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Choose vintage, avoid stretch: how to wear jeans sustainably

@lee jeans

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Choose vintage, avoid stretch: how to wear jeans sustainably” was written by Tamsin Blanchard, for theguardian.com on Wednesday 5th February 2020 15.04 UTC

Why are jeans so controversial? Is it the estimated 10,000 litres of water needed to grow the cotton for every pair? The dark blue lines of toxic pollution in China’s Pearl River that can be seen from space? The potassium permanganate, widely used to make new jeans look old and distressed, that may cause lung damage in workers? Or is it because there is no guarantee that those workers are paid a living wage, never mind being paid for the overtime they are forced to do?

“The denim industry is at a pivotal moment,” says Roian Atwood, senior director of global sustainable business at Kontoor Brands, which owns Wrangler and Lee, when we met at ART (Art Repair Transform), a denim upcycling and mending workshop at the Copenhagen international fashion last month. Lee are among the 30 brands contributing to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s Jeans Redesign project, a new initiative governing all aspects of jean production from regeneratively farmed fibres to washing and finishing techniques – potassium permanganate, for example, is not allowed. Jeans must be made with rivets and hardware that can easily be removed after the jeans are no longer fit for purpose, allowing them to be recycled into something new. The first products bearing the Jeans Redesign logo will go on sale in the autumn.

The industry is working hard to make itself cleaner and more sustainable, investing in new technology such as the innovative dry foam to dye Lee’s Indigood jeans – the use of water is pretty much eliminated, as well as reducing energy and chemicals and hopefully ending the rivers of toxic blue effluent. Already in operation at three denim mills in Spain, Mexico and India, Lee is also launching “compostable” jeans this spring. “They will fully decompose,” says Atwood. “We believe it will take 200 days.”

Denim upcycling and mending workshop A.R.T at the Copenhagen International Fashion Fair.
Denim upcycling and mending workshop A.R.T at the Copenhagen International Fashion Fair. Photograph: Gio Staiano

There is still a long way to go. According to Atwood, there is “a new and emerging environmental issue we are not quite ready to talk about yet, which is that denim has become integrated with a lot of synthetics. The comfort and the stretch movement, athleisure and the omnipresence of the yoga pant have given rise to a lot more stretch in denim. It’s plastic,” he says. And as such, your skinny jeans are responsible for shedding microplastics.

Appropriately enough, we meet in the “confessional booth” designed for visitors to confess their fashion sins and record them for a podcast. “If we are confessing our sins, I am here to say I like to wear light jeans,” he says. “A dark pair of denim uses less water in the wash-down process.” The lighter the denim, the more washing processes it has been through and the more water it has used.

The designer Duran Lantink, who was commissioned to work with Lee’s deadstock to create a small collection of upcycled denim, wears jeans every day (he switches between two vintage pairs) but is aware of the issues. “I think that, by buying a pre-washed jean, it is ruin in reverse,” he says. “I don’t get that.”

For rent … Mud jeans.
For rent … Mud jeans. Photograph: PR

Lantink is part of a growing band of designers who are not just concerned about the environmental impact of the industry but also its waste. Bethany Williams, who has perfected the art of unpicking and upcycling unwanted jeans, has grown a cult following. Brands such as E.L.V. Denim (short for East London Vintage), which is sold at a range of stockists including Net-a-Porter, are building healthy businesses using secondhand denim as their raw material. “There are more jeans than people in the world,” says founder Anna Foster. At her studio and showroom, clients can choose from off-the-peg or custom-made jeans, ingeniously spliced together a few miles away at the Blackhorse Lane Ateliers in Walthamstow.

But slowing down production is not on the agenda for the big denim brands, who would prefer to cut their environmental impact by reducing water and chemical consumption while continuing to produce at the same levels. However, there are some smart and potentially highly disruptive initiatives coming from smaller independents. Netherlands-based Mud Jeans offers a subscription system that allows you to lease your jeans for €7.50 per month, including free repairs. Once you are finished with your jeans, you send them back and they will be recycled. Hiut Jeans, which has revitalised the denim industry in Cardigan, Wales, makes just 100 pairs of jeans per week. “We are here to try and make the best jeans we can and not the most jeans we can,” it says. It also offer free repairs for life.

How to shop sustainably for jeans

Start with vintage

Whether you are a denim aficionado or a student on a budget, you can find jeans to suit your budget and your style if you shop secondhand.

Raw is best

Raw denim hasn’t been washed and treated multiple times. This is what denim used to look like before we started to sandblast, bleach and rip it to make it look old. Buy a pair of unwashed jeans and let them age with you.

Avoid stretch

Let leggings be leggings and jeans be jeans. One hundred per cent means the denim in your jeans can eventually be recycled.

Look at the label

If you are buying new, check the fabric composition. You might want to do some research online first. Look for recycled cotton, GOTS certified organic cotton, Better Cotton Initiative cotton, or G-Star’s Cradle 2 Cradle Gold certification, which means it is 98% recyclable, 100% organic and uses the minimum amount of water.

Wash cold, if at all

One of the biggest sources of water impact and energy use is during the consumer use phase. Roian Atwood advises a cold wash. Hiut Denim has a No Wash Club.

Repair your jeans

A good pair of jeans can last for decades if you look after them and repair them. Ask your denim brand where you can have your jeans repaired. Levi’s has a number of tailor shops where you can customise or repair jeans. Nudie Jeans offers free repairs for life in their shops or, if you can’t get to one, they will send you a free repair kit. Hiut Jeans also offer free repairs.

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..and the ocean tribute Award 2020 goes to Coral Sea Foundation’s Sea Women of Melanesia

 

 

The Sea Women of Melanesia program wins the 2020 Ocean Tribute Award!

… and the ocean tribute Award 2020 goes to: The Coral Sea Foundation with its project “Sea Women of Melanesia”! With the project Melanesian women are trained in scuba diving & learn marine biology survey techniques. With the prize money, 20 more women can be trained as “Reef Guardians” of their communities and help to establish protected areas at their traditional reefs.

@coralseafoundation.net/seawomenofmelanesia.php; @oceantributeaward.boot.de

The presentation of the third “ocean tribute” Award was celebrated with a (ocean) roaring party on the evening of 20 January at the blue motion night in Hall 6 at boot Düsseldorf boat show. The “Sea Women of Melanesia” were delighted to win this year’s award, which is endowed with 20,000 euros – provided by the Prince Albert II Foundation and boot Düsseldorf.

The award was presented to Marine Conservationist Lucie Guirkinger from the “Coral Sea Foundation” for the “Sea Women of Melanesia” by Borisherrmann, the representative of the Prince Albert Foundation in Germany, Dr. Bernd Kunth and the CEO of the 2020 boot boat fair Werner Matthias Dornscheidt.

In the “Sea Women of Melanesia” project, young, committed Melanesian women from the states of Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Fiji and Vanuatu are specially trained to establish marine protection zones around the unique, largest contiguous coral reefs in the world. An international team of marine biologists is on site and trains the girls and women in diving and surveying techniques to preserve and protect the corals. Their stirring motto is “Too precious to lose”.

The Sea Women of Melanesia program wins the Ocean Tribute Award 2020; @coralseafoundation.net

Laudator Boris Herrmann, himself a committed marine conservationist and last year’s prize winner, quoted the famous circumnavigator Tracy Edwards in his speech on the winners: “Strengthen a girl and you strengthen the world.” And pointed out the special challenges for the people of Melanesia. These are the survival of the coral reefs, which are threatened with extinction due to excessive CO2 emissions and the resulting acidification of the oceans.

The award winners want to help the population to maintain and care for their own habitat with hardware, software and education. In this way, they can help to defend the resources for local fishing as a source of food for the population. The project and its initiators also promote the sustainable development of tourism. All this benefits the people and their home waters in Melanesia.

The skipper explained: “The prize associated with the funding of 20,000 euros could hardly be better used. The initiators announced in advance that they will train 20 more Melanesian women as reef caretakers for their respective communities. This will now be possible! I can only take my hat off to the strong ideas and the successful and exemplary work of the prize winners”.

@coralseafoundation.net

2020 boot: Three electric boats that answer a clear demand for zero emission yachts

  Air and water pollution is an increasing problem in the world. In addition, cities, ports and lakes are plagued by noise, a special type of pollution. Imagine gliding on the water while producing minimal wake, without any engine noise or exhaust fumes. Here are three electric boats presented at 2020 boot boat show, the … Read more