How to Quit This One Plastic Bag

In 2018, the healthy meal-kit service Sun Basket swapped out their recycled plastic box-liner material for Sealed Air TempGuard, a liner made of recycled paper sandwiched between two sheets of kraft paper. Fully curbside recyclable, even when wet, it allowed Sun Basket to reduce its box size by about 25 percent and reduce the carbon footprint of shipping, not to mention reduce the amount of plastic in their shipment. Customers were pleased. “Kudos to your packaging folks for coming up with this concept,” one couple wrote in.

Read more