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The Latest

#178 March 2024/Circular Economy/Fashion/Recycling/Shop Local

100% cotton, zero-waste underwear start-up talks lofty goals and consumer response

The Big Favorite wants to redirect our worn out panties, briefs and bras into the zero-waste economy — but there’s a catch. Used polyester-infused underwear is not currently suitable for recycling. With no place left to go but the trash can, undies join the estimated 11 million pounds of textiles dumped in landfills yearly. In

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March 1, 2024
4 mins read
#178 March 2024/Community/education/Fashion/Shop Local

South Philly weaving studio/yarn shop teaches the slowest kind of fashion

On the fourth floor of the Bok Building, a handful of students are gathered in the airy, white-walled workshop space at Weaver House. Each person sits at their own floor loom, a large and elegantly complex machine constructed from blonde wood, strung across with fibers. The mood in the room is one of concentration, each

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March 1, 2024
4 mins read
#178 March 2024/Circular Economy/Community/Fashion/Shop Local

Long-running nonprofit boutique leverages partnerships to alleviate clothing insecurity

In a women’s recovery home for addiction, a volunteer offered to wash Rhonda Richardson’s laundry for her. After seeing that Richardson owned only a few worn pieces of clothing, the woman gave her a voucher for free clothes from The Wardrobe. Little did Richardson know, she’d find both confidence-boosting outfits and a support group at

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March 1, 2024
4 mins read
#178 March 2024/Circular Economy/Fashion/Shop Local

Fashion designer channels inner child for bold upcycled looks

Ashani Scales is the type to take the expression “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure” to heart. In 2021, Scales went on a thrifting hunt for a quilted blanket she could turn into a coat. Having recently started sewing again, Scales was searching for soft, easy-to-manage fabrics that would keep her warm. After a

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March 1, 2024
4 mins read
#178 March 2024/Urban Nature

The Pennsylvania Bird Atlas engages birders to canvas the commonwealth

A keen observer can sometimes hear a “boom” over the row houses on summer evenings in Philadelphia. The sound marks a male common nighthawk defending his territory, flexing his wings as he dives. The insect-eating birds nest on flat, gravelly surfaces. These can be bare patches of ground in a forest, but they can also

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March 1, 2024
3 mins read
#178 March 2024/Environment/Fashion

Science History Institute exhibit explores the history and environmental impact of dyes

For thousands of years, people used organic materials like plants, insects and minerals to create dyes. But in 1856, an 18-year-old chemistry student named William Henry Perkin changed everything. While attempting to create synthetic quinine using coal tar, Perkin accidentally developed mauveine, the world’s first synthetic dye. His invention of the rich purple hue unlocked

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March 1, 2024
4 mins read
#178 March 2024/Circular Economy/Community/Fashion/Shop Local

Philly AIDS Thrift shoppers share what brings them in to the beloved, unique social enterprise

Philly AIDS Thrift has all kinds of patrons: teachers, tourists, college students and on occasion, celebrities like singer Miley Cyrus and Eagles players. As manager and longtime employee Adam Proctor puts it, the nonprofit thrift store attracts “every kind of person ever.” Located at 710 South 5th Street, Philly AIDS Thrift has an eclectic, artsy

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March 1, 2024
5 mins read
#178 March 2024/Editor's Notes/Energy/Fashion

Editor’s Notes: Comfort Creep

I just bought a sweater. After reading “Worn: A People’s History of Clothing,” by Sofi Thanhauser (interviewed in this issue), I went online and found a second-hand gray wool henley originally sold by a company with a reputation for well-made clothing. I wanted something I could wear this winter and for many winters to come;

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March 1, 2024
2 mins read
#178 March 2024/Circular Economy/Fashion/Recycling/Shop Local

Germantown-based designer turns forlorn garments into meaningful treasures

When Moth Snow was in college, they would spend afternoons scouring thrift stores for discarded sartorial gems. Perusing the racks, they’d perform a kind of tactile divination, feeling the hem of a sweater or collar of a blouse, then guessing its fiber content. Was it cotton? Wool? A polyester blend? Their fingertips would seek answers,

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March 1, 2024
4 mins read
#178 March 2024/Circular Economy/Fashion

Is that what you’re wearing?

Do you know what it’s made of? Where it came from? Who stitched it together? Go ahead and cheat. Check the label. That will get you part of the way there: a list of materials and a country, but much of the story will remain a mystery. That little tag won’t tell you about the

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March 1, 2024
1 min read
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