• Home
  • »
  • Water Cooler
  • Home
  • Executive Jobs
  • Features
    • Focus
    • Career Couch
    • Radar
    • Water Cooler
    • Insight
    • Podcasts
  • Place an executive ad

Eco-chic no passing fad

By | theage.com.au | 04 April
Email to a friend
Print
Increased Text
Decreased Text

What shall we wear today? Our seaweed T-shirt and bamboo jeans? Or our organic-cotton skirt, fair-trade silk blouse and sweater of merino wool from free-range sheep raised in the Southern Alps of New Zealand?

For eco-fashionistas, the green choices are becoming more numerous - and stylish - by the week.

Green fashion is more than a passing fad. It's a lifestyle choice, says Cynthia Spencer, a trend-spotter from New York.

"Concerns about personal health and a healthy planet have prompted a green revolution. Fashion is a part of that," she says.

Essentially, green clothing and accessories are made from organic raw materials produced without pesticides or from recycled materials, says Spencer. No harmful chemicals and bleaches are used to process or dye the goods. And labourers earn fair wages and enjoy healthy working conditions.

"Eco-fashion doesn't mean a burlap sack anymore," says Aimee Hitchner, co-owner of Ginger, a Florida boutique that includes a range of eco-friendly labels.

Eco-fashion is big in the clothing market, says Paige Blackwelder, co-owner of Tuni, another Florida store.

Increasingly, designers are offering clothing made from organic cotton or sustainable materials such as bamboo, soy and hemp, she says.

"And some of the fabrics are just beautiful. You'd never guess they were made from bamboo or whatever."

Although customers are not "clamouring" for eco-fashions, they are intrigued by green products and are willing to try them, says Blackwelder.

The boutique's offering of bamboo knits is selling well, she says. She also plans to introduce a line of handbags made from Japanese paper and recycled water bottles.

Underwear is also becoming eco-friendly. Figleaves.com, the online intimates retailer, has launched Greenleaves, a department dedicated to green underwear, sleepwear and loungewear. And footwear makers are jumping on the green bandwagon, making shoes with bamboo heels, organic-linen uppers and recycled-rubber soles.

Cosmetics products have been touting organic ingredients for several years. Now there's a new wrinkle. Increasingly, the products are being packaged in biodegradable containers.

Compacts are made from recycled paper, packaging is recyclable or biodegradable.

PlantLove lipsticks come in biodegradable tubes made from a polymer derived from corn, which is a renewable, compostable resource.

And the lipstick's recycled-paper packaging is embedded with seeds that grow into wildflowers when you plant it.

MCT

 

First published by TheAge.com.au on April 04 2008
Visit theage.com.au for the latest news updated throughout the day

More Water Cooler news

  • Waiting for the best
  • The world’s great grape trails
  • American museums for comic buffs
  • Puttin' on the ritz
  • More water cooler
  • Home

Focus news

  • Real returns from virtual worlds
  • Don't fret over the bonus
  • Moving up the ladder
  • Make the most of the squeeze
  • More focus

Executive jobs

  • General Manager Supply Chain and Logistics$200,000 pkg Western Suburbs, Sydney, NSWA perfect opportunity for a Manger with vision. Strategic focus and flexibility are the prerequisites for this exceptional role. view job11/10/2008
  • Commercial Manager - Key Leadership Role with Global Logistics Company$160 Sydney CBD, NSW 2000Be the next to lead, direct and inspire. Rare opportunity to join one of the most respected names in international freight forwarding. view job1/10/2008
  • Procurement Manager - Key Leadership Role with Global Logistics Company$115 Sydney CBD, NSW 2000Be the next to lead, direct and inspire. Rare opportunity to join one of the most respected names in international freight forwarding. view job1/10/2008
  • National Customer Service Manager -Leadership Role with Global Logistics Company$175 Brisbane CBD, QLD 4000Be the next to lead, direct and inspire. Rare opportunity to join one of the most respected names in international freight forwarding. view job1/10/2008
  • Project Manager Sydney Metro, NSWAre you an experience project manager who is looking to work on high profile projects within a dynamic environment where you will enhance both your sk view job30/09/2008

Career Couch news

  • Reviews are a two-way street
  • It's good to let go
  • Managing change at work
  • Does your company have a silo mentality?
  • More career couch

Podcasts

VV Show #49 - Rafat Ali of paidContent and contentNext
Download the MP3. Attention entrepreneurs dealing with the current economic downturn: This interview is for you. After working as a journalist for Jason Calacanis at Silicon Alley Reporter, Rafat Ali ended up broke in a market with a dearth of employment opportunities. To try to find a new job, Rafat created paidContent.org as an "interactive resume." Luckily, no one hired him. From these humble beginnings, Rafat bootstrapped his blog holding company, ContentNext Media, for four years before taking a small investment from famed media investor Alan Patricof in June 2006. From its inception paidContent has doubled revenues each year and was recently acquired by UK-based Guardian Media Group for a rumored $30 million. Listen in as Rafat outlines the past, present, and future of online media, while sharing his war stories from another uncertain economic time.

Harvard Business IdeaCast 115: What Was Privacy?
Featured Guest: Lew McCreary, author of the Harvard Business Review article "What Was Privacy?" Copyright 2008 Harvard Business School Publishing

Market Report Friday July 25 - PM
A bloody end to the week - the biggest one-day fall in six months - as the market seems to over-react to NAB's announcement of extra provisioning.

More Podcasts
Home | Executive Jobs | Focus | Career Couch | Radar | Water Cooler | Insight | Podcasts | Sitemap | Contact us | About us | Place an Executive Ad
Fairfax Digital
NEWS | MYCAREER | DOMAIN | DRIVE | FINANCE | MOBILE | RSVP | TRAVEL | WEATHER
  member centre | login  
Fairfax Digital
  member centre | network map | mobile | advertise with us | place a classified ad  
SMH | THE AGE | BRISBANE TIMES | AFR | MYCAREER | DOMAIN | DRIVE | RSVP | FINANCE | FAIRFAX NZ