Fast Fashion May Seem Cheap, But it’s Taking a Costly Toll on the Planet − and on Millions of Young Customers

Many shopping malls frequented by young people are dominated by fast-fashion retailers.
Many shopping malls frequented by young people are dominated by fast-fashion retailers.
Rawpixel/Envato
Share
Many shopping malls frequented by young people are dominated by fast-fashion retailers.
Many shopping malls frequented by young people are dominated by fast-fashion retailers.
Rawpixel/Envato
Fast Fashion May Seem Cheap, But it’s Taking a Costly Toll on the Planet − and on Millions of Young Customers
Copy

Fast fashion is everywhere – in just about every mall, in the feeds of influencers on social media promoting overconsumption, and in ads constantly popping up online.

Its focus on the continual production of new clothing is marked by speedy fashion cycles that give it its name. Fast fashion is intended to quickly copy high-end designs but with low-quality materials, resulting in poorly made clothing intended to be worn once or twice before being thrown away.

One of fast fashion’s leading companies, Zara, has a mission to put clothes in stores 15 days after the initial design. Another, Shein, adds up to 2,000 new items to its website daily.

While others in the fashion industry are working toward more sustainable clothing, fast fashion is focused on profit. The market’s value was estimated at about US$100 billion in 2022 and growing quickly. It’s a large part of the reason global clothing production doubled from 2000 to 2014.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

A local leader calls the new federal policy an attempt to “control who votes”
No, the small squishy spheres aren’t jellyfish
Brown University Health’s SAFE services are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week
The federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued a stop-work order on Aug. 22
Hot rocks, seaweed, and clams are the core elements of this ancient style of cookout, which a Quaker meeting in Dartmouth, Mass., has held annually since the 1880s
Millwrights return to shore, with jobs and pay at risk