Posted on 01/19/2008 5:15:09 AM PST by Bluestateredman
Bamboo undergarments: How climate change is beginning to alter our apparel.
TagsClimate Change, Environment, Fashion, Green Its hard to imagine a shiny Mary Jane slipper or a faded cotton hoodie having grave impact on the planet. But experts insist that what we wear from the way its made to the way its cleaned can be a factor in global warming.
People think of fashion as the stuff you buy and wear, said Jo Paoletti, a University of Maryland professor who studies clothing trends. But its an entire process from the raw material to the making of fibers into yarns and then into fabrics, to manufacturing them into clothing and transporting it to where its sold. There are energy costs all along the way.
For example, 96 percent of clothing worn in the U.S. is produced elsewhere mostly in Asia, in fact, where the population crisis is of more immediate concern than Westerners greenhouse-gas woes.
And energy expenses dont stop once the garment reaches consumers. A study by the Institute for Manufacturing at Cambridge University found that 60 percent of the greenhouse gases generated over the life of a simple T-shirt comes from the typical 25 washings and machine dryings. A typical washing machine emits 160 pounds of carbon dioxide each year. A clothes dryer puffs out 700 pounds. And thats not even taking into account the environmental toxins used in traditional dry cleaning.
But while scientists monitor how our clothing affects the climate, trend-watchers are more interested in the reverse: how climate change is beginning to alter our apparel.
Grumblings began last fall, when Manhattan retailers walloped by an unseasonably warm autumn reported distressingly poor sales of winter coats.
There is no strong difference between summer and winter anymore, Milan Fashion Week founder Beppe Modenese told The New York Times in September. The whole fashion system will have to change.
In fact, it is changing in surprising ways. Bargain chains like Target and Kohls have hired climate experts to help them decide what to buy and when. Chicago-based company Live It Green offers Carbon Neutral Clothing certification to manufacturers who commit to buying carbon offsets for every garment sold. And on Amazon.com, you can already buy climate-conscious skivvies: underwear made of sustainably harvested bamboo and new super-textile Ingeo, a man-made fiber spun from 100 percent renewable resources.
Couture designers, in particular, are making use of earth-friendly fibers. The luxury eco label by Los Angeles-based Linda Loudermilk boasts dresses made of wood pulp and recycled soda bottles and blouses made of sasawashi, which, in addition to being fun to say, is an anti-allergen blend of Japanese paper, herbs, vitamins and amino acids.
Loudermilk encourages her customers including celebs Debra Messing and Jennifer Beals to wear your conviction in style! But in the fickle and frivolous fashion industry, it can be hard to distinguish the genuine eco-crusaders from brands just trying to make a buck off the green-is-the-new-black trend. And a glance at garment labels isnt much help.
A label can tell you a shirt is polyester, but many consumers dont know polyester is made from oil, Paoletti said. A label can tell you the shirt is 100 percent USDA organic cotton, but that claim doesnt tell the whole story: What about the dyes and finishes used in the shirt?
Labeling will change, she predicts, as consumers demand to know more about the history of their jeans and jackets. She also envisions a rise in the popularity of fabrics like cashmere and seersucker that keep us warmer in winter and cooler in summer.
In the future, she said, smart clothing that monitors and adjusts to body temperature may help us reduce our need for air conditioning and heating.
High-tech garb is already available in the form of body-scanning technology that guarantees a custom fit for suits and gowns.
You put on a body suit and walk into some sort of cubicle that does laser imaging of your body, said John Jacob, a professor of fashion design at West Virginia University. That info feeds into a computer that generates a set of patterns based on your unique body dimensions. The benefit to the biosphere is that nothing is produced that isnt already purchased.
As landfills amass millions of tons of clothing annually, and as thrift stores are swamped with the castoffs of our hyperconsumption, experts say the best way to reduce our planetary impact isnt by changing outfits. Its by overhauling our attitudes.
Shakespeare wrote fashion wears out more apparel than the man, and that phrase is even truer today! Paoletti said. The pace of fashion change is much, much more rapid now than it was even 100 years ago.
But a growing slow fashion movement, taking its cue from the slow food philosophy, is encouraging folks to buy higher-quality clothing that lasts longer, saving resources at every point in a garments life cycle.
What if you only had half the wardrobe but everything in it was something you really, really loved? Paoletti posited. No regrets, nothing superfluous.
Theres one thing she says we should dispose of, though: the hope of a perfect solution.
Youre never going to reduce your carbon footprint to zero, really. I mean, youre here, she said. And being naked really isnt an option.
Starshine
Wow! Thread successfully hijacked!
:^)
“apply for another card”
Just to be clear to all the Freepers out there, my advise in post 37 was meant for all concerned with limiting your carbon-footprint. Very small changes in your life-style can have a huge impact on the environment. Saving one toilet flush per day saves; the energy used to pump the water to your house, reduces the sewage treatment plant work load and saves water used to propel the waste in the sewage system.
:^)
Cool, huh?
All your Glock global-warming panty holsters are belong to us.
Series, sometimes we need a little levity around here.
I don't know the setting or the individuals involved, but the response that flashed through my mind is, "Would you say that if the people you are willing to starve were white?"
Clothing affects climate?????
For most sane people, climate affects what they wear! It’s 10 degrees this morning. These people are morons.
I goofed! I took your advice and washed all my underwear.........stepped outside to hang them to dry but forgot its only 17 degrees right now.
For some reason a Seinfeld episode comes to mind....
“only 17 degrees right now”
OK, then drying inside just for a month or so will add humidity to the indoor air and show visitors how committed you are to the cause of “improving global warming”.
Yea but for today, I have to go outside shopping wearing wet underwear........
What was I thinking, I have a clothes dryer........
Let’s see, it was 20 degrees this morning in the high desert, from what I see on the weather channel it is cold and snowing in the east. It is as if there has never been a change in weather or climate throughout the planet, it has to be mankind causing any little change. It all has to do with conceit and narcissism.
Mid-East suffers rare cold snap (Paging Al Gore)
Global Warming on Free Republic
Wouldn't that release water vapor an even more dangerous GHG than CO2? #######
Check out #3, Landru. I’d say Thackney has made a pretty convincing case. Although I'm not quite sure where we go from here...What say you? ;^)
Actually my wife does dry a lot of our clothes inside during the winter for that reason. Right now my indoor humidity sensor says 32% so every little bit helps.
At least, not if you're Helen Thomas.
The only problem is you have to break them in yourself....
HA!!
Aye, that he (?) does. :^)
"Although I'm not quite sure where we go from here...What say you?"
Hmmmmm, lemme look into my crystal ball.
Into the near future I search.
Ahhhh yes, I see women -- all kinds of women.
There're panties too, all colors of panties & it LOOKS like nanotechnology is all the fad.
Things will never be any hotter.
...my friend. ;^)
>”it LOOKS like nanotechnology is all the fad.”<
Haaaahaa! yup.;^)
“A typical washing machine emits 160 pounds of carbon dioxide each year. A clothes dryer puffs out 700 pounds.”
That’s 860 pounds of CO2. Which I can then sell to a greenhouse (makes the plants grow better).
Or, maybe I should start up a CO2 credits scam.
Force all greenhouses, all farmers to pay for the extra CO2.
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