Sustainability: Fast Becoming The Rule Not The Exception
Words like Eco, Green, and Sustainable, are tacked on to anything and everything these days; a constant barrage of earth friendly products hoping to seduce the consumer into a purchase. Whether through food, energy, beauty, or fashion, what started as a movement is now the standard. Of course not every corporation, brand, farmer, and engineer now incorporates earth friendly practices into their business. However, new laws and growing consumer expectations are transforming the eco–marketplace on a daily basis; appropriately ensuring a sustainable future for sustainability.
In lieu of incessant babbling about multiple industries, let’s stick to what we know best; fashion. The sustainable style umbrella is a wide one; encompassing corporate practice, waste reduction, vintage/reusability, design, and most importantly an educated consumer beneath its waterproof canopy.
Every day it seems a new designer has decidedly gone green, throughout both their structure of silhouette and manufacturing choices. Edith A. Miller, H&M, Stella McCartney, Costello Tagliapietra, Target, and a host of others are all participating in the sustainable fashion movement to various degrees.
Natalie Portman, Bono, Alicia Silverstone, and Adrian Grenier are celebrities supporting environmentally conscious designers. A self described, "lover of nature, and advocate for people and their environment," model-turned-author-turned-activist Summer Rayne Oakes has made it her mission to promote and educate others on eco-practices throughout the industry. Need more fashionably sustainable ammo?
Designer Carrie Parry launched her own label this year and is entirely dedicated to the sustainable process. Getting her start at Marc Jacobs, Norma Kamali, and doing costume for Oscar winning film Memoirs of a Geisha, Parry has the technical chops to keep her designs fresh. By manufacturing her pieces locally in New York's Garment District and utilizing environmentally conscious textiles she is able to reduce the brands carbon footprint. Carrie has even chosen to dedicate herself a step further, and is actively pursuing a graduate degree in Socially Responsible and Sustainable Apparel Business at the University of Delaware.
Though Carrie Parry has delved deeper into the environmental than most, brands and manufacturers are quickly taking the necessary steps to adhere to the idea of global social responsibility. Read more on AFINGO's participation in the sustainable discussion.