Upcycling, borrowing and fair trade: 3 fashion startups focus on recycling - Action News
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Upcycling, borrowing and fair trade: 3 fashion startups focus on recycling

"Conscious consumers" don't buy excess amounts of fast fashion or support manufacturers whose employees work in sweatshops. Canadian entrepreneurs are discovering opportunities to sell sustainable fashion.

'People are buying more all of the time, and that's a really, really big problem'

Eva Parrell works with a model on a fashion shoot for Parrell's line, Peoples Product, made on fair trade principles. (CBC)

When was the last time you tossed an old, unwanted piece of clothing into the garbage? If you're like most Canadians, it wasn't long ago.

North Americans discard a mind-boggling amount of apparel 12 billion kilograms of textiles every year, according to Value Village. And although we often donate to outlets such as the Salvation Army or Value Village,as much as 85 per cent of cast-offsend up in landfill sites.

With stylish, inexpensive clothing readily available at fast fashion chains such as Zara, H&M and many other retailers, consumers can't seem to get enough. By some estimates,we buy four times as much clothing as in 1980.

Don't be seen in the same outfit twice

"People are buying more all of the time, and that's a really, really big problem," says Kate Fletcher of the Centre for Sustainable Fashion in London. She points to social media as a factor that contributes to overconsumption.
Used clothing is sorted and processed, then sold by weight at many industrial facilities in Canada, such as this one in Toronto. (CBC)

"One of the things that many people on social media say is that there's a huge pressure topresent an endlessly new or changing image of yourself," Fletcher notes. "Wearing the same piece twice on your Instagram feed or Facebook or whatever, is a bit of a no-no."

On the other side of the problem, though, is a growing community of fashion entrepreneurs who see an opportunity. Here are three Canadian startups that are taking aim at textile waste.

Nudnik children's wear:Upcycled

Twin sisters Alexandra and Lindsay Lorusso of Toronto grew up in the trash business. Their father has been in the industryfor 40 years.

"Alexandra and I have spent the last 20-plus years in the waste management industry," says Lindsay, as the two women scavenge through piles of old jeans in a sorting facility in suburban Toronto. "We just thought there's so much of this, and we'd love to be able to turn it into something."

With two young children and an interest in sustainability, Lindsay partnered with Alexandra to launch Nudnik, a line of children's wear. T-shirts, sweatshirts and pants sewn from scraps of old fabric, then silk-screened with playful designs.
Twins Lindsay and Alexandra Lorusso use cast-offs to make their line of children's clothing, Nudnik. (CBC)

"Through our waste management connections we're able to know where to go to get this material direct from the source," says Alexandra.

By re-purposing other people's castoffs, the women areupcycling, reusing old materials so the new product has a higher quality or value than the original.

"We might have someone come to us and say, 'We have a bunch of tents that we need to dispose of,'and for us, that's where we get to be creative and say, 'That could lend itself into a rain jacket for children,'" says Lindsay.

The pair are part of the current cohort at the Joe Fresh Centre for Fashion Innovation at Ryerson University, an incubator aimed at accelerating young companies' growth.

Boroit,don't buy it

In a funky, older Toronto warehouse space, Natalie Festa shows off a long rack of designer clothing on loan to her business, Boro. At 27, she's had a corporate job before discovering the niche for her startup: renting out unique clothing to fashionistas who are either eco-friendly or on a budget,or both.

"I found myself going to a lot of events professionally as well as personally, and that would lead to purchasing a lot of items that would often sit in my closet after I wore it once or twice," she says. After borrowing a few outfits from friends, she and partner Chris Cundari had the idea to turn the practice into a business.
Natalie Festa's company Boro connects lenders and borrowers of designer fashion. (CBC)

Clients can rent sequined dresses, Chanel purses and studded leather jackets, among other uniqueattire, for a fraction of what it would cost to buy outright typically $80 for four days. Festa recruits lenders as well, who collect half the rental fee, minus the expenses of dry cleaning, delivery and insurance.

"A lot of people are coming to us with their clothing to lend it out, because it's an extra income opportunity," she says. "And every week we have a lot of new borrowers, too."

Some of her clients are social media stars, who are keen to showcase a wide variety of looks but don't necessarily want to own everything they wear.

"It's quite easy to see that using a service like Boro has a much better environmental footprint than going to the store," says Festa.

Peoples Product:Fair tradefashion

Eva Parrell of Toronto worked in the fashion business in Africa, and decided she wanted to create a company that paid workers a living wage and offered well-priced sustainable clothing that would last.

The fair trade movement has expanded beyond coffee to include high-end fashion.

"Right now a lot of fashionable fair trade clothes are extremely expensive, they're in the luxury range," she says. "And then fair trade clothes that are affordable are usually a bit more crafty and not as fashionable, so that middle market of something that is trendy and affordable and fair trade is really open right now."

She and partner Chelsea Mazur launched Peoples Productto attract customers who are aware of the larger consequences of their purchasing decisions.

"They are consuming consciously, so that may be in their diet, or their beauty, or the way they shop at Bulk Barn and they're using reusable bags," she explains. "They've already caught on to something like that and they're willing to expand that into how they buy clothes."

With sales in Los Angeles, Australia, Hong Kong and Canada, the duo are optimistic.

"We know that this isn't going to get rid of Zara," she says. "Fast fashion is still going to exist and people will still shop for it, but we want to give them an alternative."

A tipping point?

Fletcher of the Centre for Sustainable Fashion believes startups like Nudnik, Boro and Peoples Productaresigns of the times.

"Maybe this is the tipping point where these small ventures start to infiltrate people's consciousness and actually then the mainstream shifts," she says. "The good news is culture changes all the time, often in unpredictable ways."

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story identified the father of Alexandra and Lindsay Lorusso incorrectly as a founder of Wasteco. In fact, Stephen Caudwell is the founder and president of the company.
    Sep 28, 2017 2:44 PM ET