Nearly three weeks ago I decided to do a social experiment. On myself.
The challenge; to wear the same dress every day at work for one week.
Suddenly, the negative effect that the fashion industry has on the planet became very apparent to me. Not only from a sustainability point of view, but also from an ethical standpoint. From an environmental perspective alone; did you know it takes 2,700 litres of water to make one t-shirt? To put it into meaningful terms, that’s about three years worth of drinking water for one person. Crazy, right? This isn’t even taking into account the textile waste that, by 2030, is expected to be a 148 million ton problem or the thousands of polluting chemicals used to dye our beautiful threads.
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My second key reason, was that I was previously a massive culprit of an absolute bargain buy from any of the well-known brands. $7 on sale for a cute dress? Amazing. It was mine. Then I started listening to sustainability podcasts and doing my research. Exactly how could my purchase be justified when the women making them, with so much love, care and attention to detail, are being paid next to nothing? In Bangladesh, the majority of garment workers receive salaries of around $45 AUD per month, about half of what is considered an acceptable living wage.