Why Slow Fashion is the Only Choice for Sustainable Fashion Clothing
‘Slow fashion’ is the current buzzword – and the opposite of fast fashion. Fast fashion retailers like Zara and H&M flood the market with low-quality clothing. They sell garments for people to wear only a few times until an influencer or pop star sets a new trend.
As people buy fashion they only use a few times before discarding it, global landfills are full of discarded ‘slow fashion’ items, which has a devastating effect on the environment.
Sustainability is an equally important buzzword, so many savvy consumers and designers in the fashion industry have become aware of creating sustainability practices for non-fast fashion garments that will withstand the test of time. They create timeless, classic ‘slow fashion’ garments that don't harm the planet.
Thus, biodegradable and ethical, sustainable fashion has become another important trend. Slow fashion trends focus on reducing the amount of unethical fashion that manufacturers produce in bucketloads.
Read what we have to say about The Problem With Fast Fashion: How the Fashion Industry is Damaging the Environment.
Slow Fashion Clothing is Ethical Fashion
Slow fashion is, in essence, sustainable clothing. Slow fashion UK brand manufacturers produce high quality garments.
The ‘slow fashion’ trend follows on the heels of the slow food movement, created in 1986 by Italian Carlo Petrini. The ‘slow food’ movement focused on educating the public about fast food and promoting local food cultures and traditions instead.
In the same vein as the fast food movement, slow fashion is suggesting we buy more biodegradable garments and avoiding fast fashion consumption.
Sustainable or ‘slow fashion’ advocates creating and selling a fashion brand that will withstand the test of time. To manufacture slow fashion brands, companies use biodegradable materials that are long-lasting and designed more classically, to withstand the latest trends. This way, the clothing lasts longer than the current 5-minute trends advocated by fast fashion.
Manufacturers producing eco-friendly fashion brands are manufacturing slow fashion items with a much lower environmental impact that won’t end up in landfills.
Many people discard their old clothes. But if you considered being more sustainable, you would think about recycling your ‘slow fashion’ items and reusing them. After all, the material used to make these items is long-wearing and of a higher quality than fast fashion items. Popular eco-friendly brand textile choices include organic cotton, linen, and Tencel.
What are Slow Fashion Clothes?
Not only do manufacturers make more environmentally safe fashion brands out of eco-friendly raw materials, but they also produce sustainable fashion:
· Brand factories dye the fabrics and print on them using eco-friendly methods that utilise far less energy and water.
· They use fewer chemicals in the manufacturing process.
· Manufacturers consider the environment when they produce a ‘slow fashion’ brand so that there is little, or very little waste. These manufacturers also treat their workers well and offer them a clean, safe working environment.
· ‘Slow fashion’ is clothing that factories don't mass-produce: manufacturers create sustainable fashion clothing in small batches to reduce waste and ensure good quality control; this is very important in the ‘slow fashion’ business.
· Sustainable garments are long-lasting as they are of good quality and manufacturers make them using excellent materials.
The Emergence of Sustainable Slow Fashion Clothing Brands
Nobody used the term ‘slow fashion brand’ until way back in 2007, when Kate Fletcher, Professor of Sustainable Fashion at the London College of Fashion came up with the term and started a fashion revolution.
A professor, activist, and designer, she reacted to the effects fast fashion is having on the planet. In an article she wrote for The Ecologist back in 2007, she defined fast fashion as emphasising quality over quantity. "People use traditional craftsmanship techniques to create long-lasting clothing”, she said.
Sustainable clothes are not based on time, but quality, she continued. “Slow is not the opposite of fast – there is no dualism – but a different approach where designers, buyers, retailers, and consumers are more aware of the impacts products have on workers, communities, and ecosystems.”
Sure, fashion that is not sustainable is a lot cheaper, but as Ms Fletcher explains: “Of course, quality costs more. We will buy fewer products, but ones that are higher in value. A fairer distribution of the ticket price through the supply chain is an intrinsic part of the agenda.
"...More sustainable design enables a richer interaction between designer and maker; maker and garment; garment and user.”
The Key Principles of The 'Wear Slow Fashion' Movement
Kate Fletcher’s points, made so long ago, are the gist of more eco-friendly fashion today and followed religiously by many people and businesses like maake, who encourage joining the ‘slow fashion’ movement and using fabrics that are certified sustainable. (Read our guide on textile certification here). As part of today’s sustainable fashion trend, people consider the following:
1. Sustainability: This involves being environmentally aware throughout the lifecycle of a garment, from the moment a business manufactures pieces to when they dye and print on them, design, use, and finally discard them.
2. Fair trade: Involves promoting good fair labour practices in every sphere of the fashion industry. Every business should treat their employees well, give them fair, healthy working conditions and pay them a decent living wage.
3. Local production: Part of being environmentally safe is caring for small local businesses and using locally manufactured materials and resources. Buying locally means that we can reduce carbon emissions created by transporting those items.
4. Quality manufacture: It’s important to emphasise the importance of focusing on good quality over quantity. It’s all about buying fewer high-quality clothes than cheaper fast fashion brands made from poor quality materials.
5. Transparency: Manufacturers and retailers must be transparent about how they make these items, where they make them, and what fabrics they use to make the clothing. That's ‘fast fashion’ versus ‘sustainable fashion’.
The Sustainable Fashion Movement asks you to:
· Choose fashion items that you already have in your wardrobe and keep them for a long time.
· Buy good, gently worn vintage garments to recycle.
· Purchase fewer items less often – selecting quality pieces over quantity for your wardrobe, more sustainable items over fast fashion brands.
· Purchase good quality pieces over quantity.
· Find natural, organic, and environmentally safe fabrics.
How to Adopt Fashion Sustainability
If you shop for quality ‘slow fashion’ clothing that is classic in style, you’re making a conscious decision to buy pieces that will last and withstand fashion trends.
This is the antithesis of fast fashion, which is on trend one day and out of fashion the following week. Fast fashion brands produce low-quality clothes. They make these items mostly out of cheap synthetic materials, cheap labour, and manufacture them unethically.
Sustainable brands fall into a more expensive price range because:
- · Factories manufacture them sustainably.
· They create sustainable fashion clothing from quality natural and organic, environmentally safe materials.
· Local artisans create sustainable fashion with impeccable craftsmanship.
· The sustainable clothes industry wants to be long-lasting.
· Production costs are higher for the eco-friendly fashion industry, which is also why it’s more expensive.
· When we make clothes ethically, we pay our workers decent wages and they work in safe, healthy conditions.
4 Important Questions to Ask About Clothing
Before purchasing any brand, ask yourself these 4 questions to find out whether you are about to spend money on sustainable materials and clothes. If not, follow these tips to choose more eco-friendly brands:
1. Am I buying from a store that sells a quality clothing brand? Fast fashion outlets abound, so be more discerning. Find retailers who offer quality brands with craftmanship involved in their manufacture, or garments made by designers or brands known for their environmentally friendly fashion ethos.
2. Have I read the label and taken note of what it says? Check whether the textile is organic, synthetic, or both. Natural and organic fibres such as cotton, wool, linen, hemp, all create more hard-wearing, comfortable clothing.
3. What will it cost me to clean the garment? Check the washing instructions. If you need to dry clean an item, only purchase it if you will wear it a few times. If you’re planning to wear it regularly, caring for the garment will be expensive.
4. Do I know enough about fashion sustainability to make an informed decision? Do you know which clothing people consider fast fashion, and, in contrast, which are the more environmentally safe fashion brands?
If you’re unsure about fashion sustainability, why not read the comprehensive blog we compiled on fast fashion, The Problem with Fast Fashion. We also put together an explanatory blog on Why Sustainability in Fashion is so Important, which will put details about sustainability into perspective for you.
Help Bring Down Fast Fashion Numbers…
We recently researched some sobering statistics which are worth taking a look at here:
· Statistics in an article in Waste Managed showed that the UK produces the fourth largest amount of textile waste in Europe. We generate approximately 206,456 tonnes every year. And, as further statistics show, it’s expected that by 2050, £140 billion worth of clothes will end up in UK landfills. That’s bad news for the fashion industry.
· Talking of 2050, other stats tell us that by that year, fast fashion will account for 10% of CO2 emissions on a global scale. And manufacturers will use 25% of carbon emissions to make these garments. That’s before people discard those items which then end up in landfills.
Make the Transition to Slow Fashion
Some guidelines on understanding the importance of choosing a biodegradable fashion brand and shifting your mindset:
1. Love what you already have
It’s time to fall in love with your wardrobe and take care of your clothing so that items last a long time. There are several ways to extend the life of your clothes: wash with care, sew on missing buttons, or replace broken zips. Remove stains the moment they happen.
2. Buy second-hand
Discover some second-hand and vintage stores; they are veritable treasure troves of quality, sustainable slow fashion clothes. You’ll often find garments that have never been worn, with their price tags on, because in this era of excess, many of us buy too much and never get around to wearing everything.
Aside from ‘new old clothing’, gently worn garments are cheaper than purchasing quality pieces first-hand. After all, websites like Etsy and Amazon have made a fortune selling used goods to their customers. So check out what they have to offer.
3. Buy British
Support local brands, choose a manufacturer who specialises in eco-friendly fashion for its customers, a sustainable brand that produces quality clothing.
4. Take a sustainable perspective
Consider your wardrobe in a different light. Keep your clothes rather than discarding them. These garments should last; you should be part of the slow fashion movement and wear this type of fashion for years. You should only buy fashion items you love, brands you will cherish in years to come, in a size and style that will suit you.
Think about your clothing from the perspective of more biodegradable fashion. Value your sustainable slow fashion items and the way manufacturers produce these brands. After all, the craftmanship and care taken to produce sustainable and ethical brands are what matters.
Follow our Lead Towards Ethical Production
We are textile manufacturers and printers, and we focus on the supply of sustainable products. We are the winners of the 2023 Awards for Most Ethical Fabric and Best Custom Printing! We focus on creating a sustainable world with seamless custom textile printing and ethical production, and how we produce and supply clothing that we tailor just for you that is created only when you order it. We take slow to heart.
- maake has a zero waste policy – we don’t waste any of the material we print. Instead, we supply local charities, schools and educational establishments with excess fabrics and cut-offs for them to reuse. In addition, we supply our customers with upcycling bags of various sizes, filled with cut-off fabric – free of charge.
- We fit all our printing machines with energy-saving cut-off switches to reduce energy consumption. That’s how we stay sustainable.
- We only use biodegradable inks when we print designs on fabrics.
- We only print what you need to ensure no waste fabrics ever stay on our shelves.
- We don’t resell or restock any printed material that people return to us. Instead, we donate the fabrics or offer them free to our customers – see above.
- We source all our materials ethically from UK-trusted mills. This helps the local economy.
- We believe in local production – we produce your entire order in our NW London mill. If you wish, you can pick up your order to reduce our carbon footprint instead of having us deliver it to you.
Read about our focus on social responsibility here.
Non-Fast Fashion: Sustainable Design & Printing with maake
When you shop with us for fabrics and textile printing, you can also make use of our innovative design tools to assist you be more sustainable. They will also make your products more cost-effective. These include:
- A Sample Book of every fabric we offer, featuring small-size swatches of each fabric to give you an idea each product’s look and feel when we have printed on it.
- A handy Colour Atlas, a 1-metre piece of fabric printed with the 2,400+ colours we use when we print. It clearly displays each colour and its code.
Choose from our wide selection of beautiful fabrics
The best fashion fabrics choices in the UK: we choose the best dress fabric
High Quality Printed Swimwear Fabric Choices: What to Choose for Swimsuit Fabrics
The comprehensive apron guide
Subscribe to our newsletter
Promotions, new products and sales. Directly to your inbox.