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It ain't fashion, if it ain't sustainable
texfash.com
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Rana Plaza @ 10 / Fast Fashion

29 April 2023

5 minutes
Rana Plaza disaster anniversary action on Oxford Street I Campaigners form a human chain on Oxford Street, London, to call on retailers to pay up outstanding compensation to victims of the Rana Plaza factory collapse, and to ensure better safety in their Bangladeshi factories.

The Industry’s Many Moving Pieces Make It Easy to Cut Corners

Garments traverse a complex global supply network by the time they reach stores thousands of miles away. Workers are caught in this web, exploited by factory management. Western brands escape the scrutiny of their governments by outsourcing production to low-cost countries and absolve themselves of direct responsibility. This complex system makes it hard to assign ethical responsibility, because everyone, and therefore no one, is guilty.

By
  • Ravi Anupindi
Commentary
Rana Plaza @ 10 / Fast Fashion

28 April 2023

4 minutes
Rana plaza commemoration - Who made my clothes | April 22nd 2015 | In the Rana Plaza aftermath, the building’s owner, factory bosses and the Bangladesh government were blamed. But the spotlight was also shone on the fast fashion phenomenon. The workers and factory owners were under intense pressure to meet relentless production deadlines for clothing brands around the world, and do so at minimum cost.

A Decade after Rana Plaza Disaster, New Zealanders Still Rely on Fast Fashion

Multilateral government oversight of working conditions (at the point of production) combined with further regulations encouraging ethical supply chains (at the point of import), may be a more effective way to reduce the chances of another Rana Plaza.

By
  • Mike Lee
Commentary
Rana Plaza @ 10 / Worker Rights

27 April 2023

5 minutes
The Rana Plaza tragedy shed a light on the appalling conditions that sometimes exist in the global retail supply chain. Wealthy countries have unveiled lots of initiatives in the ensuing years to make things better. Unfortunately, the situation has not improved.

Ten Years after the Bangladesh Factory Collapse, We Are No Closer to Fixing Modern Slavery

What is needed is an international watchdog that puts more pressure on retailers to treat their supply chains fairly is an essential part of the puzzle. Until a regime is in place with genuine teeth to ensure retailers toe the line, the modern slavery behind high-street fashions will only continue.

By
  • Muhammad Azizul Islam
Commentary
Officewear / Women

18 April 2023

4 minutes
Matthias Zeitler / Pixabay

Deciding What to Wear to Work Isn’t Getting Any Easier For Women

Women still have some way to go in terms of perceptions of their work being based on their appearance. A continued shift in attitudes, not just corporate clothing, is still needed.

By
  • Lucy Newton
  • Victoria Barnes
Commentary
Made in India / Natural Dyes

18 April 2023

7 minutes
The late Ann Shankar, a keen student of textile history, visited libraries in Mumbai, Kolkata and Delhi and in England to compile a list of over 500 plants that had been recorded by the British botanists, whose parts were used as textile dyes. During this study, she was aghast to learn that her direct ancestor, the first Governor-General of India, had ordered this study in order to transfer the intellectual property of Indian dyers to England. She used her inheritance to support BioDye when it was started.

Synthetic Dyes are Designed to be Recalcitrant, With Most Being Non-Biodegradable

As the textile-apparel-fashion industry oscillates from greenwashing to greenhushing and greenblushing, a critical component of the backend is the dye. While it is becoming increasingly critical for manufacturers to shift to natural dyes, what also needs to be done is make them as popular as their synthetic counterparts and educate the customer about their basic goodness, mechanise dyeing and grow more raw materials so as to reduce the cost of the dyed product.

By
  • Richa Bansal
Interview
Exclusive
Microfibre Pollution / Washers

18 April 2023

5 minutes
The White Paper calls for legislation from immediate effect to mandate washing machine filters to ensure the biggest and most immediate impact on microplastic pollution.

Filters Only Effective, Near-Term Solution to Microfibre Shedding: Industry White Paper

The call to reduce shedding of microfibres got stronger as A Plastic Planet, a pro-business, pro-solutions organisation, exhorts policymakers to mandate filters in new washing machines as the only effective, near-term solution to reduce the release of microplastics in the environment.

By
  • Special Correspondent
Report
Microfibre Pollution / Thames

17 April 2023

4 minutes
The most common colours found throughout this study were blue, black, red and transparent, which is consistent with the microplastics found when assessing pollution caused by New Year fireworks in London or the particles found in the stomachs of fish in the Thames.

Lockdown Saw 77% Rise in Thames Microplastics; Reasons: Face Masks, PPE

A research has found that although there was a 34% decrease in microplastics from pre-COVID levels in the Thames River during lockdown one, levels rose by 77% during the second in late 2020.

By
  • Ria Devereux
Report
Made in India / Natural Dyes

17 April 2023

6 minutes
BioDye can dye most of the Pantone shades and meet the fastness criteria too. Their natural dyed textiles can compete with synthetic dyes in range and performance.

Leaves, Roots, Tea Dust, Madder & More to Make Natural Dyes at BioDye are Self-Certified

While the world scours for makers of natural dyes, here’s someone in India quietly greening the planet one step at a time in a low volume, high value business. The textile-apparel-fashion industry may stand up and take note, not just to source earth-friendly dyes but also pitch in with funding to help them do more for the people and the environment. texfash.com talks to the Co-Founder-Director of BioDye India Pvt Ltd, Dr Bosco MA Henriques, to bring you his voice from the Konkan region of the Western Ghats.

By
  • Richa Bansal
Interview
Exclusive
Khadi Rights / Court Battles

13 April 2023

6 minutes
The KVIC is a statutory body established in 1956 by an Act of Parliament, and is charged with the planning, promotion, organisation and implementation of programmes for the development of khadi and other village industries in India's rural areas in coordination with other agencies engaged in rural development wherever necessary. Khadi is a hand-spun and woven natural fibre cloth promoted by Mohandas K Gandhi as swadeshi (self-sufficiency) for the freedom struggle of the Indian subcontinent.

What’s Khadi and What’s Not: Indian Handloom Remains Entangled in Legal Brawls

In a landmark victory for the Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC), the Delhi High Court has passed an interim order restraining two private entities from using the ‘khadi’ mark.

By
  • Subir Ghosh
Commentary
The Observer
Textile History / Peanut Wool

10 April 2023

4 minutes
From mid-1930s onwards, William Astbury, along with his collaborators Albert Chibnall and Kenneth Bailey, filed patents on a process that used solvents such as urea to unravel the precise 3D shape of proteins found in seeds – like the peanut.

The Man in the Monkey Nut Coat: How a 1940s Scientist Made ‘Vegan Wool’ from Peanuts

Is it time for a posthumous nomination for Peta's just launched US$1 million vegan wool challenge to find the first individual, group, or company that can create a vegan wool material that is “visually, textually and functionally akin to or better than sheep’s wool?

By
  • Kersten Hall
Feature

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  • With sustainability as its underlying watchword, the texfash.com approach is incisive, fact-based and research-driven journalism that is beholden only to the planet and its people.
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