#WhatFuelsFashion 🏭 New report launching August 2024 ✉️ Make sure you're subscribed to the Fashion Revolution newsletter for exclusive access: https://ow.ly/JhIO50SmwI2 #FashionTransparencyIndex
Fashion Revolution
Non-profit Organizations
London, 145,172 followers
We believe in a fashion industry that conserves and restores the environment and values people over growth and profit.
About us
Fashion Revolution is a global movement campaigning for a fashion industry that conserves and restores the environment and values people over growth and profit. The organisation works in over 90 countries worldwide, with both an innovative and international approach to research, education and advocacy. Fashion Revolution was founded in 2014 by Carry Somers and Orsola de Castro with the aim to increase transparency in the fashion industry and stand in solidarity with the people who make our clothes. Since then, it has grown to be the world’s largest fashion activism movement, mobilising citizens, brands and policymakers to make positive change. The key pillars of change which Fashion Revolution pushes for include shifting the culture of fashion production and consumption, incentivising fashion brands and retailers to improve their practices and advocating for policy which holds the industry accountable for its impact. The global fashion industry is opaque, exploitative and environmentally damaging and desperately needs revolutionary change. Fashion Revolution wants to ignite a revolution to radically change the way our clothes are sourced, produced and purchased. We believe transparency is the first step to transform the industry, and it starts with one simple question: who made my clothes? Join us by showing your clothing label and asking brands #whomademyclothes, to show that you care and demand better for the people who make our clothes. We want brands to respond by showing us the people in their supply chain with the hashtag #imadeyourclothes. We want to see the faces and hear the stories from thousands of makers, farmers and producers, and see an increasing number of brands make their supply chains more transparent.
- Website
-
https://www.fashionrevolution.org/
External link for Fashion Revolution
- Industry
- Non-profit Organizations
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- London,
- Type
- Nonprofit
- Founded
- 2013
- Specialties
- fashion, sustainable fashion, transparency, environment, social media, and social change
Locations
-
Primary
London, , GB
Employees at Fashion Revolution
Updates
-
The people who make our clothes are already suffering from the impacts of the climate crisis 🪡🌎🚨 As dangerous, record-breaking heat waves hit some of the fashion industry’s biggest manufacturing hubs in South and South East Asia, they underscore a challenge the fashion industry is not prepared for. Read more: https://lnkd.in/ef-vnqqC
-
Online event: The Importance of Repair with Mary Morton 🪡🏴 Join Fashion Revolution Scotland and remake.world as they hear from local sustainability legend, Mary Morton. This event will be a chance to learn about local action, how repair is an important part of the #NoNewClothes challenge and how we can sustain local initiatives! 🗓️ Monday 15th July ⏰ 1:00 pm EST / 6:00 pm BST 💻 Online (Zoom) RSVP: https://ow.ly/I7Wm50SvSc3
-
-
🎤Join us for an online panel discussion focused on hope and sustainable design 💚 Elaine Foster-Gandey is the creator of the Hope Dress Project and a textile artist. She is displaying "Hope" a giant dress woven with messages of hope, at Palazzo Mora until November 22nd. To celebrate the project, industry creatives, including Fashion Revolution’s acting managing director Rudo Nondo, will come together to discuss hope, sustainability, and innovative thinking within the art and fashion industries. Hope: Weaving communities together 📆 Thursday 11th July ⏰ 10.30 am- 4.45 pm (GMT) | 11.30 am - 5.45 pm (CET) 💻 Online & Palazzo Michiel, Venice 🇮🇹 ✉️ RSVP: https://lnkd.in/gerQMN-T European Cultural Centre #ECCItaly #PersonalStructures #PersonalStructures2024
-
-
Is the EU about to give synthetic fibre makers a competitive advantage? 🛢️⚖️🌱 The EU's proposed Green Claims Directive has been designed to to stop greenwashing. This regulation is sorely needed as brands continue to mislead their customers with false sustainability claims. But a large group of farmers and their supporters claim that the policy unfairly favours synthetics and “misrepresents natural fibres as harmful to the environment”. Read more: https://lnkd.in/eYZSxbQk
Is the EU about to give synthetic fibre makers a competitive advantage?
voguebusiness.com
-
Meet the three winners of Fashion Revolution Canada's Student Upcycling Challenge! 🇨🇦♻️👗 As Sarah Jay, the team's communications lead, explains "the competition aimed to encourage the use of existing and recycled materials as the starting point for fashion design, and the reclamation of the skills needed to make clothing." The winning designs featured exceptional technical skills and made use of numerous types of source materials ranging from bed sheets to blazers to shopping bags. Meet the winners and see their revolutionary designs: https://lnkd.in/gtYTMzzk
-
-
Fashion Revolution reposted this
Clip from Episode 16 with Fashion Revolution USA about their focus around education and policy, love to see the collaboration with the Fashion Act! A great conversation with Kelly Peaks and Madison PM Cline! #SustainableFashion #CircularFashion #FashionAct #Policy
-
NEW REPORT: Threads of Opportunity: Good Work for Refugees in the Fashion Industry The UK fashion and textile industry has been vocal about skills shortages and has been encouraging people into a wide variety of jobs. For this policy paper, University of the Arts London spoke to 41 people with either refugee or asylum-seeking status, who came from 19 different countries for different reasons, and with aspirations or an interest in fashion. This paper advocates for bridging the skills gap in the UK fashion industry with the skills owned by refugees in the country. Read more: https://ow.ly/laRK50SrMpg
https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/22088/11/Mazzarella%20Mirza%20Legaspi_2024_Threads%20of%20Opportunity.pdf
-
Shoppers want fashion from sustainably managed forests but brands are letting them down 🌲 The survey revealed that 76% of consumers would be concerned if forest-derived fibres in their clothes had a negative environmental impact such as deforestation, biodiversity loss and climate change. However, the 2023 Global #FashionTransparencyIndex found that just 12% of brands currently publish time-bound measurable commitments to zero deforestation. It's unsurprising then that only 25% of respondents believe that fashion brands are effectively addressing their concerns. Read more: https://lnkd.in/eZTKGFrW
Survey finds consumers want fashion from sustainably managed forests but find brands lacking
fashionunited.uk
-
A new report from Business & Human Rights Resource Centre & Clean Clothes Campaign finds that suppliers are undermining trade unions and blocking meaningful dialogue with workers. ‘Just For Show’, investigates how freedom of association is under threat in six key garment-producing countries. The report's call to action is clear: brands must step up and support workers’ rights. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gSt3yM7i
Freedom of association is a human right. Why are garment workers still denied it?
voguebusiness.com