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Fashion Forward: How Climate Change Will Affect What We Wear
Miller-McCune via Drudge ^ | 1/18/108 | Starshine Roshell

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 It’s 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 it’s made to the way it’s 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 it’s 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 it’s 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 don’t 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 that’s 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 Kohl’s 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 isn’t much help.

“A label can tell you a shirt is polyester, but many consumers don’t know polyester is made from oil,” Paoletti said. “A label can tell you the shirt is 100 percent USDA organic cotton, but that claim doesn’t 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 isn’t 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 isn’t by changing outfits. It’s 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 garment’s 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.”

There’s one thing she says we should dispose of, though: the hope of a perfect solution.

“You’re never going to reduce your carbon footprint to zero, really. I mean, you’re here,” she said. “And being naked really isn’t an option.”

Starshine


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: agw; climatechange; clothing; fashion; globalwarming; green; manbearpig; recycling
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To: Bluestateredman
Good God. Even the most rabid global warming alarmists don't actually claim that the seasons will noticeably change, at least for another century.
21 posted on 01/19/2008 5:57:20 AM PST by The Pack Knight (Duty, Honor, Country.)
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To: TLI

I woke up to 18 degrees here in San Angelo. This after a summer in which, for the first time in over twenty years, we never saw 100 degrees. Algore, where’s my global warming? I could use some about now.


22 posted on 01/19/2008 5:59:11 AM PST by barkeep (Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc)
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To: BeAllYouCanBe
Oh By-the-way I am claiming 8,500 carbon-credits

Be careful with your spending habits. My carbon-credit-card is already maxed out........

23 posted on 01/19/2008 6:00:03 AM PST by Hot Tabasco
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To: WorkingClassFilth
The clown that analyzed the life-cycle of the T-shirt was a hoot, too. Life span washings by this expert’s count was 25 cycles. I’ll bet I have underwear older than this environmental expert - and mine is worn once and washed 52 times a year.

You beat me to it.

But on a serious note, if this is the way the carbon footprint baseline is calculated, the only clear solution is to become democrats and stop washing our underwear. The hidden agenda of the Algorites is becoming clear.

24 posted on 01/19/2008 6:02:03 AM PST by sphinx
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To: thackney

I can’t wait for 2010....


25 posted on 01/19/2008 6:04:52 AM PST by reg45
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To: thackney

That is hard to dispute.


26 posted on 01/19/2008 6:07:29 AM PST by SampleMan
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To: VermiciousKnid

“clean jeans that don’t say, “Hey! I think I’m a gangbanger who wants everyone to see my undies,”

Yep, it seems like all the girls look like ho’s with tube-tops and the boys wear their pants around their thighs at the local high school. When I was in high school if you didn’t have a belt on then the “office” made you wear a rope for that day and a note home to your parents.


27 posted on 01/19/2008 6:08:58 AM PST by BeAllYouCanBe (Until Americans love their own children more than they love Nancy Pelosi this suicide will continue.)
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To: VermiciousKnid; BeAllYouCanBe

LL Bean had fleece and flannel lined jeans in the last catalog I received. Toasty! Don’t have to worry about droopy, ripped, ragged, worn look with them either. They are built for a purpose! :)

OH OH OH!!! I figured I should look to make sure they still carried them before posting, and guess what!!!! The flannel ones are even on sale (the fleece ones might be too...I didn’t see them...I stopped looking when I saw sale)!!! How cool is that?!


28 posted on 01/19/2008 6:10:16 AM PST by Cailleach
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To: stevie_d_64
You bring up a good point that the the GW crowd has of yet failed to have hysteria over. If the planet becomes a sauna, then Antarctica will become a “new” frontier. Countries will fight for it and settlers will put the penguins onto reservations.

Let’s get this one into circulation fast.

29 posted on 01/19/2008 6:10:46 AM PST by SampleMan
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To: Bluestateredman

It’s three degrees here this morning—I think a real winter coat is defintiely in order. From Kansas. Not silly NYC.


30 posted on 01/19/2008 6:11:01 AM PST by yldstrk (My heros have always been cowboys--Reagan and Bush)
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To: BeAllYouCanBe
Mrs. BeAllYouCanBe noticed that my jeans were getting ragged and we went to Kohls to get some new ones. Every pair on the rack was more ragged that my 5-6 year-old ones that I was wearing. On every pair knees were rotted out, back pockets had holes — and these were new jeans. Then we looked at shirts - they were all worn out too.

Go to Tractor Supply. They sell new clothes.

31 posted on 01/19/2008 6:12:34 AM PST by SampleMan
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To: Bluestateredman
“There is no strong difference between summer and winter anymore,”

Really you little dim wit? Maybe if you spend your summers in New York and your winters in Miami.

For the rest of us there is a strong difference. A eighty degree difference.

32 posted on 01/19/2008 6:15:51 AM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (A good marriage is like a casserole, only those responsible for it really know what goes into it.)
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To: Bluestateredman

My elk-fleece lined slippers from cabelas are very comfortable./Just Asking - seoul62........


33 posted on 01/19/2008 6:16:23 AM PST by seoul62
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To: thackney
Photobucket
34 posted on 01/19/2008 6:16:38 AM PST by Cobra64 (www.BulletBras.net)
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To: Cobra64

Nice Glock!


35 posted on 01/19/2008 6:21:33 AM PST by BenLurkin
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To: Bluestateredman

36 posted on 01/19/2008 6:25:00 AM PST by BenLurkin
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To: Hot Tabasco

“My carbon-credit-card is already maxed out.”

Well, you’ll just have to earn more. You could ride your bike to work for the next week and maybe wash your clothes by hand in the sink — in cold water — without detergent — dry outside.

Also, to get a really big bump in earnings you could eat all your food raw to save on hydrocarbon food heating.


37 posted on 01/19/2008 6:30:27 AM PST by BeAllYouCanBe (Until Americans love their own children more than they love Nancy Pelosi this suicide will continue.)
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To: sphinx
The core philosophies are also emerging. That is, Deep Green ideology leads the inevitable conclusions that nothing we do as humans is not detrimental to Gaia - Mother Earth. Of course, Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) is a favorite tool of the left because it allows only for the debit side of economic calculations - hence, everything is bad if you wish it to be. The glaring error, of course, is that LCA doesn't recognize the immense benefit of products and processes in both the economic or social spheres.

Take input farming for instance. Long a favorite hobby horse for environmental causes, the 'studies' showing the environmental degradation as byproducts of modern farming a legion. The simple fact that billions (as in B-I-L-L-I-O-N-S) are alive and/or have significantly better health or lives doesn't enter into the calculus of predetermined environment dogma. Norman Borlaug himself (the Father of the 'Green Revolution') always maintained that the critical thing was to feed people and, secondly, to resolve pollution effects from the primary process. To this end, modern ag practice has consistently produced more food from less land every year, and it has been done with smaller environmental consequences.

In a symposium on Environmental issues a few years ago, I asked one of my fellow panelists what conversion to the ballyhooed organic system would mean to the estimated 20 million people in sub-Saharan Africa that would starve since organic practices are not sustainable in that region (biomass inputs, etc.). The answer? "They'll make good shoe leather."

The people that form and lead environmental movements on mass scales know exactly what they intend to do - kill people.
38 posted on 01/19/2008 6:31:28 AM PST by WorkingClassFilth
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To: BeAllYouCanBe
wash your clothes by hand in the sink — in cold water — without detergent — dry outside.

Uh, I think I'll just apply for another card.......

39 posted on 01/19/2008 6:34:16 AM PST by Hot Tabasco
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To: Bluestateredman

Polar bear overcoats are going to make a comeback ...


40 posted on 01/19/2008 6:36:01 AM PST by Tarpon (Ignorance, the most expensive commodity produced by mankind.)
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