Category: Sustainable Fashion
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Who Gets to Save the Planet
Patagonia built its brand on belief, not just product. Its lawsuit against climate activist Pattie Gonia raises a question worth sitting with: what happens when the values on the tag don’t extend into the boardroom?
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What Transparency Was Always For
Shein’s acquisition of Everlane for $100 million is being read as irony. But when you look at the financial structure that produced it, there is very little that is surprising.
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Dressing Across Seasons That No Longer Behave
When the weather no longer follows a script, layering becomes more than a style trick. It becomes a way of dressing for real uncertainty.
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What ‘Made In’ Actually Tells Us
There is a small rectangle of information sewn into most garments. A country name. A fiber content percentage. A row of care symbols that are, for most of us, more decoration than instruction. The country name is the one that carries weight. Made in Portugal. Made in Bangladesh. Made in Italy. We use it as…
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The Fabric Question
A clear guide to the fabrics that matter in sustainable fashion: what organic cotton, linen, TENCEL, and recycled polyester actually mean, and what they don’t.
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Reading the Labels
Fashion certifications are everywhere, but what do they really mean? This piece explores key labels, what they stand for, and why understanding them matters more than simply trusting them.
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France Is Putting Fast Fashion on Trial
France has approved a new law targeting ultra-fast fashion with eco-taxes, advertising bans, and transparency rules aimed at reducing environmental and social harm.
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Wearing What Matters
A thoughtful guide on how to dress sustainably: from checking brands and fabrics to valuing longevity, repair, and personal style over perfection.
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Building a Business that Doesn’t Want to Grow Fast
A reflection on slow business growth, staying small by design, and rethinking success beyond scale through care, depth, and values-led entrepreneurship.
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When Repair Becomes Resistance
Repair does more than fix — it interrupts the cycle of disposability. In a system built on constant newness, mending becomes both a strategy and a statement.
