From
Fashion and sustainability DK's
Lab (Sustainable Fashion-Issues to be addressed)
Most
of us know what fashion is. Many of us know what sustainability is. But when it
comes to exploring the relationship
between the two, we can very quickly find ourselves on new ground. For the
relationship between fashion and sustainability is active and complex and each
time we look at the key ideas or issues at stake, different aspects seem to
come to light. Sometimes what is emphasized is technical information about
toxic chemicals or working conditions in mills and factories on the other side
of the world. At other times, the fashion and sustainability relationship seems
best understood by looking at what goes on locally: networks of handcrafters;
dyes made from species of plant found only in local hedgerows; our individual
laundering practices.
The
truth is, of course, that sustainable
fashion is all of these and more. It is a celebration of ingenuity, vitality,
care, resourcefulness and strong relationships between us and our world,
expressed in garment form.
These
sustainability values will help shape the future of fashion and give us a
mental picture and sensory way markers about the direction in which we should
head. Part of this "shaping" involves reducing the impact of the
fashion sector as it exists today- and is a massive job. For the production and
consumption of fashion impacts hard on ecosystems, communities, workers and
consumers in a variety of challenging and sometimes surprising ways. Producing
fashion clothes, and the textiles they are made from, is one of the longest and
most complicated industrial chains in manufacturing industry. It starts in fields with the cultivation
of fibre crops like cotton and wool or in chemical plants where fibres like polyester are extracted; and ends up in homes,
on our bodies and in landfill sites
continents away from where they started out. The journey in between involves
the use of lots of labour, water, energy and processing chemicals and produces
waste and pollution.
Indeed
in a recent pollution risk assessment
by the UK's Environment Agency, the fashion and textile industry was rated
worst.
Thus
it makes sense that sustainable fashion activity is underpinned by a deep
awareness of the use of resources and
how these resources are organized to meet people's needs.
Central
to this is "Lifecycle thinking", an approach that sees garments as a
mosaic of inter-connected flows of materials, labour and as potential
satisfiers of needs that move through phases of a garment's life from fibre
cultivation, to processing and transportation
and into garment use, reuse and eventual disposal. Such lifecycle thinking is
inspired principally from the study of ecology, where each part of a system
influences every other, and where overall system effectiveness is prioritized
over the individual parts.
When
fashion is looked at from a lifecycle perspective, what is revealed are
"hotspots" of harmful impact and opportunities for the greatest whole
system improvement. For some (though certainly not all) fashion clothes, these
hotspots of harm are linked to material choices.
Traditional
views of sustainable fashion focus
their attention almost exclusively on materials and their provenance; on
whether fibre is organically grown and fairly traded, or whether materials are
from rapidly renewable sources or from recycled yarn. Today for example over 20
major brands and 1200 smaller ones now sell organic fibre products. Yet for
many other fashion clothes, choice of materials has only limited effect on
overall product sustainability.

In
the case of frequently laundered clothes for instance, the overwhelming hotspot of harm is the use phase of a
garment's life. Here it is our laundering choices, washing, drying and ironing
behaviour and perceptions of cleanliness that have most influence over our
clothes' sustainability.
Yet
these flows of resources are only part of the story. Fashion clothes are much
more than the fibre and chemicals
needed to make them. They are signs and symbols, expressions of culture,
newness and tradition. They link us to time and space and deal with our
emotional needs, manifesting us as social beings, as individuals. Thus
sustainability issues in fashion are as much about cultural, economic and
social phenomena as material and manufacturing ones. They are also about
decadence, consumerism, expression and identity and if sustainability is to
become a real possibility in fashion, then the sector has to work with these
big issues and their difficult implications as well as the more bounded
fibre-specific or production focused ones. For in order to make sustainability
happen in the fashion sector, there needs to be change at many levels: we need
both root and branch reform.