Fast Fashion Is Hot Garbage | Climate Town

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  • Опубліковано 22 вер 2021
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    www.borgenmagazine.com/5-orga...
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    References:
    History of Fashion:
    fashionista.com/2016/06/what-...
    www.apparelsearch.com/terms/f...
    Fast fashion stats and analysis:
    digitalcommons.bard.edu/cgi/v...
    www.vox.com/the-goods/2020/2/...
    ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/...
    / why-regulations-arent-...
    www.voguebusiness.com/sustain...
    Videos in case you don't wanna read:
    peabodyawards.com/award-profi...
    • The Hidden Cost of Fas...
    www.worldwildlife.org/stories...
    • The Ugly Truth Of Fast...
    Zara annual report:
    static.inditex.com/annual_rep...
    Clothing thrown away:
    www.treehugger.com/clothes-yo...
    www.bbc.com/future/article/20...
    Legal stuff:
    www.thefashionlaw.com/is-the-...
    www.natlawreview.com/article/...
    sourcingjournal.com/topics/su...
    Genuinely Good Reporting:
    Heated: heated.world/p/a-lie-for-a-li...
    NYT Coverage: www.nytimes.com/2021/06/30/cl...
    WaPo: www.washingtonpost.com/climat...
    Grist: grist.org/accountability/how-...
    Slate: slate.com/news-and-politics/2...
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    All We Can Save: www.allwecansave.earth/
    The Uninhabitable Earth: www.penguinrandomhouse.com/bo...
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  • Комедії

КОМЕНТАРІ • 11 тис.

  • @nooodisaster
    @nooodisaster 2 роки тому +5754

    "Clothes on average are worn seven times before getting tossed"
    Me a 20 something, still wearing shorts I got in middle school: "Y'all doing what now?"

    • @naibo8249
      @naibo8249 2 роки тому +429

      Also me a 27 year old still wearing pjs from high school 😂

    • @LucyLynette
      @LucyLynette 2 роки тому +516

      I'm currently wearing a shirt I bought around 1997. Only seven wears on a garment is just mind boggling to me.

    • @NoiseDay
      @NoiseDay 2 роки тому +123

      "On average"
      How many items of clothing do you have right now that you've worn since you were 14?

    • @dimplesd8931
      @dimplesd8931 2 роки тому +177

      Big shout out to all those still thin enough to wear childhood clothing…. I’m awed and jealous. #fluffyandforty

    • @funnygaming2672
      @funnygaming2672 2 роки тому +12

      @@dimplesd8931 then go watch coach greg doucette it will fix that he the best on youtube for competition and healthy weight loss for people that do not go on stage he has program and recipes for everyone go look at his playlist he gave great information and make it simple

  • @user-lt6dj8hh1h
    @user-lt6dj8hh1h 2 роки тому +35628

    I was raised in what is called 'Soviet clothing culture'. In Soviet Union when people bought clothes, at first they were used as their holiday clothes - something to go out on a weekend, on a date, etc. After some usage, same clothes became their casual wear to go to their work. Then, when the clothes had become to look too worn out, they could become wearable at home, whre there is no need for a cool dress. Then they could become the clothes to do some work which implies dirt - like gardening of DIY fixing something. And after all the same clothes could be turned into rags and used to clean your house. Despite there is no such scarcity in consumer gooods now, I still find this clothing culture to be the most rational way to treat clothes and still have some really old shirts in use.

    • @najarvis
      @najarvis 2 роки тому +1894

      That's a really great way to treat it, making the most out of what you have while you can.

    • @LexYeen
      @LexYeen 2 роки тому +2200

      To the reader, not OP: If you decide to pass along this method, be careful! That S-word is thought of as _dangerous_ by many in the Western establishment. Try "Sustainable" instead. ;)

    • @tomo1168
      @tomo1168 2 роки тому +1265

      @@LexYeen I was raised in one of the neighbouring country, we called it socialist clothing culture. Outside the USA is this one s-word still acceptable, even on the rise.

    • @yandoddge
      @yandoddge 2 роки тому +786

      да) а ещё одежда переходила от старших к младшим детям

    • @NelaDunato
      @NelaDunato 2 роки тому +1194

      I grew up during the war and in a post-war economy, and this cycle of clothes (fancy > casual > home > yard work > cleaning rags) is forever baked into my psyche. That's how my grandparents treated clothing while it was still handmade. I wish people in more affluent countries realized how insanely wasteful it is to throw away clothes that is still good to wear.

  • @tinalettieri
    @tinalettieri Рік тому +172

    Years ago, I found a Calvin Klein winter coat in a "free store." It had a hole in one pocket but no biggie. I also found $2 in the other pocket. We moved to Florida so I re-donated the coat. A few years later, I was in Jerusalem and I went into a thrift store. There was an identical coat and since Jerusalem gets cold, I bought it. I put my hand in the pocket and there was a hole...and $2 American!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @bob8776
      @bob8776 5 місяців тому +30

      Glitch in the matrix

    • @thesilentpearl8575
      @thesilentpearl8575 4 місяці тому +12

      Dont support genocide

    • @thekingoffailure9967
      @thekingoffailure9967 4 місяці тому

      @@bob8776consistent manufacturing flaw that cuases holey pockets

    • @pepsiman4708
      @pepsiman4708 4 місяці тому

      @@thesilentpearl8575😐

    • @thesilentpearl8575
      @thesilentpearl8575 3 місяці тому

      @feudelacroix when did i say i support the israel diaper force

  • @virani3120
    @virani3120 Рік тому +894

    the "poor people need fast fashion" thing is hilarious as a poor person because I'm wearing clothes until they fall apart to the point it'd be obscene to keep wearing them, not participating in fast fashion

    • @bekichan91
      @bekichan91 10 місяців тому +88

      A better take would be "everyone needs access to good quality clothing at various price points". Although if the clothing is a higher quality, it lasts longer before NEEDING to be replaced. Terry Prattchett had a great example of this with cheap boots vs expensive boots in (iirc) Guards Guards - cheap things end up costing more over time, but poorer folk tend not to be able to buy the expensive thing

    • @manateekida1484
      @manateekida1484 9 місяців тому +20

      Yeah i guess he means that, people who can´t pay 25 instead of 2 €/$ for a simple, plain t-shirt, rely on fast fashion to get new clothes from a namely brand in a somehow manageable price range. Sadly, those pieces often fall apart way quicker than higher priced goods or even used clothes would, therefore, closing the gap to needing new clothes sooner and not being able to spend more money on higher quality clothes.

    • @skippern666
      @skippern666 9 місяців тому +13

      I wear clothes to they fall apart because I hate go shopping. Not that I have any spare money to waste on clothes. Just hate to go shopping.

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 9 місяців тому

      THIS! Meanwhile my dad taught me that you have to be rich to afford cheap shoes for example. When i got my first full time well paid job, the first thing i did was waltz into a quality shoe store where you can't find shoes under 100 bucks. I got myself some winter boots, leather on the outside, completely covered in wool from the inside, rubber sole to walk in that prevents sliding around on ice quite well. I also got some tips on how to take care of it. The shoes cost me 300€ plus 20€ for care products like leather oil and cleaning spray, helping to make them waterproof too (sealing in the stitching and stuff).
      EVERYONE told me i'm crazy and to spend so much money on shoes. The average price for boots here was 50 bucks for plastic leather. They would fall apart after 1-2 years, they are not warm at all and you will constantly have cold feet, additionally your feet will sweat in them (that's what wearing plastic does) and making you even more cold. My 300€ shoes are breathable and i never sweat, despite me being a bit too warm inside them often, which results me running around in a sweater when everyone wears a winter coat. I clean them once a year and when i wear them i oil them once a month (let it sit over night and wipe off the excess oil next morning) and that's it. 12 years later, you can barely tell they've ever been worn at all. Not a scratch or a dent on them, not even the sole.
      Quality costs money when purchasing it, but in the long run expensive shoes and clothes (not expensive cause of brand name but cause of quality, mind you) safe you SO MUCH MONEY afterwards.
      I also started to sew, partly cause i have fitting issues for most clothes. I've sewn myself a linnen skirt, knee long, for summers to wear at home. Cost: 9€ for fabric, yarn and elastic waist band together (today it would cost 15-20€ here). That was 7 years ago and i had to replace the elastic once and redo the hem too (i had quite some scrap fabric left and i always keep it for future repair or adjustment purposes), otherwise the skirt holds up great. Wearing it right now.

    • @imperialus1
      @imperialus1 9 місяців тому +7

      Agreed... I'm wearing a shirt that I got for the midnight release of Halo 2. Twenty years ago. I wear cloths until I can't wear them anymore. When my pants get a hole in the crotch I patch it and use them for yardwork on colder days. When they get holes in the knees, they become shorts for yardwork on hot days. When my shirts fall apart, I cut them up and use them as cleaning rags. When the cleaning rags get filthy to the point that they can't be used anymore, I use them to absorb oil when I change the oil in my car and then dispose of them at the fire station.

  • @Sevenspent
    @Sevenspent 2 роки тому +2690

    "worn 7 times before being tossed"
    me: looks at my shirts that I've had for 10 plus years, jeans I had for 13+ years...

    • @cakegasm9831
      @cakegasm9831 2 роки тому +277

      And after those 13+ years they start to rip, but by now you're emotionally attached to them and you keep them anyway.

    • @Braun30
      @Braun30 2 роки тому +115

      Sadly I had to part with my cotton sporty trousers just about two months ago.
      Bought in 1998.

    • @Dewydidit
      @Dewydidit 2 роки тому +30

      Same here, but we have to admit, we're outliers among our peers.

    • @FernandoHernandez-jw4yy
      @FernandoHernandez-jw4yy 2 роки тому +71

      Let me guess: Your're male, probably older than 25 and fashion never played an important role in your life. Fast fashion is really a problem which exists mostly due to women. Especially young women. That doesn't mean that there aren't guys who contribute a lot to that problem as well. But their numbers are significantly lower.

    • @HendrikTheThird
      @HendrikTheThird 2 роки тому +125

      ​@@FernandoHernandez-jw4yy Looking good has quickly become one of the things most young men consider an important part of their masculinity. I'd say this trend already existed as a recurring phenomenom (e.g. metro men), and really started with millenials/hipster culture which got absorbed into more conservative notions about masculinity. I also don't believe this is something specific to an arbitrary gender divide, but instead the result of capital tapping into the previously underexploited market that is men's insecurities.

  • @discoeur
    @discoeur 2 роки тому +3540

    i think large companies like zara should be fined for each kilogram of clothes they dont sell and throw away- they should be discouraged from overproducing garbage clothes that no one wants to buy in the first place

    • @shinybearevidra
      @shinybearevidra 2 роки тому +58

      It's so cheap that they don't care

    • @michaelgraflmusic
      @michaelgraflmusic 2 роки тому +453

      @@shinybearevidra Yeah. That's why they should be charged an amount that hurts.

    • @shinybearevidra
      @shinybearevidra 2 роки тому +41

      @@michaelgraflmusic agreed.

    • @77Tadams
      @77Tadams 2 роки тому +100

      But that would require real change. I don't thing AOC and the likes would ever do that because they would upset big corporations. It is easier to just be in politics and virtue signal instead of do something that would actually be reducing waste. We can do without this clogging monster of cheap and bad clothes....but the stocks in it and money in advertising is so good.....why do that?

    • @patriciacorrea8871
      @patriciacorrea8871 2 роки тому

      👏🏼

  • @JaredWyns
    @JaredWyns Рік тому +1214

    68 pieces of clothing per year? Holy hell. I've had largely the same wardrobe since college, I think I've bought maybe 10 shirts over the past decade? How the hell do people buy so many every year.. that's like over 5 per month

    • @gabopalacios2028
      @gabopalacios2028 Рік тому +170

      Freaking Instagram influencers! Instagram has become the biggest showcase in the world for fast fashion, making us feel inadequate for not having the latest products on the market. And if you think adults feel insecure, imagine how teenagers feel when confronted with this false image of what they're supposed to look

    • @applesauce_0743
      @applesauce_0743 Рік тому +104

      It's really disgusting, the culture of constant buying and consuming. There is NO reason anyone would need 68 more peices of clothing every single year. That is my entire wardrobe basically in one year!

    • @H0mework
      @H0mework Рік тому +47

      It's mostly women who are big buyers. You could buy zero and someone buys 400. Average of 200.

    • @stoferb876
      @stoferb876 Рік тому +29

      I'm the same, most of my clothes are either bought along time ago or second hand. But I do get curious. Does this number include underwear? Are a pair of socks counted as two garments? Not that I would even get close to 68 pieces of new clothing a year anyway.

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Рік тому +55

      @@H0mework Why do you have to bring up gender and make it a gender war? And distract from the video's message. How does you bringing that up help? There's women here agreeing with the video and dismayed at fast fashion or consumerism for vanity or pressure. There's also some men who demand that there's a equal amount of clothing for men as women for its own sake. And not that all of them care about fashion. Some men are also big on consuming and waste too. Even if it's not the same types of things like women, such as fashion.
      It's not just clothes that is fast, overly produced, and filling landfills. It's other things too. Like tech, or things that men like too.
      If you're trying to say people can't be interested in fashion, then that's double standards to allow some hobbies but not others.
      I see lots of men wearing lots of fashion and costumes too. Like for yt.
      Gordon Ramsey wastes food easily in rage. And he gets lots of views and praise. I watch lots of reviews, crafting, and cooking videos on yt. There's a culture of easy waste, regardless of gender or who the person is. Such as throwing out new products easily if the person doesn't like it in reviews. They didn't even try to give it away or recycle it. Or set up something to give it away to the public.

  • @Ace-1525
    @Ace-1525 Рік тому +424

    Moments like this kind of make me grateful for growing up poor. I was raised on rummage sales, thrift stores, and hand-me-downs from my older cousins and siblings. 29 now, and I still get most of my clothing from thrift stores, on the rare, rare occasion that I need new ones. (Apart from intimates. I refuse to do secondhand with those). It just baffles me how wasteful our culture has become, and how much just ends up trashed. Clothes, cars no one will buy/drive, food- So, so much waste, and so, so many people who could and would gladly use those very items. Greed is killing our planet and our people.

    • @krk6216
      @krk6216 Рік тому +22

      Same! The scream I scrumpt when the remains of an estate sale got donated at my local thrift and everything the lady had was a vintage 10/12 which is my size ❤ glorious vintage shirts with pretty detailed or embroidered collars and pockets ❤

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Рік тому +11

      I'm glad you mentioned culture, and not just blame companies. Even if companies were good, there'd be still a problem of people, who are the majority, being wasteful too easily. I watch reviews, crafting, and cooking on yt. If some reviewers dislike something they throw away new products easily. They didn't even try to give it away or recycle it. Or people to set up something to give it away to the public. Gordon Ramsey wastes food in rage. He gets lots or views and praise. Someone who worked at a recycling center said they won't give away recycleables to the workers even if they want it.

    • @casadactyl21
      @casadactyl21 Рік тому +3

      Yep even my nicer clothes are second hand thank goodness for patogonia and Lululemon that sell used clothes!!

    • @tinalettieri
      @tinalettieri Рік тому +2

      I didn't grow up in a particularly affluent area but we didn't even have thrift shops. I discovered Goodwill thru a friend when I was almost 40, newly divorced and having moved to Atlanta. It soon became my go to place, before I went to a store for new and that was the mid-80's.

    • @kvachu2397
      @kvachu2397 Рік тому +4

      greed

  • @kay4829
    @kay4829 2 роки тому +2560

    Please keep filming the shots where you’re so far away and we get to watch people stare at you like a crazy person. It makes me happy.

  • @ex0stasis72
    @ex0stasis72 2 роки тому +2335

    "I'm not an actor. I'm a comedian, which is way worse."
    I'm surprised that guy didn't bust up laughing right on the spot.

    • @PerfectAlibi1
      @PerfectAlibi1 2 роки тому +41

      That's why it's way worse...

    • @rocky-hi7hc
      @rocky-hi7hc 2 роки тому +69

      "love you" "love you too" omg this made my day

    • @Vanilla.coke1234
      @Vanilla.coke1234 2 роки тому +20

      He's apparently not a very good comedian

    • @327legoman
      @327legoman Рік тому +1

      egg

    • @Kokorocodon
      @Kokorocodon Рік тому +5

      @@Vanilla.coke1234 Probably because he's not making sex jokes or being very abnoxious to his interviews, right?

  • @lumiukko4296
    @lumiukko4296 10 місяців тому +70

    Clothes also used to be altered to follow fashion. So you didn't always buy new clothes but took your old ones to dressmakers who changed them slightly to be more fashionable. I think that is pretty cool.

    • @petergeorge4415
      @petergeorge4415 8 місяців тому +4

      Great ideas to tell....teenagers and..older consumers!!! 👍

  • @m.racheljones7019
    @m.racheljones7019 Рік тому +197

    I am eternally grateful to have been raised by depression era parents. I grew up marinating in the understanding that wastefulness is a sin. I was taught to sew and garden as soon as I could walk. Mom and Grandmas even taught me how to make my own clothing patterns, do alterations, and reuse fabric from older clothes to make new fashions. A quilt was the very last stop for fabrics.

    • @AnthurMoman
      @AnthurMoman Місяць тому

      That's awesome they taught you those things. So you could utilize them in your personal life

  • @Tridd666
    @Tridd666 2 роки тому +1878

    "The average piece of clothing is worn 7 times before being thrown out"
    The 7 t-shirts I've been wearing once a week for the past 5 years: ◑.◑

    • @absolutium
      @absolutium 2 роки тому +12

      Brilliant

    • @iCore7Gaming
      @iCore7Gaming 2 роки тому +119

      Ikr? I find that "fact" hard to believe

    • @Dustyphoto915
      @Dustyphoto915 2 роки тому +1

      Same

    • @Tridd666
      @Tridd666 2 роки тому +63

      @@iCore7Gaming I've been thinking about it and i think there's a facet of society in the big lib cities where this sort of waste becomes background radiation to the rats scurrying about under the gaze of skyscrapers
      The type of place where it's normal to see a literal tornado of garbage and the voracious consumption required to sustain a concrete jungle is offset only by a rabid hypocrisy regarding "climate change"
      The midwest farmer who babies a tractor older than he is through yet another growing season is not the type of man to go for fast fashion or to throw away a garment after 7 washings

    • @leaderoftaehyungnation9766
      @leaderoftaehyungnation9766 2 роки тому +43

      this statistic surprises me actually.. i’m grown and i still wear/repurpose clothes from when i was 11, if not, i hand it down. a lot of the people around me to this too, even younger ones, so i wonder who and where this average came from 😭😭😭😭

  • @thefollowingisatest4579
    @thefollowingisatest4579 2 роки тому +2014

    "I'm not an actor, I'm a comedian. It's worse." incredible

    • @ayderla789
      @ayderla789 2 роки тому +10

      so funny much laugh such fast

    • @BrutalOverride
      @BrutalOverride 2 роки тому +6

      That moment, chef's kiss 👌

    • @AkshayKumar-ue1fp
      @AkshayKumar-ue1fp 2 роки тому

      I have a hunch that says more than 3 quarters of fast fashion is bought by women.

    • @mynameisuju
      @mynameisuju 2 роки тому +1

      @@AkshayKumar-ue1fp most fashion is bought by women, so this is not a hot take.

    • @thehilaryglow
      @thehilaryglow 2 роки тому +2

      That was so cringe... he's not a comedian either lol

  • @JaneNewAuthor
    @JaneNewAuthor Рік тому +10

    "The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.
    Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in Ankh-Morpork on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles.
    But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that'd still be keeping his feet dry in ten years' time, while the poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.
    This was the Captain Samuel Vimes 'Boots' theory of socioeconomic unfairness."
    - Terry Pratchett, Men At Arms

    • @deus_ex_machina_
      @deus_ex_machina_ День тому +1

      This was expounded upon in the PBS Two Cents video “Why It's So Expensive to Be Poor”.

  • @CHPatriot1291
    @CHPatriot1291 10 місяців тому +80

    And just when you think fast fashion can't get any worse, along comes SHEIN.

    • @claycowthh
      @claycowthh 2 місяці тому +1

      yall r buggin ive ordered way well over 20 things from shein and ive had all of it over a year in fact some of it lasted longer than other brands i got from

    • @skrittle555
      @skrittle555 2 місяці тому +2

      @@claycowthh a year is not a long time when you consider the entire human life span. teenagers who have been dating for a year are laughed at by coupled sharing their 60th anniversary. natural fibers well constructed could last an entire lifetime if cared for properly. i have vintage t shirts from the 80s and cotton gets better with age, as does leather and other natural fibers.

    • @claycowthh
      @claycowthh 2 місяці тому

      @@skrittle555 I mean yeah a year isn’t a long time compared to a whole lifetime obviously but all my fast fashion doesn’t die after 4 wears if what I was putting out I get at least a good 2-3 years out of mine before I gotta get more

  • @regnbuetorsk
    @regnbuetorsk 2 роки тому +1507

    i am tailor and i hate how modern clothes are made. they are made to self destruct, often sewn with the shittiest thread, and their structure doesnt allow repairings.
    we should teach young people how to make their own clothes and how to keep/fix them

    • @1O1O11
      @1O1O11 Рік тому +128

      I just started learning how to make clothes. I started because I design videogames as a hobby and was creating lots of clothes for videogame characters. Then I realized there are programs that allow me to build clothing in a 3d software but export it to an actual pattern I can print. (Clo3d)
      So then I went out and bought a sewing machine. But I haven't started sewing stuff yet, as I am still at the stage where I am learning about different fabrics.
      Not sure where this journey will take me, but it is a fun learning process.

    • @regnbuetorsk
      @regnbuetorsk Рік тому +72

      @@1O1O11 the power to turn flat fabric into clothes (and not only) is damn wonderful, i guarantee. knowing the fabric is the hardest part, but it's like learning all the combos on a videogame character. it takes time, it can be frustrating, but then you become unstoppable.
      also, you will learn to hate synthetic fibers XD

    • @vinhhoangkhai8329
      @vinhhoangkhai8329 Рік тому +8

      I agree, i often wear suits so when i look at the more "casual" clothes of mine(mainly zara) i saw how bad the stiching is, like i know they use slaves but the slaves are trained so that i cant even give it to my local tailor without him beating the hell out of me. My suits are bespoke and from different hands but all are still acceptable and can be fix in a day or less my different tailors

    • @thismissivemisfit
      @thismissivemisfit Рік тому +23

      The reason I learned to sew was to repair my existing clothes. Patching tears and small alterations stretched out its use much longer, and reusing the fabrics from old clothes to make crafts as handmade gifts is much more meaningful.

    • @timdillon4876
      @timdillon4876 Рік тому +19

      What brands last a decent while im so sick of bad quality clothes id much rather spend like 30-40 on a t shirt then spend 10 and have to throw it out after 10 washes

  • @philippefleury1060
    @philippefleury1060 2 роки тому +2635

    "Remember hobbies? They are what we used to have before we had phones."
    So true it hurts hahaha

    • @racewiththefalcons1
      @racewiththefalcons1 2 роки тому +71

      "Phones" should be replaced with "second and third jobs so we don't die of starvation".

    • @DBT1007
      @DBT1007 2 роки тому +5

      😐😐😐

    • @cadaver4985
      @cadaver4985 2 роки тому +3

      @@racewiththefalcons1 Thats for you lmao

    • @g0d5m15t4k3
      @g0d5m15t4k3 2 роки тому +7

      I'm in this photo and I don't like it.

    • @Emanuele246gi
      @Emanuele246gi 2 роки тому +9

      That's some boomer shit right there, we can normally have a phone that's not made in a unsustainable way, it's the production that must change

  • @hayden6700
    @hayden6700 Рік тому +180

    Genuinely didn't know this was a problem. I've been wearing the same clothes for over 3 years and I've only occasionally bought jackets or "nice" clothes from thrift stores because I didn't feel like going to the mall downtown. I can't even imagine buying a shirt to wear once and then throwing it away that is insane to me

    • @solanareznor8309
      @solanareznor8309 Рік тому +11

      No one buys something to use it once on purpose (at least if it’s not a costume). There used to be a term that was used to describe it that you don’t ear so often today which is fashion victim. People genuinely buy an item thinking that this will be worn most of the time, that they need it, that it will make all the difference. Fashion is a powerful communication tool and people go to great lengths to communicate even unconsciously.

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Рік тому +1

      In reviews, some people throw away new items if they dislike it. They didn't even try to give it away or recycle it. TV shows like food or cooking shows has lots of waste. I see yt-rs who make videos on crafting or cooking have lots of waste too. It's a culture problem and extends to everything. Not just clothes. And even tho there's lots of videos teaching how to repurpose things. Like NHK Japan Zero Waste.

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Рік тому +1

      @@solanareznor8309 What about costumes or a dress for prom? I also think there's needless waste just cause of social constructs of what should people wear. Like you can't wear formal clothes or dresses outside of formal events. But I wouldn't care. I think more options should be created like tee shirt costumes. That can double as daily wear.

    • @solanareznor8309
      @solanareznor8309 Рік тому

      @@user-gu9yq5sj7c SoCIaL cOnSTRuCT. The only thing that needs to be constructed here is your head. Go ahead and use sweat pants for your prom, or wedding or whatever, I am sure you are not the first one. And if you are this worried about waste you can just stop breathing, it saves a lot!

    • @jessislistless
      @jessislistless Рік тому +1

      @@solanareznor8309 This is a very ideological thought process. I wish this were our general reality, but it just isn't, and shops like Zara and Shein are billion-dollar businesses because of this.
      I live in a city where young people, especially teen girls, buy high amounts of cheap clothes like from Primark for one specific occasion or to recreate an outfit from tik tok or a popular movie/show and then toss it out. Spaghetti strap tops are routinely purchased every 3-4 weeks in various colours. The old ones are still perfectly fine, but maybe they've lost some colour or elasticity because they keep buying the wrong size, and that's all the reason they require to replace clothing.
      Resale sites like Depop and Vinted have even been reappropriated to sell brand new (fast fashion) clothes at a sometimes higher price than initially purchased.

  • @kierstenpansza1790
    @kierstenpansza1790 Рік тому +176

    Donate directly to organizations who NEED the clothes! For example my home town has a small home for children (not necessarily an orphanage), but anyways, they sometimes specifically ask for certain clothing items like hoodies, jeans, etc. I know there’s many other places like this. Like women’s shelters and even homeless shelters:) make a direct difference.

    • @brutusthecat6044
      @brutusthecat6044 10 місяців тому +2

      Children also deserve full sized homes.

    • @qwertydrorakqwerty
      @qwertydrorakqwerty 9 місяців тому +5

      Most organizations do not want used clothing items because the process of going sort and picking is labor intensive. On the top of that, you have no idea whether the recipient would be happy with what they got. The clothing item can be thrown away at the donation site or by the recipient. Even kids do not want used, ugly clothes. In need does not mean they have no preference.
      It’s a wishful thinking that your clothes will benefit the world or somebody. It’s best to not buy unnecessary clothes, reduce waste, and donate money directly.

    • @mettamorph4523
      @mettamorph4523 8 місяців тому +2

      The first few minutes of this video debunked that shelters donation belief. Shelters discard a lot because your leftovers are not as useful as you think. And multiply what YOU donate by 400...how much can a shelter use.
      You want to do the right thing, but it's not as easy as donating.
      Same holds for recycling plastic. Any of you who live with the recycle police should let them know that only 1% gets used, 99% ends up in landfills. We need bigger policy changes to make a real difference. Tell them to channel that energy toward their representatives.

  • @arifahaque6616
    @arifahaque6616 2 роки тому +2262

    Hello, a Bangladeshi here! I just found you and I'm so glad that I did. I would like to thank you for bringing up the working conditions of my people. Unfortunately, even after the Rana Plaza incident, our factory owners don't give a shit about the workers. I don't know how many lives have to be lost/abused until things start to change. I'm definitely among the more privileged people who can afford education and have better working conditions. But it feels horrible to see that the people who make up so much of our economy have the worst lifestyle.
    On a brighter note though, thanks for making me feel better about my humble wardrobe 😅

    • @UninstallingWindows
      @UninstallingWindows 2 роки тому +64

      Bangladesh is going through the same phase as United States did decades ago...and most likely, things wont change until people start demanding change.

    • @LeftistJesus
      @LeftistJesus 2 роки тому +51

      "Power concedes nothing without demand."
      Sorry, comrade, you're not going to see anything change until people make it so much a priority, that it cannot be refused.

    • @zenithnow
      @zenithnow 2 роки тому +30

      Unionise. Start a movement. Be the difference. Locally, prepare for war. Arm your self, defend your neighbors, family and friends. Otherwise, your kids will inherit what your generation is going through now. Watch the US films about union labour, and the Australian films about the Eureka Stockade, educate yourself and try to pass on to your family, friends, work colleagues and local people. Make those in positions of responsibility, be responsible and answerable to their actions.
      This really is a 'game' of life and death.

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 2 роки тому +9

      "I don't know how many lives have to be lost/abused until things start to change."
      Only a few would be necessary if they're the right ones. But one needn't resort to murdering or maiming CEOs of fast fashion producers. The suffragette movement achieved a lot (in part) by destroying property but not lives.

    • @Camaleonte9087
      @Camaleonte9087 2 роки тому +7

      Well you're right, but the suffragette part is more complicated, for example the international women's day was invented by the II Internationale and established on March the 8 by Lenin in open contrast with the bourgeois suffragettes

  • @elm1230
    @elm1230 Рік тому +2028

    Part of this issue is that clothes are made so poorly now to meet the demands of fast fashion. I’ve been thrifting for several years and I’m always impressed with the high quality clothing I find from even the 80’s. The fabrics are soft and robust, jackets have tailoring and linings, threads are secure, etc. people shopping in thrift stores easily look more expensive than people shopping in malls/cheap online stores these days.

    • @robertroelantjr2753
      @robertroelantjr2753 Рік тому +85

      I absolutely love to thrift! I’ve been doing it ever since my highschool days. I have amazing quality clothes from years ago that I still wear to this day. You’re right, you really can find great items; you just have to know what you’re looking for. My most “expensive” clothes are worth a couple hundred dollars a piece when in reality I only spent about $10-30 for each one.

    • @calisongbird
      @calisongbird Рік тому +48

      @@electricfishfan7159 capitalism is killing the environment. Did you watch the video?

    • @MrTriple3D
      @MrTriple3D Рік тому +2

      @@calisongbird and your solution? communism?

    • @TwixtheFox
      @TwixtheFox Рік тому

      @@MrTriple3D Yes. Or socialism. Preferably socialism.
      Capitalists actively snubbed out and interfered with any other system in most countries. Surprise, Russia weren't the only communists. The systems are by far much better than "unregulate everything" or as close to that as you can get. The end goal becomes money instead of human lives and value of happiness. It becomes a game.
      Capitalism pretends no other systems worked, while doing their hardest to destabilize those systems. It wants you to think there's no other option, because the ones who benefit and are the kings of the system get to stay in power and rich. They want you to think there's no better system because it keeps them at the top.
      Besides, there's so many more systems than just communism, socialism, or capitalism. Each of those systems also has a ton of smaller flavors and mixed flavors as well. Honestly, almost anything is better than our current form of capitalism in the USA. It's literally killing the whole planet, the thing that is our ONLY hope for humanity to survive. Where everyone ever has been born, and where everyone ever dies. The only thing everyone has in common. The thing that has been around for billions of years and has been at the core of everything we know. Out of the billions of years of the planet, and hundreds of thousands of years, maybe millions of humans, close to being destroyed by a country that has only existed for 245 years. By contrast, roman civilization and many others before us lasted for thousands of years. Capitalists are willing to trade all of humanity, including themselves and their future family, for a fever dream of infinite growth and fake money.

    • @Alex-fu3mi
      @Alex-fu3mi Рік тому +28

      @@electricfishfan7159 as a die hard capitalist, how would you suggest clothing companies prioritize human rights and the environment over the profit motive?
      (same question, edited for clarity. originally written while sleepy)

  • @djvelocity
    @djvelocity Рік тому +53

    This is insane. *I’m 35 and I still have clothes from when I was 20.* Not just 1 or 2 either, like a ton. I don’t understand why somebody would wear some thing only 7x 😳🤯

    • @ClaudiaEhrhardt
      @ClaudiaEhrhardt 9 місяців тому +2

      I have some jackets and sweaters from the mid-90s! And a lot of shirts which are also hitting 20 yrs now. I guess that means I'm not into fast fashion. 😂

    • @djvelocity
      @djvelocity 9 місяців тому +2

      @@ClaudiaEhrhardt That’s amazing. Thank you for doing that, on behalf of the rest of us because you have saved a ton of carbon from the environment. If you think about it, those clothes have to be transported, manufactured, stored, all of this creates carbon due to vehicles, electrical use etc. so thank you once again for doing that because most people don’t seem to care that much 😕

    • @SzilviaVirag
      @SzilviaVirag 8 місяців тому

      ​@@ClaudiaEhrhardt and it means your weight has stayed about the same that whole time. I wouldn't even want to be as thin as I was at 25 ever again, because it was too thin.

    • @ClaudiaEhrhardt
      @ClaudiaEhrhardt 8 місяців тому

      @SzilviaVirag - Not really, just like they still fit. Back then the fit / style was different. Clothes weren't tight fit.

  • @constantbloom5560
    @constantbloom5560 Рік тому +244

    Resale is an R word for pRe-owned. Loved the video! ❤

  • @Neveri93
    @Neveri93 2 роки тому +561

    "Only caring about poor people when it's convenient isn't caring". Thank you! At least someone has courage to say it.

    • @Matthew10950
      @Matthew10950 2 роки тому +5

      Man, i guess I will just keep on not caring then. That seems better.

    • @nunyabidness3075
      @nunyabidness3075 2 роки тому +3

      Yeah, I care about the poor. The government should tax the rich and help the poor!
      There, I’m a good person.

    • @amandaaliciaduron8991
      @amandaaliciaduron8991 2 роки тому +12

      Thank you! I hat the "but poor and fat people need clothes too" argument. They're literally exploiting people for slave labor, so they think they're better than the factory workers. Well said!

    • @Neveri93
      @Neveri93 2 роки тому +4

      @@Matthew10950 I mean at least it's more honest then. Helping poor just to f. ex. polish public image isn't caring.
      Those people who do donations anonymously or help communities without selfish interest are helping because the motive is right. If the motive is to gain something out of it, you probably don't actually help but just try your best to look like you are helping. That's what PR stunts are for... To look like you care. And if you think it objectively, the objective truth is you are lying.
      To add on this: I don't claim that big companies aren't helping anyone. The problem is that when the motive is polishing public image, the receiving end (the one that is being helped) doesn't really matter. What matters then is how public (f. ex. potential customers) see that.

    • @ClaireLoprensa
      @ClaireLoprensa 2 роки тому +1

      @@Neveri93 people are not perfect. If you take away the image that comes with doing good, you will drastically lower people's interest in helping others cause of the simple fact that they have more important things to do and is not in a perfect state to be helping others. Most people can't even help themselves. The least they could get is a morale boost when they do help someone.

  • @EminayDrackoness
    @EminayDrackoness Рік тому +41

    The best way to donate clothes is to go to a shelter and donate directly, they will even give you a tax write off form. I volunteered at the rescue mission washing the donations that came in that went directly to the people that needed them we had a little store in there where the guests would sweep the floor for 4 minutes, recieve 5 tickets that they could then use to buy 5 articles of clothes with. It gave them a sense of duty, helped keep the shelter upkept and provided the much needed clothing they needed. Sadly, winter coats and boots were rarely donated...

    • @petergeorge4415
      @petergeorge4415 8 місяців тому +1

      May I suggest that you write notes...to your town Hall or ask permission to put up what you need on boards in schools? All the ways are good, to help others and you may be flabbergasted at the speed...clothes will come in!
      😃
      Good Luck!
      You are wonder-full!!!
      helene (Canada)

  • @michellebayliss9464
    @michellebayliss9464 10 місяців тому +53

    This is such a huge dilemma for anyone who is plus-sized or whose weight fluctuates widely; a lot of times our only affordable options are fast fashion or hoping for luck at the thrift store. Most sustainable brands don't carry plus sizes and while it's not impossible to find good stuff, it is difficult, especially if you go up or down several sizes and can no longer fit your old clothes.

    • @karenannaluisa3370
      @karenannaluisa3370 9 місяців тому +6

      Know the problem: recently put on weight and have two sizes on top of my wardrobe. One advice: if it is timeless quality it may fit gain after loosing the extra kilos. Next thing: I buy in thriftstores, but only quality. In some it is a bit of a hunt. But especially those which are located in areas with rich people it is sometimes amazing what you can find. And third: eventually it could be a good idea to learn how to tailor ones own clothes which are suited perfectly! Good luck, my dear!

    • @michellebayliss9464
      @michellebayliss9464 9 місяців тому +2

      @@karenannaluisa3370 oh absolutely! All excellent advice. I thrift all the time and I’m actually a professional seamstress, but not everyone can afford a sewing machine and such.

    • @sazbear3913
      @sazbear3913 8 місяців тому +4

      Oooh guys Leena Norms just made a video on this, “how to build a wardrobe for a changing body”. It’s very helpful x

    • @Thorned_Rose
      @Thorned_Rose 8 місяців тому +4

      If you have sewing skills or are willing to learn, there are some very easy to make garments that are adjustable. In fact, adjustable clothes use to be the usual because it meant garments lasted much much longer. But adjustable clothes don't make manufacturers and retailers as much money so it's fallen out of fashion (hah!). But you can absolutely still make your own adjustable clothes. You can even sometimes alter premade clothes to be adjustable too :)

    • @beyzayavuz6770
      @beyzayavuz6770 8 місяців тому +5

      I have an advice, stop fast food too.

  • @Maldanil
    @Maldanil Рік тому +2899

    The most interesting thing for me as a non-American is that Zara, H&M and Guess are very expensive in my country and not at all fast fashion.

    • @Lucky-si4ih
      @Lucky-si4ih Рік тому +439

      Yeah it happens often in my third world country, H&M, Zara, and Uniqlo are considered glamour brands

    • @DouradaBambina
      @DouradaBambina Рік тому +16

      True

    • @mathieuavisse4623
      @mathieuavisse4623 Рік тому +390

      it s shit quality that falls appart within weeks but quite pricy in europe for instance - so it s fast fashion but at an idiot price -

    • @valfson1
      @valfson1 Рік тому +55

      No it is steel a fast fashion. You are just poor.

    • @merlinazz
      @merlinazz Рік тому +14

      Yep! Same in Argentina.

  • @princessdyn
    @princessdyn 2 роки тому +836

    I'm African and when I moved to the US I was told that fast fashion stores were cheap. I walked into an H&M and I was stunned by how EXPENSIVE everything was for how BAD the quality was. I never bought fast fashion. Now I don't even buy clothes

    • @FutureCommentary1
      @FutureCommentary1 Рік тому +69

      Meanwhile I am still wearing a pair of H&M pants and an H&M sweater I bought 10 years ago.

    • @groberti
      @groberti Рік тому

      @Tintin tbh all this video is is super first world problems, I hate videos like these

    •  Рік тому +51

      @Tintin It's not just in Eastern Europe. I lived most of my time in UK/EU and it's super expensive too. I don't know where Zara is actually cheap.

    • @salamjunior9965
      @salamjunior9965 Рік тому +32

      For me H&M used to be like a luxury brand. I remember having one H&M t-shirt that I got from my aunt and every time I wore that thing I felt super fancy lol

    • @groberti
      @groberti Рік тому +2

      @ I guess he is mostly talking about the US where everything is as expensive af

  • @ammitthedevourer7316
    @ammitthedevourer7316 Рік тому +72

    This is part of the reason I’ve been interested in sewing lately. I have this idea to use unwanted or damaged textiles to make and donate up-cycled items to shelters. Quilts, bags, pet toys, whatever. I don’t have 10 kids to sew for like my great grandparents did, but the urge is still there, lol.
    Granted, I’m a total noob about everything I just mentioned, so it’s just a fantasy for now, but man. Glad I found this channel!

    • @cheyennerey
      @cheyennerey Рік тому +2

      Great idea, hope you got around to it!

    • @beckypetersen2680
      @beckypetersen2680 9 місяців тому

      Shelters and group homes are always looking for quilts. Consider those.....

    • @petergeorge4415
      @petergeorge4415 8 місяців тому

      Are you an ANGEL in disguise?????
      Thank you SO MUCH for doing it!
      Very...gratefully,
      helene :))

  • @_TheShiv
    @_TheShiv Рік тому +77

    I love clothes. Difference between 10 years ago and now since becoming more aware of how the industry works, I want to love them enough to want to wear them forever or until they fall apart or become decorating / cleaning clothes or pyjamas. Side note: shein can **** off.

    • @margo3367
      @margo3367 Рік тому +3

      I recently deleted Shein’s app.

    • @claycowthh
      @claycowthh 2 місяці тому

      @@margo3367 whats so bad about shein everything i get there lasts hacka long i just take care of my clothes and its been years

  • @BearingMySeoul
    @BearingMySeoul 2 роки тому +629

    I'm surprised he didn't mention how a big percentage of America's "donated" clothes are shipped overseas to developing countries as "donations" and as part of trade agreements. There's literally an oceanfront area in Ghana where truckloads of clothes are dumped. :(

    • @heviutza
      @heviutza 2 роки тому +54

      Very true! There are some really good documentary here on UA-cam about that subject like "Dead White Man's Clothes" and "The Environmental Disaster that is Fuelled by Used Clothes and Fast Fashion". Two must see short documentaries!

    • @ridiculousrusty
      @ridiculousrusty 2 роки тому +10

      I just looked this up and it's true! ...but only accounts for about 5% of clothes, so 85% is still going directly to landfills

    • @mrs.potatohead8471
      @mrs.potatohead8471 2 роки тому +37

      The worst thing is, that prevents Ghana from developing their own fashion industry for economic development smh.

    • @jjk4891
      @jjk4891 2 роки тому +1

      I would think that’s better than going to landfills…..

    • @gunfun7772
      @gunfun7772 2 роки тому +1

      Ruins fashion economy there from what I remember hearing

  • @paulseidler
    @paulseidler 2 роки тому +833

    “Resale” instead of “preowned”. Note that shopping at vintage stores automatically makes you 40% cooler. I know this for a fact bc it was the only thing I learned in college. Apologies if this was already suggested… I only read 2k of the 5k comments

    • @venuzhey
      @venuzhey 2 роки тому +33

      Does shopping at thrift stores count as well?? I love thrift stores and some vintage stores as well.

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 2 роки тому +30

      @@venuzhey Yes. People buy the coolest stuff in thrift stores.

    • @klugshicer
      @klugshicer 2 роки тому +6

      I was thinkong of „resold“ instead of „preowned“

    • @mrdontgiveafuck3
      @mrdontgiveafuck3 2 роки тому +6

      Repurpose?

    • @silentracer911
      @silentracer911 2 роки тому +15

      It’s on the damn screen people… preowned- RE-OWN

  • @matthewbanta3240
    @matthewbanta3240 Рік тому +159

    Now I have something to tell my wife when she yells at me because I don't want to stop wearing an item of clothing I've had since the 90's just because it is starting to get a giant hole in it. I am not being lazy about clothes shopping -- I am just trying to help the environment. The fact that I don't have to go clothes shopping is just a bonus!

    • @bapparawal2457
      @bapparawal2457 Рік тому +65

      You can also trying mending that hole in your clothes. 😂

    • @ahse479
      @ahse479 9 місяців тому +8

      Well your wife is right, you have to get creative & repair that item!

    • @fnma21
      @fnma21 9 місяців тому +1

      She could try to mend it or do it yourself 😅. It's very useful to know how to mend things.

    • @Chris-jq8ne
      @Chris-jq8ne 9 місяців тому

      Your funny

    • @petergeorge4415
      @petergeorge4415 8 місяців тому

      🤣👍 Ah ! Ah ! Ah !
      You are the BEST!
      Hopefully, young couples (and older ones) will read your comment!
      Bravo!
      helene :)

  • @joelcuerrier4833
    @joelcuerrier4833 Рік тому +16

    A while ago, I helped a friend who was running a thrift store and we would go collect clothes people throw away in those bins. What I can confirm here is, yes, you find clothes with the sticker on them that were never worm.

  • @zand7128
    @zand7128 2 роки тому +377

    I work at urban outfitters and every single item that comes into the store is individually wrapped in plastic. Even things that are already in cardboard packaging.

    • @voider978
      @voider978 2 роки тому +31

      This is true for every clothing store in the world... All in the name of that "new clothes" urge

    • @purpurina5663
      @purpurina5663 2 роки тому +18

      ☹️
      This needs to be common knowledge!

    • @sarahlilliancullen
      @sarahlilliancullen 2 роки тому +4

      Same in zara

    • @sangomoon5456
      @sangomoon5456 2 роки тому +10

      I used to work in a clothing store too and i noticed the same thing. Its so wasteful

    • @magesalmanac6424
      @magesalmanac6424 2 роки тому +6

      sweet jesus, that's infuriating.

  • @legendarykeyboardwarrior8364
    @legendarykeyboardwarrior8364 Рік тому +1792

    In India, cloth life cycle: 1) party/wedding/holiday wear 2) office/ school wear 3) weekend outside wear 4) home wear 5) home wear while cleaning 6) doing something dirty like scrubbing floor or grease or dying hair 7) for cleaning car or dusting house 8) as a floor mop 😂😂

    • @Torantes
      @Torantes Рік тому +126

      Same in Russia hahahah

    • @jaidevtyagi1033
      @jaidevtyagi1033 Рік тому +14

      Hahaha true

    • @keegsmarshall6610
      @keegsmarshall6610 Рік тому +81

      I live in Australia and keeping clothes, repairing clothes, repurposing clothes is what I've done all my life. And now I discover other people don't? Strange world.

    • @irissupercoolsy
      @irissupercoolsy Рік тому +8

      Office/ school wear and home wear are the same for me tho. I often go in and out the house and inside, I'm just behind my pc all day. I switch to workout clothes when cleaning.

    • @jamegumb7298
      @jamegumb7298 Рік тому +7

      @@keegsmarshall6610 I pay a bit more (sometimes quite a bit more) but the clothes that I get are worn a lot usually. Oldest pair of jeans I have is 8 years old, still looking good.

  • @snifferscribbler9730
    @snifferscribbler9730 9 місяців тому +3

    Oh yeah, I was also raised in a "soviet clothing culture" - you just have 2 fashionable dresses (or suits, if you're a guy, but I'm a girl) for 2 types of events - a "sad" dress for funerals and a "joyful" for weddings and wear it to every such event, keep a eye on them, preserve them in a good condition (my "sad" dress is like 15 years old, still wear it). Than there's a work/casual clothes, 3-5 outfits for each season, and then everything that is torn/stained/worn out is your "home clothes". When your "home clothes" is unwearable (my husband literally had a T-shirt with so many holes, that it was funny) it becomes a cloth with which you wash your floor (so you never buy those as well). And yeah, old curtains become tablecloths. We were taught this by our parents, and we were very astonished, as we moved to Europe and realised we're leading a cool "sustainable" lifestyle lol. And those fashionable leather high heel shoes that have scratches on them are remodelled with nail-polish/paint in a creative way, and than the new scratches are remodelled again and so on and so forth... And I still show up in a gym in my stained old trousers and a worn-out T-shirt - back home it was just so normal, you're gonna sweat anyway, so...

  • @MayorSom
    @MayorSom Рік тому +5

    My wardrobe:
    - 4 grey t shirts
    - 4 black t shirts
    - 4 black trousers
    - 4 blazers
    -2 rain jackets
    - seven socks
    - seven boxers
    Last clothes purchase: 2016 😅

  • @Thoric_
    @Thoric_ 2 роки тому +1133

    "Trying to fix the supply chain from the demand end is like trying to turn a cruise ship by leaning really hard to one side" is an incredibly fitting phrase for climate change activism

    • @SuperSarahbop
      @SuperSarahbop 2 роки тому +1

      Yep the ignorance of this video is insane. It shows his privilege

    • @CaSCHWANK
      @CaSCHWANK 2 роки тому +64

      @@SuperSarahbop ok so what? You prefer when privileged people don't give a shit? You realize the target audience of this video is people who participate in fast fashion. you know. Rich people. Who do you think is allowed to try to make a difference? You're sure doing a lot for the world by leaving dissenting comments on an informational video. 🙄

    • @CloroxBleach-mm1xy
      @CloroxBleach-mm1xy 2 роки тому +23

      @@CaSCHWANK rich people aren’t buying $5 clothes. Poor people are because they can’t afford to go to more expensive stores. Don’t delude yourself.

    • @daniellxnder
      @daniellxnder 2 роки тому +13

      But wouldn't lower demand will ultimately leads to lower supply because if the supply stays still, then the price will fall down

    • @taylorsutherland2595
      @taylorsutherland2595 2 роки тому +26

      @@SuperSarahbop How is it ignorant? Climate change activism is largely centered around advocating to lawmakers, not individuals

  • @supriyam6896
    @supriyam6896 2 роки тому +318

    I recently wrote a paper for college on sustainable supply chain for fashion industry. I was appalled by so many scientific papers claiming Zara and H&M as leading in sustainable supply chains. Even as a complete amateur, I could spot the green washing. These big cooperations can buy out anyone to fit their narrative.

    • @pablodelsegundo9502
      @pablodelsegundo9502 2 роки тому +52

      Sadly, the rent-a-scientist phenomenon is happening in pretty much any industry- pharmaceuticals, tobacco, petroleum, fashion, etc.

    • @papajohnsuk5965
      @papajohnsuk5965 2 роки тому +12

      @@pablodelsegundo9502 Also, carbon offset companies, really evil. Just so they can pay to have 'green' 'certified' stauts

  • @Theodore453
    @Theodore453 8 місяців тому +5

    It's so important to know how to mend clothes. It's more sustainable and more cost effective than just throwing them out all the time, but it can also just be fun! Some of my favorite articles of clothing are ones that I've fixed several times, because all the patches and darns add so much visual interest.
    And they tell a story, too! Like the legs on my shorts aren't just patched up for no reason, they're like that because I walked hundreds of miles in them. It's a badge of honor, like "hey I got a lot of good use out of these, and I'm gonna get a lot more".
    Mending your own clothes can be so fulfilling, and I really reccomend learning it to anyone with the time.

  • @andreizaulet7477
    @andreizaulet7477 Рік тому +8

    this just validates my feelings about clothes now...its so hard to find something that isnt garbage quality and lets not talk about workers and pollution...

  • @jamesjohonnott1164
    @jamesjohonnott1164 Рік тому +278

    "Remember hobbies? They're what we had before we had phones." Hits like a ton of bricks.

    • @amw6846
      @amw6846 Рік тому +8

      I heard it, knitting as I watched my phone...

    • @sweglakatos1463
      @sweglakatos1463 Рік тому +5

      yea why cant you have hobbies if you have a phone??? i dont get what that has to do with anything

    • @amw6846
      @amw6846 Рік тому +15

      @@sweglakatos1463 because paying attention to your phone takes the place of your hobbies in their eyes.
      My thought is that it can do so but doesn't have to.

    • @Rose333X
      @Rose333X Рік тому +1

      idk man, i got hobbies, video games, cycling, going out, etc. most people do shit like that i imagine so

    • @DanielFerreira-ez8qd
      @DanielFerreira-ez8qd Рік тому +2

      @@Rose333X safe hobbies that don't require much effort in the person's side. They certainly count as hobbies but they're just as mindless as using your phone all the time.

  • @alcuddle
    @alcuddle 2 роки тому +957

    "The average garment in America is worn just seven times before it's thrown away"
    You guys need to re-discover washing machines

    • @groszak1
      @groszak1 2 роки тому +28

      That's the third R (Repair)

    • @beth8775
      @beth8775 2 роки тому +151

      I wash and wear clothes for years. For 7 to be the *average* - how many people are actually just buying new clothes instead of washing them? I thought that was mostly a joke, but apparently, I was very sadly wrong.

    • @BraxtonHoward
      @BraxtonHoward 2 роки тому +64

      The clothes made for fast fashion usually only survive 10 or 15 washes without holes or worse. It's shocking to me that people continue to buy it.

    • @baganatube
      @baganatube 2 роки тому +11

      @@another2133 I have a jacket from 2007 still worn from time to time in the winter. I intend to see how many more years I can keep it.

    • @groszak1
      @groszak1 2 роки тому +41

      @@BraxtonHoward Products that are made to break through repairs are obviously planned obsolescence.

  • @urmomsh0use
    @urmomsh0use 8 місяців тому +12

    I still wear things that are 5-10 years old routinely. It's crazy to me how much money people waste trying to impress strangers.

  • @definitelynotacrab7651
    @definitelynotacrab7651 Рік тому +4

    That 90% of donated clothes thrown away bloes my mind that's awful

  • @user-ug4ow1qq2h
    @user-ug4ow1qq2h 2 роки тому +996

    I love wearing my clothes until they fall apart. Unfortunately, clothes manufacturers have their way of dealing with people like me, and now even jeans don't last for a full year. So I started sewing patches to brand new jeans in places that are most vulnerable to wear and tear, effectively doubling the fabric thickness. So far it works, but I wonder what the next move will be.

    • @nicolescats2
      @nicolescats2 2 роки тому +59

      Learning to make your own? I know most of historical fashion UA-cam isn't relevant to your goal but the pattern drafting and sewing techniques could be. I know Angela Clayton did some 1940s pants and shorts sewing vlogs and mentions a pattern company that also makes modern patterns. I'm not saying everyone is capable of that, but it might be worth looking into seeing handsewing techniques being demonstrated (though you might need a more historical piece, or a different UA-camr that shows more handsewing footage to get that, she quite likes her sewing machine and if you intend to get a machine seeing how she did her garment of a very different style might help).

    • @bcase5328
      @bcase5328 2 роки тому +31

      Yeah, if I want worn jean with holes, I wish to start with a new sturdy thick pair and wear them until they get to that point.

    • @bcase5328
      @bcase5328 2 роки тому

      @@nicolescats2 UA-cam channels:
      Sewn Company ua-cam.com/channels/I76QID4NG3MwCDwnUaVY3Q.html , Burnley and Trowbridge Co. ua-cam.com/users/BurnleyandTrowbridgeCo , and others have short videos on hand sewing.

    • @richardallen144
      @richardallen144 2 роки тому +24

      But the crotch is often the first place to go, and sewing patches there makes your junk sweat, and thickens the spots that already rub against each other. But I still try to repair as much as possible.

    • @andreja9425
      @andreja9425 2 роки тому +18

      go for raw or true denim or even buy designer. I know these are more expensive but they will last you decades and you’ll sind up saving money long term. Plus they often have better fit, more interesting design, and overall look and feel so much better that you’ll think it’s worth it

  • @SofiaCamussi
    @SofiaCamussi 2 роки тому +702

    Pro tip: here in Argentina my friends and I have started making clothe fairs birthdays. As the birthday person you put your house for the celebration, bring all the stuff you want to give away, or swap and tell people to bring the same. That way I haven't bought clothes in for so long it's crazy. It's super freaking fun and mostly all my clothes have a story from someone else 💚🐥🐳

    • @virginiacreager4331
      @virginiacreager4331 2 роки тому +17

      I love this idea, thanks for sharing. Do people leave the clothes they don’t want to be donated ? What do you do with the extra clothes no one takes?

    • @10Tie
      @10Tie 2 роки тому +10

      That's a good idea for getting rid of evidence too!

    • @mardiffv.8775
      @mardiffv.8775 2 роки тому +7

      There is a variant of your system: In my neighborhood we got a Facebook groep for giving away any stuff that is still useable. I receive a set of plates and bowls for free.

    • @dimplesd8931
      @dimplesd8931 2 роки тому

      That’s a great idea

    • @ViolawithS
      @ViolawithS 2 роки тому +1

      Amazing idea and I definitely want to try this out! Thanks for sharing :)

  • @donyori
    @donyori Рік тому +11

    I was wondering why clothes are so low quality now. Half the shirts I had in elementary school were thin and almost see-through and that was the norm. I wasn't a crazy kid, yet all my pants had a hole in them.

  • @jeremybirmingham2316
    @jeremybirmingham2316 8 місяців тому +6

    This is why I always try to buy clothes that are well made and made of natural fibers. My clothes last a long time, and recycled at home, which is to say my old jeans get patched, turned into shorts, have been used to refurbish seats, and becoming stuffing for old toys, I even made at my daughters instance a cat toy out of old jeans. Unfortunately it is almost impossible for my wife to find decent clothes because it seems that women's clothing is expected to be worn only once or twice.

  • @chewygum1854
    @chewygum1854 2 роки тому +707

    "A suit that looks like it was made for some kind of European heroin addict"
    And just like that, I was hooked within 8 seconds* of content.

    • @solaris025
      @solaris025 2 роки тому +7

      Fr me it was “discount Burt Reynolds type”

    • @mnk9073
      @mnk9073 2 роки тому +2

      Great, now I miss the Libertines...

    • @moonbeeps
      @moonbeeps 2 роки тому +12

      He clearly has never been to any country from Europe.

    • @jimmyjoejeeter2366
      @jimmyjoejeeter2366 2 роки тому

      @@solaris025 He even has Burt's hairline! LOL!

    • @insunym
      @insunym 2 роки тому +2

      Fun fact: there is a S Korean fast fashion brand named 8 seconds

  • @joshuachandra6677
    @joshuachandra6677 2 роки тому +691

    So us men that own underwear until they literally disintegrate is something everyone should be doing go figure

    • @Matthew10950
      @Matthew10950 2 роки тому +92

      And they've been making fun of us for DECADES!!

    • @jasbails9857
      @jasbails9857 2 роки тому +111

      Ahead of our time. My boxers are saving the planet.

    • @snoopymccloud1875
      @snoopymccloud1875 2 роки тому +103

      Every hole in my boxers is one less hole in the ozone layer, is what I always say

    • @liamconrad4710
      @liamconrad4710 2 роки тому +26

      Finally got rid of my boxers from high school… I’m 23

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 2 роки тому +15

      Hah... You save the environment and you destroy your relationships.
      My ex wore boxers that were too tight and gave him stomach cramps and made him shit his pants. He'd leave them on the floor, I've stepped in one once.
      The thing had holes on the front, sides and back and in the middle. The crownjewels were hanging out of the hole, dangling through. The print itself used to be armyprint on white, but had faded into vague grey and light green, and it now also included brown. He always got annoyed with my re-using and saving everything and never chucking it, but that pair of pants I am certain is still in his cabinet.

  • @emmac1398
    @emmac1398 10 місяців тому +7

    Outside of the absolutely excellent points youve made regarding the shocking state of fast fashion and its environmental impact, you are EXCELLENT.
    I nearly fell of my seat laughing during the "I'm a comedian, its worse" bit 🤣 Thank you for keeping in the crazy happenings around you, I absolutely love it!

  • @JustMeMorgane
    @JustMeMorgane 11 місяців тому +6

    whenever i find myself wanting new clothes i browse vinted, save all the articles i wanna have, and then draw myself wearing them, and then i'm fine

  • @cileft011
    @cileft011 2 роки тому +354

    my mom works in the fashion industry in america and her job is almost completely gone. she's a patternmaker, the person who makes sure clothes are cut to fit well and different sizes are actually consistent. but now big fashion companies are cutting out this position where they can and it results in wonky fitting clothes that no one wants to buy 😕

    • @ab935
      @ab935 2 роки тому +36

      If she can make patterns, she should consider being a tailor. The wealthy will always want something made specifically for them.

    • @atomic66
      @atomic66 2 роки тому +15

      So, that's why things sometimes fit weird!!?? Whoa

    • @zoinomiko
      @zoinomiko 2 роки тому +17

      It gets even worse the bigger the sizes get. Fast fashion is TERRIBLE.

    • @Megan6772
      @Megan6772 2 роки тому +3

      I wanted to be a patternmaker. I find it fascinating. she should try to get contract work with aspiring/established fashion designers who are lacking in that skill

    • @wm8840
      @wm8840 2 роки тому +21

      This explains why so so many clothes in fast fashion are cut so weird I've seen pieces that seem impossible to ever fit anyone properly they just look off I don't even know how they make it to the stores in the first place

  • @afonsobarata9615
    @afonsobarata9615 2 роки тому +461

    Blame not low-middle class people that buy fast fashion once every 3 months and use it often and redirect the blame to those 800$ shein hauls never to be used again

    • @lizz9896
      @lizz9896 2 роки тому +61

      @h e mimoso essentially said, "blame it on overconsumption." which is true, no? people who tend to buy fast fashion, tend to easily rack it up by the hundreds in just a week or two, or month. People who don't have money- when they do buy, tend to do it once a month, an article or two, or even a lot less than that (time wise) because those $8 $15 dollar price tags add up too easily. What is bought isn't an impulsive choice but a deliberate one. With the $8-$20 dollar price tag, you're usually making the decision between an article of clothing and food or something fun to do, or simply saving. So yes, blame it on the $800 hauls, which include nonbroadcastive ones.

    • @ssticky
      @ssticky 2 роки тому +26

      or blame the people producing it? if you buy fast fashion I don't think anyone should aid you in a climate disaster

    • @LinkEX
      @LinkEX 2 роки тому +46

      @@ssticky Yeah, it's being produced because people keep buying it.
      If you buy fast fashion, you're part of the problem. Doesn't matter whether you're involved in the first or the last step in the fast fashion chain.

    • @Survivalist-of-war
      @Survivalist-of-war 2 роки тому +7

      Ive seen way to many low middle class bedrooms with more cloths than. Ive ever owned in my entire life. Closets filled with them. Fuck the industry and anyone who takes part in it.

    • @gildanonofyabiznez6430
      @gildanonofyabiznez6430 2 роки тому +1

      I'll get this comment tattooed on my forehead and left butt cheek

  • @lostcharge
    @lostcharge Рік тому +4

    Didn’t realize that clothes may be transported more than once during production. I’m learning to sew my own clothes as I want to make garments that are well made and fit me well. there is some waste in the process but I imagine a lot less waste compared to the amount of shipping the garment goes through during production.

  • @roundlake96
    @roundlake96 Рік тому +5

    I used to buy a lot of cloths and enjoy fast fashion but one day I sorted out my wardrobe and found out that over 60% of the stuff I owend I never used.
    Today I buy very few cloths but of a higher standard that last longer. I also slimed down on what kind I use and thanks to it I as a bonus feel more secured in my dressing style.

  • @Sidecutter
    @Sidecutter 2 роки тому +532

    As someone who wears their stuff for years, often to where it just can't be used anymore, I am completely blown away that people go through so much clothing. And even then, things like t-shirts that are too won out to wear in public still get used for odd jobs or just clothes to wear around the house.

    • @Yourgurtisgood
      @Yourgurtisgood 2 роки тому +40

      And when it can’t be worn cut that shit up and boom cleaning rags

    • @Pheatan
      @Pheatan 2 роки тому +12

      Torn clothes turn into oil rags in my shop. Any clothes i cant wear anymore clean up any spill in the shop before doing a final quick clean with a mop to stop the stickiness.

    • @Tesserex
      @Tesserex 2 роки тому +10

      This is me too. That 5 articles per month is crazy to me. I wear t shirts until they have so many holes that my wife has to steal them away. I buy maybe one pair of jeans per year and cycle out the oldest one. I pretty much have one shopping trip per year, and other than that I'll get a single article per gift occasion.

    • @rafaelalodio5116
      @rafaelalodio5116 2 роки тому +10

      I was also shocked, Americans buying 5 clothe peaces each month, this is insane.

    • @SpaceCase1701
      @SpaceCase1701 2 роки тому +2

      The life cycle for me is usually.... normal casual outdoor wear - indoor comfy wear/dirty work clothes (painting, gardening etc) - pyjamas - cut up for cleaning cloths.

  • @alexfwfwfw4830
    @alexfwfwfw4830 2 роки тому +627

    "The average piece of clothing is worn 7 times before being thrown out"
    My clothes take more than 2 years, I assure you.

    • @asfsfas2435
      @asfsfas2435 2 роки тому +8

      i thought he said 7 washes.

    • @ssilentmedia
      @ssilentmedia 2 роки тому +83

      lmao, i still have clothes from when i was 14 years old. i m now 25 (i stopped growing at 14. i m 1.93)

    • @paul6925
      @paul6925 2 роки тому +5

      Me too. I’ve never not worn an item I’ve bought.

    • @allopez8563
      @allopez8563 2 роки тому +5

      @@ssilentmedia So you grew almost 7 feet in just a few years?

    • @ssilentmedia
      @ssilentmedia 2 роки тому +8

      @@allopez8563 pretty much. I know this for sure because at the beginning of high school (at the age of 14) they took our measurements and I was 1.93 and to this day I'm still 1.93

  • @justyarn9939
    @justyarn9939 8 місяців тому +9

    When my mom was in her 20’s, my dad bought her thousands of dollars worth of designer clothes. After a little while my mom decided that she didn’t really need all that and she slowly started giving some items away. I watched her give someone a 20 year old jacket that looked brand new. After all that time sitting in a dusty closet it had stayed in perfect condition. They just don’t make clothing with that mindset anymore. Everything is about quantity over quality these days

  • @InventorZahran
    @InventorZahran 6 місяців тому +2

    I extended the Three R's into Seven R's:
    RENT specialty outfits for one-off occasions;
    REUSE existing clothing by buying pre-owned;
    RESELL (or gift) unwanted clothes to keep them out of the donation-to-landfill pipeline;
    REPAIR your clothes to extend their useful life;
    REPURPOSE stained garments as dedicated dirty-work outfits;
    RETROFIT torn clothes by shortening or cutting off the sleeves/pantlegs;
    And finally...
    RADICALIZE your friends and family by sharing this video with them and spreading awareness of fast fashion's numerous problems. The more people we can convince to stop buying these crappy items, the less profit those crappy companies make!

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 6 місяців тому

      ...too many words for obvious, heuristic comments. There's no need to smear "use it in a different way as it wears down" across 3-4 points. It doesn't really make them any different.

  • @simpleplanfan011
    @simpleplanfan011 Рік тому +556

    I cannot believe people wear clothes 7 times before throwing them away. That’s so wasteful! I have clothes that I’ve worn for years and they’re still going strong. Clothes can last for such a long time, you just have to take care of them.

    • @QoraxAudio
      @QoraxAudio Рік тому +27

      Well, most of those people just have too much money to burn or they're addicted to their credit card.
      Many people complain about debts, well... yeah... there's that...

    • @shrineheart87
      @shrineheart87 Рік тому +13

      Back in 2004, when forever 21 was the thing, i brought a cashmere top for $35 it was on clearance !!! to me that was affordable and it was rare to find due to the material. I used to envy the rich buying designer. I also brought silk blouses and camisoles from Charlotte Russe ,Express and fine quality leather purses from Hollister and til this day i still have it. I still thrift from places and find high end designer goods for dirt cheap lets say .25 yep no lie i still have a classic look that is timeless and not guilty of spending more or less and if get robbed at least i did spend top dollar.

    • @lasjames7516
      @lasjames7516 Рік тому +5

      women

    • @pinkmiku12
      @pinkmiku12 Рік тому +2

      @@lasjames7516 men and dogs

    • @Lars-gu3wi
      @Lars-gu3wi Рік тому +6

      women

  • @samantharose7951
    @samantharose7951 2 роки тому +439

    As someone who works with donated clothing, I find that the reason only 10% gets sold on is because the rest is so damaged and stained it is unsellable. It’s incredibly frustrating, people often don’t wash their clothes before putting them in the donation bins

    • @Shoyren
      @Shoyren 2 роки тому +94

      You'd think that making your donations clean would be an obvious thing. >_>

    • @elizrebezilmadommdo1662
      @elizrebezilmadommdo1662 2 роки тому +40

      It's like when people donate hair for cancer patients. Most of it doesn't actually get used for wigs, because a lot of people don't know the guidelines they need to follow to donate their hair. They can't use your hair if it's too short, dyed, damaged, tangled, or dirty. So if it doesn't meet the necessary requirements, it just gets thrown out.

    • @annakeye
      @annakeye 2 роки тому +36

      And some of it gets sent to African nations, by the container load. And they throw it out after feeling fucking offended that someone just sold them a jacket with a sweat stain on the collar and trousers with a fart hole. Just because they're financially poor, doesn't mean they don't have dignity.

    • @tyricelewis1161
      @tyricelewis1161 2 роки тому +4

      I've seen workers pull clothes from the racks before they change the tag color instead of allowing ppl to purchase them at 50% off. Soo do they put them back out on the floor or send them to the bins?????

    • @artvandalay13
      @artvandalay13 2 роки тому +6

      I love going to goodwill and finding shit stained pants and underwear. It's a bonus. Why you throwing that out?

  • @dalgardnerd
    @dalgardnerd 10 місяців тому +7

    2 years later I'm here to tell you that you could have referred to preowned clothing as "resold" clothing. Love your videos

  • @Peleski
    @Peleski Рік тому +9

    Yes, clothing shopping can be stressful. One way to cut through the mess is to choose 5 colours which suit your skin undertone and acceptable contrast range, and only shop those. It cuts 99% of the crap out. Everyone knows those 5 colours because they're the ones you wear till they're rags.

    • @elizabethharalson7903
      @elizabethharalson7903 Рік тому +1

      I agree with you about having a color palette. There is no orange or yellow in my wardrobe. Pink and green are only a few carefully chosen items because they clash with my strawberry blonde hair.

  • @SomewhatAbnormal
    @SomewhatAbnormal 2 роки тому +678

    Instead of buying “pre-owned” clothing you could just “Re-own” clothing. See, now you have an “R”.

    • @TheSighphiguy
      @TheSighphiguy 2 роки тому +39

      its DE-owned by the 1st guy.
      its PRE-owned in the thrift store,
      and RE-owned by the next guy.
      are hand me downs FREE-owned?

    • @LukeSumIpsePatremTe
      @LukeSumIpsePatremTe 2 роки тому +36

      Re-used?

    • @TheNightwalker247
      @TheNightwalker247 2 роки тому +8

      I love the different story it tells. It's less off a oh it was already used and more of a it found a new purpose

    • @vapingcat9615
      @vapingcat9615 2 роки тому +5

      R-ready-owned

    • @davedixon2167
      @davedixon2167 2 роки тому +6

      I was going to say 'remarketed' - that sounds like a buzzwordy thing people would get down with, yeah?

  • @RamadaArtist
    @RamadaArtist 2 роки тому +539

    "The average garment in America is worn just seven-"
    Me: "years."
    "-times before being thrown out."
    Me: "o-ohhhhh... right that's definitely what I meant to say." *looks around furtively*

    • @RamadaArtist
      @RamadaArtist 2 роки тому +14

      @a I think I appreciate your reply more than my own comment.

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 2 роки тому +12

      * looks up the word "furtively" *

    • @maagic2031
      @maagic2031 2 роки тому +6

      @@camelopardalis84 so easily forgotten

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 2 роки тому +2

      @@maagic2031 It is! I have no idea what it means anymore! So off I go to look it up!

    • @EdwardBIl
      @EdwardBIl 2 роки тому +1

      Looks down at my 2015 Bernie Sanders shirt...

  • @braviansamuelpanderaja5723
    @braviansamuelpanderaja5723 11 місяців тому +1

    This is why i support the more olden ways where cloths were tailored. In the yesteryear where clothing were made specifically to how you like and though you pay quite a bit more, you wear it more and generally is a better investment.

  • @Kai-Made
    @Kai-Made 8 місяців тому +1

    Well, I am doing my part. I might buy socks and underwear once a year. BUT typically I do not buy clothes until the ones I have are threadbare and beyond repair. However, last year my last two pair of shorts finally died. SO I went to Wally world, since there is literally no other clothing stores near me...actually no clothing stores within 60 miles other than Wally World. There I bought two pairs of Wrangler stretch shorts. Comfy and full of pockets...and enough belt loops. I am a simply guy but we must have enough pockets. I wore them twice and the pockets literally fell off the back. Pissed me off. SO I had to buy 2 more pair of something else. Those however have survived.
    I am still sickened by "fashion". I wear what I want, that is comfy, and affordable...I buy only when absolutely required and I donate any and all things that I do not need or want to the local mission.
    Goodwill and Salv. Army are both full of corporate bs...so I know to steer clear.

  • @aikhailathe5135
    @aikhailathe5135 2 роки тому +634

    I don’t do the whole fast fashion thing also because I’m ugly anyway, and there is nothing made by starving 12 yo Pakisani kids can fix that

    • @andrewtrip8617
      @andrewtrip8617 2 роки тому +25

      Burka will fix that .

    • @gertrudesuzan9253
      @gertrudesuzan9253 2 роки тому +33

      Love that you don't feel like you need fast fashion, don't love that you think you're ugly. You don't need to fix yourself, just live your life looking however you look and don't worry about comparing yourself to others ❤

    • @PumpkinMozie
      @PumpkinMozie 2 роки тому +8

      Hahahahahahahaha I feel this post so hard. Same, same. Like I’m not gonna look good anyway so why make other people suffer by buying these new clothes??

    • @ookayokay
      @ookayokay 2 роки тому +2

      Well if you do not have the money you have to. Sadly.

    • @vihaandumir1649
      @vihaandumir1649 2 роки тому +5

      It's Pakistani with an s, not that it matters.

  • @Amanda-hq9of
    @Amanda-hq9of 2 роки тому +317

    so many people use shopping as a way to feel better when daily life is stressful. they go to the store and buy poorly made shirts for dirt cheap, feeling like they got a good deal, get a sweet little dose of endorphins and then when they feel like crap again, it’s back to the store to fill up their closets with things they’ll never wear or won’t hold up in the wash. there are just so many cogs in the machine that is fast fashion.

    • @ashkanarabi3785
      @ashkanarabi3785 2 роки тому +8

      Well said!

    • @ah5721
      @ah5721 2 роки тому +7

      I used to be that way until I lived out on my own with a tiny armoir instead of a closet and large set of drawers for my stuff and when I found minimalist life style to cinch the deal. It changed how I shopped forever . I only buy things that I can use in a week and I look for better made clothing, hang drying them too

    • @ssticky
      @ssticky 2 роки тому +4

      think of how stupid the average person is and realise half of everyone are more stupid than them

    • @krishhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
      @krishhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh 2 роки тому +2

      Totally agree!

    • @theymademepickaname1248
      @theymademepickaname1248 2 роки тому +5

      The same can be said about a lot of things in US culture (clothes, electronics, fast food, guns, cars, etc.) I see the pandemic induced supply chain shortages as a good thing. It will force people to use what they have instead of looking to buy new.

  • @MrKingsley
    @MrKingsley Рік тому +1

    As a motorcyclist and out door enthusiast what bothers me is the Gortex, which is quite toxic to create, and similar textiles. Waxed cotton, linen, and hemp are 99% of the time going to be "good enough" for the recreational user. Yes, if you're going into extreme environments often as part of your job, then Gortex and similar makes sense; but there are a good number of people out there who are like, "It might rain in New York better have an H&H gortex jacket and unbrella". The other end of this is the sheer cost of natural fabrics like wool, cotton, hemp, linen, etc... These things should be a lot cheaper, local, and easy to access and they are not. A plastic shirt costs 5$ and hemp or linen 10 to 20 and wool! OMG I have seen wool underlayers for well over 100$ and I'm like how? why?

  • @glenncalkins4764
    @glenncalkins4764 Рік тому +4

    I like to mend my clothes. It's relaxing, leaves me with a visible acheivement and saves money. When I like something I don't want to throw it away just because I lost a button, or a seam has ripped.

  • @mohammedmodan7083
    @mohammedmodan7083 2 роки тому +1972

    This really is one of the most underrated channels on UA-cam

    • @adamt195
      @adamt195 2 роки тому +21

      Seriously, Rollie is doing amazing work. I hope he hits 100K by the end of the year.

    • @jerryballstein
      @jerryballstein 2 роки тому +19

      You can tell it's a passion project for him. The humor is genuine and is actually funny and it's packed with really informative stuff here that doesn't just feel like someone trying to be contrarian or edgy. He definitely deserves success!

    • @danielcooper4497
      @danielcooper4497 2 роки тому +4

      100% agree this need putting on TV

    • @Zscach
      @Zscach 2 роки тому +7

      "Discount Burt Reynolds" 🤣

    • @Paul-wd8cz
      @Paul-wd8cz 2 роки тому +11

      I was wondering what you were talking about and then realised he has less than 100k subs. I'll have to like and comment more often.

  • @trapical
    @trapical Рік тому +233

    1:02 "Americans on average buy 68 pieces of clothing a year."
    wtf, I bought literally ONE SHIRT last year. Buying 70 pieces of cloth sounds f-ing exhausing.

    • @JK_Clark
      @JK_Clark Рік тому +21

      I've never known anyone come close to buying that much, unless you count socks and tights.

    • @bullpup1337
      @bullpup1337 Рік тому +29

      if this is an average, then a lot of people must be buying hundreds of pieces. Does not compute I dont have enough space for the roughly twenty shirts and perhaps 20 pants I own lol

    • @JJ-ze6vb
      @JJ-ze6vb Рік тому +3

      @@bullpup1337 why own 20 pants?! 5 each is basically enough.

    • @bullpup1337
      @bullpup1337 Рік тому +8

      @@JJ-ze6vb i live in a country with seasons, so i need some for hot, moderate and cold weather. and i also want to have multiple colors, and some spares for laundry. still, 20 is not too much. i only buy like two per year on average. and only high quality that lasts

    • @mr.2minutes161
      @mr.2minutes161 Рік тому +2

      @@bullpup1337 but you only need a couple pants for daily use no? thats a lot of pants for me
      i got 2 cold pants, 1 formal pants. and 1 hiking shorts, i only use the hiking shorts to go outside, at home i use 2 of my sarong (its basically a skirt but for men), i've been doing this for 4-5 years

  • @laureliechapman1267
    @laureliechapman1267 Рік тому +1

    I have always loved vintage, which goes in and out of style, but it remains my style. I have several winter coats, all vintage. Fabulous! It can be hard to find but the search is the fun part. Personal style is what each individual sees for themselves, not what Zara, Shein, or H&M tell us it is. Thrifting and vintage can be more challenging if you are a size 14/16/18 like me, but when you find a fab piece it is more exciting and you have the satisfaction of knowing your finds are not only unique but are not going to the landfill - at least not today.

  • @ongakuwo
    @ongakuwo Рік тому +9

    I work in a thrift/antique store, and the amount of clothing people bring into our store is insane. I was talking with a friend today who works in another store of the same type, and we were talking about how the daily income is essentially clothing if nothing else big was sold.

  • @MrBRANDONandJESS
    @MrBRANDONandJESS 2 роки тому +506

    On day one of my design degree 5 years ago my fashion fundementals lecturer asked us how many articles of clothing we each had. Granted it was first year fashion so we all very excitedly boasted about how many articles of clothing we had but eventually when it came back to the lecturer they said they only had 10 interchangeable pieces. They then proceeded to explain about the impact of fast fashion on developing nations which effectively become dumping grounds. It's awesome to see this video and gives me something else to share when discussing fashion choices. I can't wait for your next video!

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 2 роки тому +41

      Sounds like an awesome teacher. Good way to make a point and get your students to think about their own actions. And ensure they make a positive contribution to the world.

    • @BambiLena666
      @BambiLena666 2 роки тому +11

      Im not sure what 10 interchangeable pieces means in this context. I always get a bit confused when people say something like this. Maybe its also a lifestyle/location thing. Living in a place where the weather goes from 40c (104f) in the summer to -15c (5f) in the winter doing that is impossible. Or did they mean they only had 10 "extras" that werent unique pieces, like I only have one winter jacket, but 4shirts that are interchangeable?

    • @bintangdilangit3348
      @bintangdilangit3348 2 роки тому +3

      Right i come from that country who buy second hand clothes from ame or Europe and fr the come in very big big Quantity The seller bought it in kg and will open it in the market And sell it in cheap price. Since they buy in buck they cant check the quality or anything, Many become waste. If it's for charity at least they have to give it free to a foundation that can distribute it, but in reality they sell it again to dealers And in the market that second hand clothes prices are almost the same as locally made products

    • @alicen2610
      @alicen2610 2 роки тому +5

      @@BambiLena666 I think the point is more to try to keep the amount of clothes we wear down and not dump out our wardrobes every year because we have to show everyone we're cool too wearing the latest trends. That is a huge problem right now. And there is not a shortage of used clothes or clothes for the most needy (a way people brush off their own responsibility, "I donate / resell"), there is way too much and it's leading to massive amounts of waste. The whole industry is one of the biggest contributors to climate change and environmental harm but gets very little attention from young liberals and progressives because so many participate in that lifestyle. Easier to blame others. And we will need a combination of people changing their own wasteful habits and also governments doing more to discourage the overproduction of clothes and the related harms done.

    • @IL_Bgentyl
      @IL_Bgentyl 2 роки тому

      Huge issue imo is people including me are ignorant. Thankfully I don’t mind not matching but I’ve been working on a nicer wardrobe with all interchangeable cloth. I also have work cloths I’ll wear for other things.

  • @MarcosProjects
    @MarcosProjects 2 роки тому +433

    "I offered to plug United By Zero for free, but those dorks literally paid me" ...it's almost like their company culture actually backs up the work they're doing by making sure that the people that deserve it get paid AND putting their money toward spreading awareness about the Climate Crisis. Respect.

  • @burrdaddy
    @burrdaddy 10 місяців тому +1

    Well done, Climate Town! Great channel and wonderful content. Amazing that you’re pulling such viewer numbers.

  • @canalrubiaraquel279
    @canalrubiaraquel279 9 місяців тому +2

    As a second hand shop owner in Brazil it breaks my heart to see clothes going to the bin.
    Here all we get is so apreciated.
    I would love if I could get them to wash, press, repair, costumaze if necessary and pass them on at a low cost as I do in my comunity.
    Congratulations, nice vídeo ❤❤

  • @LKonstantina915
    @LKonstantina915 Рік тому +624

    literally the cause of humanity's downfall: Overconsumerism, people just cannot stop buying things

    • @mangonectar8117
      @mangonectar8117 Рік тому +57

      Overconsumerism is the result of the failure that is capitalism🤓

    • @kalamay
      @kalamay Рік тому

      @@mangonectar8117 and of course communism is not a failure, huh? 🤓

    • @izabella4450
      @izabella4450 Рік тому +40

      Which is the product of human greediness in the first place

    • @TokyoXtreme
      @TokyoXtreme Рік тому +32

      I would say decline is due to the intentional destruction of spirituality through enforced nihilism.

    • @bearbowen2302
      @bearbowen2302 Рік тому

      @@TokyoXtreme its wayyy easier just to blame white people

  • @ashleighfiddler
    @ashleighfiddler 2 роки тому +271

    ”No one has landed a kick flip since 1999“ sums everything up brilliantly

    • @extropiantranshuman
      @extropiantranshuman 2 роки тому +2

      back when tony hawk was popular and we had finger skateboards to practice with

    • @circulati
      @circulati 2 роки тому

      Haha, been binge watching the berrics “do a kickflip!” videos lately, love them. Apparently, people can still do them 🤷🏻‍♀️😇

    • @Spootyskater
      @Spootyskater 2 роки тому +1

      I landed a kickflip yesterday, felt like it was just 1999

    • @Spootyskater
      @Spootyskater 2 роки тому

      Oh wait, I think I said that backwards

  • @thegameowl11
    @thegameowl11 Рік тому +3

    I never understood my mom’s obsession with constantly Changing my wardrobe. I have worn a lot of my clothes several times.

  • @hannahlololo8731
    @hannahlololo8731 10 місяців тому +1

    Hey, German here 👋🏼 I wanted to share some interesting facts about the German Supply Chain Due Diligence Act you mentioned 13:40. Like you said, the Act was originally planned to force companies to make sure that their whole supply chain would work without exploitation and child labour and make them liable if it wasn’t (and pay fines). BUT unfortunately the law was changed last minute. Due to the last votes our government currently consists of three parties and one of them, FDP, which is basically a party for the rich, made sure that the law was changed last minute, so the Supply Chain Due Diligence Act ONLY forces companies to make sure the LAST step of the chain works…. Meaning they don’t have to care about their factories in Bangladesh and India, since they are usually the first step of the chain… so the Act changed nothing really, due to this stupid party :) Worst part is, most people in Germany still think, because of this law things HAVE changed because the name of kit makes you think it did or they don’t really care about it at all… it’s really sad and disappointing. 😢

  • @PurpleLightsaberAlex
    @PurpleLightsaberAlex 2 роки тому +221

    In my teens my family was going through rough financial times. We made a habit of wearing used clothes given away by richer folk. I swear, we were always well dressed and I'd found the best tshirt I'd ever worn: an orange tshirt with a detailed print of a dragon's face in blue ink. Best tshirt ever.

    • @dayglodoggy
      @dayglodoggy 2 роки тому +29

      My family goes trash picking in rich beach towns at the end of the season on the bulk trash day and we get the best furniture, bot indoor and outdoor, and grills that people just throw out after a season.

    • @yuuri9064
      @yuuri9064 2 роки тому +1

      Where did you get your hands on them? I've found that expensive things usually remain at least somewhat expensive when in a second-hand shop.

    • @samsalamander8147
      @samsalamander8147 2 роки тому +8

      It’s funny at a time in my life where I have money to buy whatever clothes I want and I shop at savers and Salvation Army. When I had no money I would go to the mall and want everything I would see and more it would cause me to even steal at times. Now I go to the mall and I can’t find one thing I want to buy even with the funds to buy it. I have better luck at second hand shops.

    • @albertogutierrez9734
      @albertogutierrez9734 2 роки тому +5

      Found an Italian suit that was oversized for $20.00. Took the suit to my tailor. He looked wowed. He said I have a beautiful suit and was happy to fit it to my size. Total spent with alterations: $80.00. It is my favorote suit.

    • @samsalamander8147
      @samsalamander8147 2 роки тому +4

      @@albertogutierrez9734 my cousin just found a vintage Hugo boss suit that fit him almost perfect for a wedding recently at savers it was brand new from the mid 90s tags still in it from Macy’s it was a beautiful suit everyone kept commenting how amazing he looked

  • @annaselbdritt7916
    @annaselbdritt7916 2 роки тому +373

    I think it's important to point out that yes, clothing items were used for many more years in ye olden times than they are now, BUT people still followed trends extremely closely - the difference is, that they were really good at ALTERING old clothes, to fit new styles. We can learn from this!

    • @bcase5328
      @bcase5328 2 роки тому +8

      Purchasing good quality and classic styles allows for repair as it ages.

    • @maralenah3825
      @maralenah3825 2 роки тому +58

      Also trends lasted for years rather than weeks

    • @billmartins5545
      @billmartins5545 2 роки тому +10

      That isn't going to work with the crap quality most people buy these days.

    • @bintangdilangit3348
      @bintangdilangit3348 2 роки тому +5

      And buy basic color and not to much pattern will help you mix and match

    • @og-greenmachine8623
      @og-greenmachine8623 2 роки тому +1

      BS🙄

  • @romeolacorda568
    @romeolacorda568 Рік тому +1

    Very informative video and overall good style of humor. I'm from Europe where we still have some very good quality local garment manufacturers but who know how long they will exist. In general I do not support fast fashion. I found my way of shopping to avoid big and very known brands. I have some knitted jumper I ordered to local knitter 14 years ago to make it for me and my measures. First 6 years I had it for better occasions, then I had it for hard working in a field and forest and I realized it still looks as brand new after so many washings and wearings. So I have it now again for wearing when I'm at home and I ordered to that knitter to produce three more from same material. But my father has many extremely well made jumpers all the way from 1970's and those look as brand new and for today's standards they could be luxury pieces. But back then they were just normal jumpers for middle class.

  • @vincewhite5087
    @vincewhite5087 9 місяців тому +1

    As an older person, we buy most of our clothes at Thrift stores, and some consignments. My wife if a great sewer & used to make most of her clothes, but can darn & repair ours. We do donate some. We also repair our shoes including runners. Having grown up on welfare in the 60’s, I know how to get life out of things. And buy more classic fashions rather then hypster crap.

  • @furinick
    @furinick 2 роки тому +120

    in my family we first get clothes for fancy occasions, then it gets downgraded to just going out clothes, then it gets once again downgraded to clothes to stay at home, then into pj's, then either into rags or the types of stuff you use when you know its going to get dirty

    • @filipmazic5486
      @filipmazic5486 2 роки тому +8

      Serious question but if you get a dress or tuxedo you're saying that becomes your pajamas one day?

    • @CombineWatermelon
      @CombineWatermelon 2 роки тому +9

      @@filipmazic5486 kinda based if it does

    • @TM-my2dj
      @TM-my2dj 2 роки тому +1

      @@filipmazic5486 well if you have just a single tuxedo then keeping it is not a problem. I generally buy shirts or tshirts and keep them cycling like OP said, a single tuxedo lasts way too long as you don't wear it often( atleast in my case )

    • @bcase5328
      @bcase5328 2 роки тому

      This is an argument for cotton.

  • @problemat1que
    @problemat1que 2 роки тому +78

    No color of the season, no loud decorations, patterns, or messages (you will tire of them very quickly). Instead, buy timeless, high quality clothing and keep it fresh by mixing and matching and accessorizing.

  • @OfficialMarkieB
    @OfficialMarkieB 8 місяців тому +1

    This is def culturally and most likely by region and class etc. I come from the dirt poor and we always used the best laundry detergent, avoided commercial washers and always hang dry.
    My mom taught me also to buy timeless classic styles like dress shirts and polos etc. My closet is mostly biz casual with a few V necks and athletic tees; I have Ralph Lauren dress shirts that are older than my work career. But I clean them in a religious like way lol and the fabric is still crisp clean and irons well. Literally looks like the day I got most of them.
    I will admit its alot easier for us dudes with dress clothes especially, if we stay close to our original size since college. Nonetheless, I only replace clothes unless its completely out of style, it becomes unserviceable (holes) or I have a event to attend where I want something new. When I do replace clothes the old ones become PJ's or yard work stuff.

  • @karenannaluisa3370
    @karenannaluisa3370 9 місяців тому +1

    Thx for that video! As a fashion historian it always amazes me where we have come in such a short time (in a bad, destructive way); and how fast it went to unlearn the useful skills of our Grandmothers like repairing, reusing, sowing, knitting, quilting . Maybe time again to relearn those skills. I know some initiatives and brands of young fashion designers to change the DIY image to some sort of ultra cool / urban chic / creative freshness.

  • @Cazamalos
    @Cazamalos Рік тому +339

    My roommate used to love shopping at Zara until she realized that almost everything was pure garbage that was unusable after less than a year and tailors wanted none of that stuff because the quality was so bad that repairing most of it was "like storing water in a cheese grater"

    • @mimi-fm7hz
      @mimi-fm7hz Рік тому +19

      I didn’t know Zara fits into the category of fast fashion. I’ve never bought from them but their website has pretty expensive stuff. Honestly so sad that their clothes which can be 100+ dollars is actually garbage and unethical

    • @Cazamalos
      @Cazamalos Рік тому +8

      @@mimi-fm7hz yeah they could even be the inventors of fast fashion or at least they perfected the whole practice, people don't think of them like that mainly because their prices but everything else about their business is harmful and unethical

    • @haylsey
      @haylsey Рік тому +2

      zara used to be cindisered good quality where i live, and it is still kind of expensive, but cheaper options are just not fashionable and offer clothes styles that were worn decades ago for some reason.. i was recently looking to buy a coat, im in my 20s and i wanted something fashionable and modern but cant afford a 300e coat so i wen to zara. utterly disappointed. they are trying to sell coats for 100e or more, and their coats dont have have a lining on the inside... absolute bs. then i went to some other stores and found the same...l they started making winter coats that are the thickness of a crew neck hoodie and made of the same fabric as a thin blanket. absolutely insane. thankfully im travelling soon to western europe so ill try to find a reasonably prices coat there, that can actually be worn in cold temperatures. smh zara should me ashamed of what theyre trying to sell.

    • @xjtreex
      @xjtreex Рік тому

      For the most part yeah, but I bought a scarf at H&M over 10 years ago and it’s still going strong

    • @loon7181
      @loon7181 Рік тому

      @@mimi-fm7hz some of their stuff is fairly cheap, I've got tops from them for like idk $15? dresses and jeans for less than $30. Plus their perfumes are also very cheap. Some of their stuff is indeed somewhat pricey but they also have like clearance stuff or whatever.

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja 2 роки тому +405

    There’s no “colour of the season”, just colours that suit your own colouring.

    • @raem7846
      @raem7846 2 роки тому +29

      I wear like two colours, and the rest is black.
      Find a colour and shape that really works for you, make it your signature, and never worry about fashion again.

    • @sharkwaffle1582
      @sharkwaffle1582 2 роки тому +29

      Exactly! Imo, people should just straight up ignore fashion trends and wear whatever looks good on them. If that means dressing like a band member or a cowboy or a RenFair LARPer, that's fine by me :)

    • @agatainventio9464
      @agatainventio9464 2 роки тому

      yes!!

    • @joykaralyn
      @joykaralyn 2 роки тому +3

      I wear the same 3 colors not including neutrals like black and white year round. I don't transition my wardrobe for the seasons. It's either short sleeves and shorts or pants and sweaters.

    • @irenafreidin2932
      @irenafreidin2932 2 роки тому +4

      @@sharkwaffle1582 you can't really ignore fashion trends, because whatever is in the shop at that moment... Is part of the trend of the time... 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @Zoie3x8
    @Zoie3x8 6 місяців тому +1

    "Clothes on average are worn seven times before getting tossed"
    "90 percent of donated clothes get rejected"
    "10 percent of clothes, gets worn ZERO times, before being thrown away because it was never bought"
    *I CAN ONLY SCAVENGE, DECOMPILE, AND RE-SEW, SO MANY CLOTHES, BEFORE I MAX-OUT OF CLOSET-SPACE !!* oOo -exhausted-flop-

  • @TheDorkle
    @TheDorkle Рік тому +1

    The opening of this really sucks ya right in.
    First video from this channel I’ve watched. Incredibly well written and the Burt Ryenolds type is hilarious. 😎🤘🏼
    This engaging and entertaining. I will share this with many folk I think could use this. 💪🏼🙌🏻

  • @0fof0fo
    @0fof0fo 2 роки тому +436

    “Trying to fix a supply chain from the demand end is like trying to turn a cruise ship by leaning really hard to one side.”
    Fan-freaking-tastic

    • @yagruumbagaarn
      @yagruumbagaarn 2 роки тому +16

      And yet that is exactly what this video recommends as the "solution".
      We aren't going to fix any of this by personal choice because the problem is systemic. Bodies will continue to be shoveled into the oven for the profit motive. Regulations in the corrupted political system will always be full of loopholes because they are allowed to be written by industry they supposedly regulate. If we are to be realistic the only solution is to smash capitalism.

    • @bicycles-as-far-as-im-aliv5725
      @bicycles-as-far-as-im-aliv5725 2 роки тому +7

      While I agree with u, It’s worth mentioning that there is no supply without demand. If supply goes up without demand following, maybe these clothing companies will consider their supply model when their pockets & books start taking a dive

    • @0fof0fo
      @0fof0fo 2 роки тому +5

      @@yagruumbagaarn Oh, yes. I forgot the best way to end capitalism is to spend a bunch of money every year on dozens and dozens of dirt cheap clothes manufactured through child labor. The worst thing you could do is not do that. Ya know… if you want to end capitalism and stuff.

    • @yagruumbagaarn
      @yagruumbagaarn 2 роки тому +15

      @@0fof0fo of course fast fashion should be boycotted at minimum. But that is not necessary and sufficient to stop them. Direct action and labor action are also necessary.

    • @KaterynaM_UA
      @KaterynaM_UA 2 роки тому +12

      @@bicycles-as-far-as-im-aliv5725 demand is artificially created by the suppliers that's the whole point. You can't make people not believe in advertisement, if that was possible US wouldn't be living in a asphalt desert and had public transportation and livable neighborhoods.