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Met Gala 2016: Emma Watson wears a Calvin Klein dress made from recycled plastic bottles

Met Gala 2016: Emma Watson wears a Calvin Klein dress made from recycled plastic bottles

Celebrities Champion Sustainable Fashion At The 2016 Met Gala How To Buy Vintage Clothing: The Retro Fashion Bloggers' Insider Guide | Huffington Post How the fur industry clawed its way back into fashion Fur dominated London Fashion Week this yearOnly 58 per cent of 18 to 24-year-olds in a poll believed it wrong to use furFur houses are seducing celebrities and budding designers with freebies By Lorraine Fisher for the Daily Mail Published: 22:08 GMT, 16 March 2014 | Updated: 12:50 GMT, 17 March 2014 Tom Ford’s was a rich purple, Roksanda Ilincic went for a garish patchwork design and Christopher Kane opted for the natural look. As the designers sent their models down the London catwalks, nothing summed up Fashion Week quite like fur. It was the same story in New York, where the likes of DKNY and J. Back in fashion: Designer Alexander McQueen used fur in his show, as did DKNY, Roksanda Illincic and Tom Ford In fact, according to furriers, 70 per cent of recent catwalk shows featured fur. Twenty years ago, it would have been unheard of. And sales are shooting up: in 2011, the industry was worth £9 billion, a rise of more than 70 per cent in a decade. Celebrities were drafted in to help.

How Sustainable Brands Are Turning Their Backs on Fast Fashion Trend Every fall, fashionistas and students heading back to school rid themselves of their old, worn garments to gear up for the newest trends. And that mantra — out with the old, in with the new — is reinforced in the constant cycle of trends that make their appearances on the runway each season, and some clothing on the store racks made so inexpensively it almost feels disposable. Fashion is a $1.2 trillion global industry, and more than $250 billion of that is spent annually in the U.S. alone, according to a 2015 Joint Economic Committee Congressional report. Fast fashion is a business model that moves designs from the runway to the store quickly to capture current trends and typically can include inexpensive, poorly constructed garments that can be ruined after a couple of trips through the washing machine. The Dirty Fashion Industry The concept of pollution usually evokes images of coal power plants, oil spills, barren rain forests and plastic bottles clogging up the world's oceans.

The Best Ethical Fashion Brands What: Fat Face has a company-wide Code of Conduct where all factories that produce their goods must abide by as well as working with suppliers and other organizations to make sure their workers are treated fairly. What: Your new one-stop shop for ethically made wedding wear, Minna describes itself as an ‘Eco Luxe’ brand. With wedding dresses, veils and bridesmaid dresses made from sustainable, organic, recycled and locally produced textiles, you can dress your whole wedding party without feeling guilty. What: Worn by Kate Middleton, Mirabelle makes handmade fair trade jewellery as well as a British Made collection. Think pretty pendants at good prices. Wear: Hammered pendant, £69 What: Committed to ethical trading, Monsoon’s ethical compliance team regularly checks that their factories are abiding by its Code of Conduct which sets out minimum requirements on working conditions, pay and employment rights. Wear: Betty Embroidered Dress, £89 Wear: New Balance 811 Training Shoe, £65

35 Fair Trade & Ethical Clothing Brands Betting Against Fast Fashion Based In | Hawaii, USAEthics | Handmade in small batches, donates excess fabric, gives backBest For | Responsibly-made dressesProduct Range | Women’s tops, dresses, rompers, playsuitsPrice Range | $$–$$$ No matter the season, YIREH has us dreaming of sunny summer days. Their floral vintage-inspired dresses and rompers are handcrafted by artisans in Bali, where they are paid fair wages, receive one-month paid vacation, religious holidays off, sick leave, and medical insurance. Plus, YIREH donates 10% of their profits to International Justice Mission to help bring an end to human trafficking. If you’re seeking the statement piece of the season with a production story you can be proud of, YIREH has what you’re looking for. Shop YIREH

Stella McCartney: Change Agent LONDON, United Kingdom — In a nondescript building tucked away on a quiet street in West London, Stella McCartney and her team are comparing the properties of a real leather shoe to the various non-leather swatches being considered for her brand’s Winter 2015 shoe collection. McCartney is wearing a cream blouse, open at the neck, with faded blue jeans and non-leather boots. Pinned up against the wall are boards labeled: “Heels,” “Mules,” and “Cutouts.” Women of differing ages, ethnicities and body types come in and out of the room with a constant flow of new ideas and creative references while McCartney acts as a kind of real-time editor, deciding what colours, materials and shapes feel right for the upcoming season. “That non-leather thing was doing a bit of a leather thing,” McCartney declares obscurely, at one point, caressing one of the samples and then draping it on top of her foot. Stella's Sustainability Commitments | Source: BoF The early years were tough.

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