Search and Find

Monday, May 20, 2013

Setting Goals...



Every amount helps :) Check out my page here

A pledge of $20 or more gets you a 15% off coupon code, for your entire order, with no expiration date!

A pledge of $50 or more gets you 25% off your entire order, no expiration date!

A pledge of $100 or more gets you 35% off your entire order, no expiration date!

Thank you so much to everyone who has contributed!!! Much love!!

Monday, May 13, 2013

Where Clothes Kickstarter Campaign is Underway!

Hey world! I have just launched a Kickstarter campaign for a lookbook collection project! If you or someone you know is interested in sustainable and ethical fashion, please check out my page and share with anyone you's like! Thanks in advance :)

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Another Tragedy at an Unsafe Sweatshop


The demand for cheap fashion lead to a building collapse in Bangladesh today, killing over 120 people and injuring over 1000...many are still trapped in the rubble. According to the New York Times article, this factory made clothing for Walmart, C & A, Benetton, and Cato Fashions. 

The building's overall construction was substandard, and the top four floors illegally constructed without permits. After the nearby garment factory fire killed 112 people last November, stricter saftey standards were supposed to be upheld. Inspection teams discovered cracks in the wall on Tuesday, but these danger signs were ignored by the factory owners and employees were forced to work.


For $40 a month on average, these employees risk their lives working long, hard hours in dangerous conditions...all so we can buy a cheap pair of jeans.

This unfair and detrimental labor needs to stop. Please consider supporting local and ethical fashion.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Happy Earth Day!

Team Eco Etsy has made a bunch of fresh and green treasury collections of eco-friendly items in honor of Earth Day! Check out the creative, inspiring, and eco-friendly etsy items featured below!

Click here to view full treasury!

Click here to view full treasury!

Click here to view full treasury!

Click here to view full treasury!

Saturday, April 6, 2013

New Website!

In the midst of spring cleaning, I decided to amp up my website and change the theme around. I'm loving the new look, especially the new Spring 2013 collection photo gallery. These photos were taken by the lovely and talented Ash LaRose, and modeled by my dear friend Jacs Fishburne. It was a super fun shoot, I love being with those gals!
Here are a few previews:







Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Future Fashion

From Rations and Proportions on tumblr:

"What spurred me to promote ethical fashion? This little book. It’s called, quite succinctly, Future Fashion and it contains a series of short essays from a host of different designers and business owners involved in green fashion. Everyone from Diane von Furstenberg (writing as the head of the CFDA) to an organic wool farmer to a natural textile dyer contributes to this book, and each small essay adds up to an enormous picture of the huge obstacles the industry faces before we become sustainable and ethical. The book focuses on green movements, but some of the facts I read - such as the huge cancer rates among textile workers - spurred me to endorse fair trade and fair labor issues in the production of fashion as well. It’s a quick and easy read, but it’s well worth the effort if you’re curious as to how the fashion industry has become the 2nd most pollutive industry on earth, behind only oil & energy. "

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Is Synthetic Clothing Causing “Microplastic” Pollution in Our Oceans?


A scary note from ecouterre.com:

"Think of plastic pollution in the world’s oceans and visions of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch invariably come to mind. But an emerging breed of “microplastics,” defined as any plastic particle smaller than 1 nanometer—or one hundred-thousandth the width of a human hair—is raising health and safety concerns on shorelines across the globe. Unlike its larger brethren, however, microplastic pollution has a far more insidious cause. And, according to a study published in the November 1, 2011 issue of Environmental Science & Technology, our washing machines are partly to blame.
Microscopic fragments of acrylic, polyethylene, polypropylene, polyamide, and polyester have been discovered in increasing quantities across the northeast Atlantic, as well as on beaches in Britain, Singapore, and India, says Mark Browne, an ecologist at University College Dublin and the paper’s lead author. Browne and his colleagues from the University of Sydney in Australia, the Universities of Plymouth and Exeter in the United Kingdom, and Waters in Canada sampled 18 sites representing shorelines in six continents to track down a possible source of the contamination.
A chemical analysis revealed that nearly 80 percent of the filaments comprised polyester or acrylic, which are common in synthetic textiles.
By separating the plastic from the sand and chemically analyzing them, the researchers discovered that nearly 80 percent of the filaments were either polyester or acrylic, both of which are common in synthetic textiles. No single beach was devoid of the colorful lint. Each cup of sand had at least two fibers and as many as 31. The most-contaminated samples also originated from areas with the highest human population density, suggesting a pathway to the ocean through sewage. Samples of treated wastewater and sewage-tainted ocean sediment confirmed the scientists’ suspicions.
To discover how the synthetic lint wound up in sewage, Browne’s team purchased an assortment of polyester blankets, fleeces, and shirts. After cycling the garments in three domestic washing machines for several months, the researchers collected and filtered the wastewater for analysis. The numbers were startling: A single garment can produce over 1,900 near-invisible fibers with each wash, Browne says. Ingested microplastics can persist in cells for months, moving up the food chain to animals and people who eat fish. More alarmingly, some studies show that microplastics can absorb toxic chemicals such as PCBs, dioxins, and DDT.
Textile and washing-machine manufacturers, as well as sewage-treatment plants, should be researching ways to mitigate microplastic pollution, says Browne.
As populations grow, so will the problem. Textile and washing-machine manufacturers, along with sewage-treatment plants, should be researching ways to mitigate microplastic pollution, says Browne, who suggests filters that trap the fibers or clothing that sheds less. Consumers can also help by choosing natural fibers over synthetics. Certain garments, such as polyester fleeces, can release up to 180 percent more fibers than other textiles, he adds.
Seasonality is another consideration. Washing-machine usage is seven times greater in the winter, notes the study, which results in a sudden uptick in the amount of microplastics released into the environment. Getting maximum usage out of clothing before tossing it in the wash could also ease shoreline pollution." -Article by Amanda Coen

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Hearts!

All of our Pop Up Shops are going to have themes...because themes are fun! Since the upcoming shop falls in February the theme is Heart Attack! for Valentine's Day. Althea and I are doing a themed collaboration that I am so excited about, but in the meantime, I've been embroidering hearts and cutting out shapes. Check it!




To be honest, I think Valentine's Day is kind of weird, but hey- heart's are pretty cool. All items pictured are for sale in my etsy shop, and there will be even more at the Pop Up!!

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Upcycling Around the World!

Rags2Riches, an eco-ethical company from the Philippines, takes fabric scraps from factories to create beautiful, ready to wear items.

Monday, January 28, 2013

It's time to think about Where your clothes are coming from

Another clothing factory fire killed 7 in Bangladesh last week, just 2 months after a factory fire that killed 112 workers. These factories make clothing for Disney, Walmart, Sears, and some European brands such as Zara. Since this past November, there have been 18 fatal fires in Bangladesh clothing factories.

Munir Uz Zaman/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
These factories are unsafe and unfair. They are not maintained, the emergency exits are kept locked, and the employees are paid as little as $30 per month. International labor advocates are pushing companies to make changes in the quality of their workplaces, but nothing significant has been done, and people continue to be harmed. Many of the past fatalities were underage workers; children, and young teens.

Judging by what necessary action has been accomplished so far, it's going to take a lifetime for fair labor laws to be put in place. In the meantime, think about where your clothes are coming from. Are human lives worth a cheap new shirt?

Keep your dollars local, support independent design, and wear vintage. Every garment counts.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Heart Attack- Pop Up Shop!

In December, Where Clothes and Down South Vintage put together a holiday pop up shop at Angioplasty Media Studio in Burlington, Vermont. It was so much fun, and a smashing success! A few of us decided that we should do these pop up shops every other month, so this time I teamed up with Althea of Althea Designs to host another: Valentines Day- Heart Attack!

Poster by Abby Manock of AbbyAbby

There will be live music throughout the day, and a full on rock show at night with Maui, Nuda Veritas, World End GF, Chuck the Plains, Trapper Keeper, and more! Our talented vendors include:


Party While You Shop! Shop While You Party!!



Check out the facebook event for updates and more information!