Sustainable fashion is coming of age in India! Janice Goveas explores the environment friendly practices and ethical path that brands are adapting to ‘go green’.
With several companies in the apparel space catering to the growing needs of the consumer for organic clothing. Not only is sustainability important in the manner the clothing is produced but is also important from the point of view of ethical practices adopted by companies at the company and worker level.
MINIMALLY SUSTAINABLE
The fashion industry is the second largest environment polluter in the world, just after oil. Pesticides account for most of this, since the cotton industry optimises production with pesticides. It is estimated that around 20,000 litres of water is consumed when you produce a single pair of jeans. A vicious cycle of consumption and waste drives this industry, with the added effects of chemical substances in synthetic clothing, diminishing crafts and use of toxic detergents.
However, there is a growing trend of minimalism and sustainability amongst consumers. A marked focus on clothing with minimal ostentations, preferences to sober, natural colours and a general bend towards sustainable living is a growing trend. Organic fabric, however, isn’t the same as organic clothing. A lot of manufacturers use natural and organically cultivated fabric; it doesn’t make the garment organic. For a garment to be 100 per cent organic it needs to be free of toxic dyes and do not have permanent press and fire retardant finishes.
Independent designer Ramona Saboo’s Forty Red Bangles is very welcoming of organic cotton and offers a range of clothing for adults and children. While designs are made in-house, the production is commissioned to varied NGOs and women’s self-help groups.
Denne historien er fra May 2017-utgaven av Apparel.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra May 2017-utgaven av Apparel.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
All About Dressing As You Want
A. Das uncovers the current trend which is all about dressing as you want. Easy, over-sized, baggy fits and unstructured cuts are ruling every wardrobe.
Online Shopping Likely To Reach $1.2 Trillion By 2025
Market Watch
Weaving A Sustainable Future
Brinda Gill talks to Ashita Singhal, awardwinning weaver, designer and social entrepreneur, and founder, Paiwand Studio, who is committed to converting textile waste into new, meaningful textiles.
Summer of 2022
Heer Kothari walks our eager onlookers through the runways of New York, Milan and Paris, exploring the nuance of summer styling for men in 2022
Journeying for the Joth
Brinda Gill drafts the interesting journey of Vinay Narkar, a textile designer and revivalist based in Solapur, spared no effort in the pursuit of joth, one of the lost weaves of Maharashtra, and reviving it.
Go Digital - Get Organised Reshamandi Style!
Heer Kothari explores India’s first and largest market-place, digitising the natural textile supply chain. It is a full stack ecosystem in the form of a super app, starting from farm to fashion.
Erotissch – Stitching differently
Chitra Balasubramaniam explores Erotissch, a brand by women for women, based on the concept of ‘Bed to street wear'.
Colourful Fable
A. DAS interviews Karan Torani to find out the inspiration behind the designs of his label Torani and his thoughts on it being widely welcomed and connected well.
Going #PLUS
Heer Kothari explores the growth of the Plus Size apparel segment in India.
Endorsing Desi Oon
Brinda Gill discovers India’s indigenous wools, locally called Desi Oon, which hold potential for use in the apparel industry