Cactus leather creators release material life cycle assessment
The creators of cactus leather, Desserto, have recently released an early stage life cycle assessment. This is exciting, because it means we can begin to understand how Desserto compares to other materials.
Fashion industry tied to significant wildlife slaughter in new analysis
Faunalytics — an organisation which conducts research and shares knowledge relating to the suffering of non-human animals — has recently released analysis of 15 years worth of legal wildlife import data from the United States.
New polling shows that City of Melbourne supports a fur ban
Independent polling commissioned by Collective Fashion Justice in collaboration with Animal Justice Party MP Andy Meddick’s office found that the majority of people in the City of Melbourne support a ban on fur.
Zoonotic disease risks in fashion
Unsurprisingly, our fears around the spread of zoonotic diseases such as COVID-19, or even worse, continue to rise. As a total ethics fashion organisation, we’re asking, what responsibility does the fashion industry have to help prevent zoonotic disease spread?
10 reasons to help ban fur
Right now, around the world, there are calls to ban the sale of fur, and the farming of fur. Here are 10 reasons to support the efforts to move past farming and trapping animals for the sake of fashion…
5 reasons fashion is a feminist issue
Despite the many feminist slogan t-shirts you can buy in stores, the fashion industry is far from championing the rights of women. In fact, it is an extremely oppressive industry in many ways, impacting women all across the supply chain.
Fast fashion: an industry built on exploitation
Fashion can signify individual expression and has artistic merit, but, it has, since the industrial revolution, relied on extreme exploitation of enslaved people and then wage workers. It is an industry that exploits class, race, gender and species in pursuit of never ending profits.
Fashion activism on Invasion Day
Today, on Invasion Day, as a fashion-orientated organisation we thought we would share information on how the way you dress, and your fashion activism can support Aboriginal people today and always. We’re keeping it short and sweet, so you can get onto the work:
The carbon cost of our leather goods, calculated
When we’re talking sustainability in fashion, we need to be using data to drive our discussion. Our new calculations of carbon and cow skin leather products shows us yet again, that a care for environmental wellbeing is not aligned with leather production and consumption.