Dressing Greener
Nov
24
The only real answer to being greener when it comes to clothes is to buy fewer, better-quality items, use them for longer, repair and recycle theme, and make sure that what you do buy comes from as naturally produced materials as possible – like organic cotton – grown without the use of pesticides and other chemicals which often contaminate water supplies in cotton growing areas.
The basic principles of green living as applied to clothes are reuse, repair, and recycle. Don’t throw anything out before you’ve got every ounce of wear out of it by repairing and reusing. When you can no longer do that think about whether it’s still fit for someone else to wear so that it can be recycled. By repairing, reusing, and recycling you’re doing the most important thing, which is reducing the amount of clothing you’re buying in the first place, which in turn reduces the amount that has to be produced.
If you simply can’t use the item any longer and there’s no life left in it, but the material was organically produced and the fabric wasn’t dyed or treated with chemicals, you may be able to put it on the compost heap and help to recycle some nutrients back into the soil.
One of the most effective methods of reducing the demand for clothes is to keep all the items currently in people’s wardrobes in circulation for much longer than they usually are. Whether it be by handing them on to other people or charities, trading them over the Internet, or keeping them for yourself, you can ensure that these clothes can continue wearing on to reduce the demand for new supplies.
Last but not least, think about regifting. We’ve all been given those jumpers we wouldn’t be seen in under any circumstances but there may be someone you know who’d like the items you don’t. Regifting is green because it cuts down the amount you buy and the amount being produced. Give an unwanted clothing item as a present instead of buying another one.
The four main green issues to consider when it comes to choosing clothes are:
Impact on workers: Buying clothes produced by people on low wages who have no union representation and benefits isn’t green. The workers are being exploited and aren’t making enough to feed their families and are banned from an organisation that can help them fight for the same _rights as the people who can afford to wear their products.
Impact on local economy: Losing local textile companies that relocate overseas can be devastating to the UK economy.
Impact of production methods: Commercial cotton is often farmed using unsustainable, intensive farming practices and synthetic fabrics use chemicals. Persistent environmental pollutants are used in some clothing (such as fabrics with Teflon coating) and in some imported clothes. Check the labels as far as possible and if you’re unsure go for the green option – such as organically produced cotton and wool or silk.
Impact of materials: You have to count the environmental, social, and economic impact of using skins and other animal by-products from declining animal populations. Other materials like rayon and viscose are man-made from wood pulp treated with chemicals. If you want to avoid the chemicals go for greener natural and organically produced materials.
Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)
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- knowing that natural doesn't necessarily mean green
- Green Shopping, Eating Vegetables
- What your food come from? continued
- Link Exchange
- Green Meat Shopping
- Shopping for Green Clothing, Yearning for Vintage Clothes
- Wearing green materials
- Green Shopping, buying Green Food continued
- Ten Green Ideas to try

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