Slow Fashion Season under way

Slow Fashion Season is under way once more! If you missed it last year, it's a way to help avoid buying fast fashion – you pledge not to buy from fast fashion brands. Vintage and secondhand is fine, home made is fine, and this year because of the impact of covid-19 they're okay with buying from small, local, sustainable fashion labels (handy if you've been eyeing up any Black-owned small fashion brands in the light of Black Lives Matter).

I've signed up, though I am slightly regretting it, because after months in lockdown I am very fed up of my clothes, not helped by the fact that a lot of mine don't fit too well right now thanks to the lockdown weight gain, so the joy I was taking in trying things on for the first time in ages has waned rather. However if a challenge is easy, would it really be a challenge? And to be honest, I don't think I want new clothes so much as a change. After all these weeks, we're probably all ready for something different, even if it's just a trip to a different town. Travelling's not likely to happen, of course, so I'm just going to have to get the machine out and sew more!

If you fancy joining in Slow Fashion Season, click on the link at the start of the first paragraph.

Comments

  1. I signed up too, finding it a doddle last year, as I hardly ever buy fast fashion anyway. It's good that they are now making exception for small sustainable fashion brands, though. I think that should have been the case last year as well, as these are not fast fashion in my book. xxx

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    1. Yes.

      There's been a big scandal here in the UK as lockdown has highlighted the appalling conditions in clothing factories here. I really hope people start paying more attention to how the people who make clothes are treated globally.

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  2. Look forward to seeing what you make, Mim!

    Take care
    xxx

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    1. Hopefully a 60s-looking tie-shouldered top... we'll have to see how it comes out!

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  3. I didnt know! I work in a Vintage/ second hand store in harajuku. And I am always picking up peices there, plus the Japanese women are tiny so, I tend to stick to men’s styles or grab the trousers and dress before they get altered so they fit their tiny waists. I try hard. But when you see a peice that you know that you fit you you grab it!

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    Replies
    1. Oh that must be such an amazing place to work - Harajuku's *the* place for Japanese street style, isn't it?

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