Bags of used clothing await recycling at the Eileen Fisher factory in Irvington, N.Y. (Vincent Tullo / Washington Post)
It's
back-to-school time, which means the advertisements are everywhere:
Buy! Buy! Buy! Pencils and gadgets. Backpacks and sneakers. And, yes,
heaps and piles of brand new clothes.
But
this year, those ads are running up against another powerful message,
resounding from such big brands as Eileen Fisher and Patagonia, along
with a growing cadre of smaller thrift and resale shops: Let's make do,
reuse, recycle.
Fast-fashion
trends, driven by consumer taste and innovations in textile
manufacturing, have overstuffed American closets. Clothes shopping has
emerged as a weekly habit, and people are constantly clearing out and
buying new.
It's
a big problem. In 2019, Americans will throw away more than 35 billion
pounds of textiles, according to the Council for Textile Recycling.
That's nearly twice as much as in 1999.
It's more important than ever, environmental advocates say, to keep that clothing out of landfills.
"We're
trying to take responsibility," said Eileen Fisher, whose eponymous
fashion brand buys back its garments from customers at $5 each and
reworks the material into new merchandise, under its Renew brand, at
factories in Irvington, N.Y., and Seattle. It bought back its millionth
garment in May. Fisher lives near the former printing warehouse in
Irvington that the company converted into its Renew sewing factory. She
walked through its intake center, wearing a gray and white kimono coat
made from patches of Eileen Fisher clothing scraps that were turned into
felt.
At
an early stage in her 34-year-old company, Fisher said she and her
co-workers grew alarmed at the environmental toll of clothing
manufacturing, such as depleted farm fields and dye pollution in rivers.
Her company's reuse efforts have expanded into its Circular by Design
mission, in which today's clothes become tomorrow's raw materials.
"We
need to move from a use-and-discard economy to a reuse economy," she
said. Her company’s remade clothes are specially tagged and sold in
Eileen Fisher stores, pop-up shops and several Nordstrom locations. A
$250 jacket gets a second life at $90. "As manufacturers, we want to
treasure the resources we're using, to make clothing that lasts and can
be repurposed. We want customers to value our clothes."
Patagonia,
the Ventura-based outdoor apparel maker, for decades has been a
worldwide leader in this closed-loop system of manufacturing and reuse.
"As
individuals, the best thing we can do for the planet is to buy less and
keep our stuff in use longer," said Rose Marcario, Patagonia's
president and chief executive. "The simple act of extending the life of
our garments through proper care and repair reduces the need to buy more
over time."
It's
estimated that the global textile industry uses 98 million tons of
resources a year, chiefly water and energy. Fabric dyes have polluted
major rivers in India, Bangladesh, China and other countries. The plight
of underpaid workers producing fast fashion in unsafe factories has
sparked outrage after being documented in documentaries and books.
The
large and ambitious buyback, repair and repurpose operations signal a
fundamental shift in consumers' relationship with clothing.
One
vision of the future works like this: Brands manage the products they
make after consumers use them. Consumers buy garments with the idea of
keeping them as long as possible, and then the brand repairs and resells
them. If garments are too damaged to be donated or resold, they will be
"upcycled" into new clothing or recycled into fibers. So, for instance,
a favorite shirt may one day provide the fiber that insulates a home.
Or the fabric of a sofa. A garment might have six or seven life cycles.
Repurposing
"can be made into a business that's profitable," Fisher said, noting
that her company's Renew operation brings in $3 million of the company's
$450 million in annual sales.
To
amplify the philosophy that resource stewardship can be profitable, the
Eileen Fisher company is an active member of Business for Innovative
Climate and Energy Policy and the American Sustainable Business Council,
joining like-minded ventures such as Nike, Seventh Generation and
Starbucks. "We don't want sustainability to be our edge," Fisher said.
"We want it to be universal."
‘Waste can be art’
At
its huge service center in Reno, Patagonia houses a repair facility
where 70 full-time employees replace zippers, patch rips and renew and
return items that customers may have bought decades ago. The company's
Worn Wear program, begun in 2005, includes cute clapboarded rigs that
make regular tours to U.S. college campuses and ski resorts and to
international locations, teaching customers how to repair items.
Shoppers can sell used Patagonia items in good condition back to the
company and buy "certified, pre-owned" Patagonia gear at discounted
prices online.
To
further the cause, Cynthia Power, facilities manager for Eileen
Fisher's Renew, is kept busy showing other clothing manufacturers how
its 40 employees mend, overdye, resew or felt (a way of processing
fabric) bought-back silk, wool, cashmere and cotton.
"This
is where our industry is going," Power said, watching as head designer
Carmen Gama pinned a jumpsuit for Renew's fall 2019 line using fabric
from five pairs of used black jeans. The recycled textiles also are
turned into wall hangings, pillows, coats, vests and kimono jackets.
"Waste
can be art," Eileen Fisher designing artist Sigi Ahl said. The pillows
are sold at ABC Home stores, and a Paris gallery sells the wall art.
Both types of product were displayed in June at the American Institute
of Architects' sustainable exhibit at the Javits Center in New York.
The
Renew program also studies fiber wear and clothing-construction
techniques to generate performance data — such as how well a particular
material held up — that it puts on Excel spreadsheets, Fisher said. The
information "inspires the main fashion line" to do better, she said.
Todd
Copeland, Patagonia's environmental responsibility manager, said the
company — a founding member of the Sustainable Apparel Coalition — has
long turned yarns made from plastic bottles into fleece, for example,
and made fabric from plant fibers such as eucalyptus.
He
said Patagonia has relationships with at least 85 finished goods
factories in 17 countries, at least 150 material suppliers in 25
countries and at least 200 farms, and the company examines them all for
business capability, quality, environmental impact and social impact.
He said the efforts help the company: "Customers are looking for a brand with values that resonate with them."
Resale shops are multiplying
It's
back-to-school time, and Kidding Around, a children's resale shop in
Clive, Iowa, has been hopping for weeks. July, August and September are
the store's busiest months, and there is brisk turnover of the 18,000
secondhand clothing items for sale.
The
4,000-square-foot store outside Des Moines is open seven days a week. A
staff of nine keeps up with the flow of garments coming in and going
out. Parents drop off lightly worn clothing and never-worn garments —
"new with tags," in resale parlance — and receive cash or store credit.
The appeal of resale?
"People
have so much stuff it's unbelievable," owner Diane Fitzgerald said.
"And they like the concept that they can reuse and recycle their items."
The
number of thrift, consignment and resale businesses has exploded in
recent years, growing 7% annually, according to trade association
figures.
Online,
a new crop of resale shops such as ThredUp and Vinted has emerged, as
well as internet-only sales platforms sponsored by traditional thrifts
such as Goodwill and the Salvation Army. These time-honored nonprofits
face increased competition because of the nationwide expansion of
for-profit chains such as Clothes Mentor, Buffalo Exchange and Plato's
Closet.
Clothing rental companies such as Rent the Runway, another form of recycling, have also been booming.
Now, one out of six Americans shops for resale clothing. But only about 15% of clothing in the U.S. is recycled.
‘Rethinking consumerism’
At
a textiles summit in New York in October, Ben Rose, representing the
city's Sanitation Department, disclosed a stunning figure. Each year, on
the day of the New York City Marathon, runners shed as much as 100 tons
of clothing. His department places collection bins inside apartment
buildings. Most of the textile waste it collects goes to salvage and is
turned into such products as wiping cloths, auto insulation and carpet
padding.
Worldwide,
less than 1% of the material used to produce clothes is eventually
recycled, according to an Ellen MacArthur Foundation report. The waste
causes major environmental damage and the annual loss of about $100
billion of potentially useful textiles that are burned or buried in
landfills.
Some
industries are stepping up. Airlines such as Southwest, Jet Blue, Delta
and KLM are recycling uniforms, blankets and cushion fabrics, which are
turned into totes, luggage tags and stuffed animals.
Unlike
recent changes in the food industry, where restaurants and corporations
responded to consumer demands for more healthful food, much of the
initiative on fighting textile waste is coming from forward-thinking
clothing companies and industry associations.
The
summit in New York on innovations in textile manufacturing, waste
reduction and reuse brought together a large roster of groups working on
the problem, including the Product Stewardship Institute, Textile
Recovery, the New York State Pollution Prevention Institute and the New
York Product Stewardship Council.
College
students have been early adopters of the waste-reduction issue. A
campus-based nonprofit, the Post-Landfill Action Network, has chapters
at about 100 universities across North America. The group promotes
plastic-free campuses, food recovery and composting programs, efforts to
salvage items students discard when they move out at the end of the
year, and campus thrift stores.
"It's
a young people's movement," said Ahl, the designing artist at Eileen
Fisher. "They're rethinking consumerism. Just like in fast food, things
must change."
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