Susta-Style Wednesdays by Bronte Hogarth
Today is World Environment Day, this year the global theme is Think.Eat.Save, all about how to combat food waste. Keeping on topic, Susta-Style this week is about what to do with your clothing waste, and in fact how it’s not waste at all!
Over the next 5 weeks Susta-Style will be going on a journey through different elements of what sustainable style means when it comes to fashion. Below is all the themes we are going to cover and today we’re kicking off with – Recycle, Share & Swap.
The Susta-Style journey |
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Recycle, Share & Swap |
Care & Cleaning |
Repair & Rebirth |
Knowledge & Research |
Return on Investment |
What is ‘Recycled’ clothing: Anything that has been made from already existing materials, fabrics, metals or fibers. These are often reclaimed from previously made clothing and accessories and reworked into new ones. Fibers can also be re-purposed from pre-existing fabric, re-spun and reused for new garments.*
How you can recycle your clothes:
- Donate – Giving your old clothes to charities, (known as charitable recycling of post-consumer waste) is one of the oldest recycling industries in Australia. It’s estimated between 80-100 million kilos of textile waste is collected each year through clothing recycling collection bins. 60% consists of items of clothing that can be reworn or reused! and 15% can be torn into industrial wiper cloths.
- Sell – Instead of throwing your old clothes away, think first if you could sell them. If they are still good quality but you just don’t wear them, somebody else might. You could hold a market stall, have a garage sale, use Ebay or sell your clothes on consignment to a second hand clothing shop. In the past two weeks I myself have had a market stall with friends to sell our unused clothes, it was great fun and felt wonderful to see other people walk away with a great deal and the clothes not be wasted.
- Share & Swap – Buying new clothes all of the time makes no sense at all when you can have fun with your friends sharing and exchanging. Hosting a clothes swap is a great way to stop clothes being thrown out and ending up in landfill. The 1MW team is hosting its own internal clothes swap, it’s something you can do in your own workplace too.
- Give back – Recently there has been action from larger retailers to implement recycling into their production systems and make avoiding waste central to business ideals. This is companies having an option to return clothes you bought but no longer use to them, and they will re-purpose them. H & M and Patagonia are two big retailers who are doing this. H & M even turn the really damaged clothes that cant be re-purposed into energy. This is an area of recycling which could use more action, and rallying from consumers to ask retailers to embrace this.
Did you know?: Australians collectively spend over $12 billion a year on more than a billion fashion items, but discarded clothing makes up 4-5% of waste going into our landfills!
We can make this a lot more sustainable. See even more sustainable fashion tips here at our website.
There is a lot you can do with your old clothes instead of just throwing them away. Remember, there is no away!
*Definition of Recycled fashion from Eco Fashion World
We are daughters, mothers, sisters and grandmothers getting on with practical climate action to live better for us and the planet. Join the movement at www.1millionwomen.com.au
- Susta-Style Wednesdays is a weekly post on sustainable fashion, shopping and design.
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If only everyone did this with their clothes! For years I have bought second-hand clothes and remodelled them. Even if a garment is worn in parts, if the material is unusual and if most of it is not damaged, it can be used for patchwork. The advantage of buying second hand clothes, is that you are likely to find something which no one else has. You never know what treasures lie beneath those piles of clothes! An elderly woman was horrified that I bought second-hand things for my Dad and me. “Oh no,” she said, “Only poor people buy second hand clothes!” I am poor, but if I were rich, I would rather buy from charities, which need the money, and not the clothes, than buy a garment new, only to find it is out of fashion in a season and that the earth’s precious resources have been wasted in producing it.
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