4 Ways Unraveling Sweaters Can Combat Fast Fashion

It's here, it's simple: 4 ways unraveling sweaters can combat fast fashion.

It’s Affordable

Sweater unraveling (and DIY textile recycling in general) allows those of us with small pockets to have sustainable style without having to resort to fast fashion. If you think about it, a big reason why fast fashion exists is because money is tighter around the board and most of us simply cannot afford to spent $30 on one pair of underwear.

Sustainable and ethical yarns, fabric, and notion can be very expensive. I’ve often felt like someone who longs to be in the “slow fashion aesthetic club” but I have never been able to afford it. There’s a very good reason for the high prices, yes, but that doesn’t mean one should have to sacrifice healthy food for their family because they need a pair of warm socks, for example.

 

knitting with recycled yarn
I'm currently working on the Mungoche Sweater from Rosa Pomar designs and it's so beautiful! I'm using cotton/wool blend yarn that I unraveled from an old Gap cardigan.

 

If you’d really like to combat fast fashion, taking on a DIY attitude will get you the most bang for your buck. This is obviously more appropriate advice for someone who already knows how to knit some socks or a sweater, or owns a loom to weave fabric to sew into a garment. In a way, even having the time to make it yourself comes with a healthy dose of privilege. That said, I have always considered buying your clothes second-hand from thrift stores “slow fashion,” which means nobody should ever feel left out of the slow fashion revolution.

 

You’ll Appreciate that Fast Fashion isn’t Fast

The act of taking apart a sweater takes time. More often than not, you’ll find yourself lingering on thoughts about the person who made that sweater. Who monitored the knitting machine? Who raised the sheep that made the wool? Who linked the pieces together and added the tags? How much work did it actually take to make this sweater I’m now taking apart?

As you do this, you begin to appreciate that even though it’s called “fast fashion,” it’s not at all a slow or simple process. Many people were involved, many people were injured or taken advantage of. Somebody sat there all day doing the seams for 200 of these sweaters instead of spending time with their kids. And now you’re ripping it apart.

 

 

In a way, as you take apart a sweater or knit garment that was meant for the fast fashion world, you begin to appreciate everything it stands for. It’s such a symbolic process, and it will completely change the way you view how clothing is made in the modern world.

 

You’ll Actually Help Reduce the Carbon Footprint of Fast Fashion

 

 

Reuse of materials is a way to combat fast fashion by fighting against the creation of new materials by any fashion industry, slow or fast. The fact is that 60% of the carbon, water, and waste footprints made by the garment industry comes from the production of new fibers. Yes, that means your organic cotton kimono or sustainable wool sweater also contributes to these footprints. They take energy, machinery, and water to produce.

When you recycled materials that already exist, you’re contributing -7% to the overall footprints of the fashion industry. It’s a bit of an abstract idea, but you’re doing the opposite of creating a footprint. You’re helping to reduce the footprint of the industry, and that’s a huge deal. Image what kind of impact that would make if we all did it?

 

You’ll automatically become a walking, talking activist

When you use waste from fast fashion to create your own slow fashion garments, you’ll become a walking, talking activist, whether you like it or not.

Here’s an example:

“Beautiful sweater, where’d you get it?”

“Oh, I made it myself from recycled yarn!”

Chances are if the person asking isn’t a maker, their minds just exploded. Recycled yarn from sweaters almost always looks like brand new yarn you could buy at a store, and that new looking yarn makes new looking garments. To someone not privy to the fiber world, the realization that recycled textiles can look brand new can be a paradigm-shifting moment. You don't have to have a soapbox to be an activist. Just by existing in your beautiful, recycled yarn garment, you can influence others to begin thinking about where their clothes come from.

 

I knit this lace shawl for my mom's birthday using recycled yarn. Who would ever know it's recycled unless I told them?

 

Whats more, fast fashion isn’t made with the end of life in mind. By that I mean the designers and manufacturers who make fast fashion garments are only thinking about how to make quickly and cheaply, and without considering how something might be recycled or disposed of properly. I like to view recycling these types of garments kind of like a big “F- you!” to this way of manufacturing.

Sure, those mega corporations probably don’t care. But it empowers me to think about these things when I produce items from my recycled yarn and I’m always proud to let other people know, too. I bet you’ll feel the same way. So let's get unraveling and combat fast fashion together!

My Contribution to Slow Fashion October

Ever since I met Karen Templer at a fiber show years ago, I’ve been in awe at how passionate she is about slow fashion. If you’re unaware, every October she does Slow Fashion October in an attempt to help us question our fast fashion consumption. She encourages us to think more intentionally about what clothes we keep in our wardrobe (and what we do with them when we've decided they're not right for us anymore). A great way to begin to fix the huge problem of fast fashion is at a small scale - and our own closets are a great place to start.

I’ve been thinking about how to participate in Slow Fashion October this year, beyond following the weekly prompts, and it dawned on me that I already have the answer! The reason I started Unraveling Club was to provide an educational resource for folks who want to learn how to take their unwanted knitwear and unravel it for yarn. I also want to encourage folks to create pieces for their own wardrobe using recycled yarn that they’ve made themselves. I realize that "Slotober" isn’t just about making your own wardrobe, but to a lot of us out there it’s a fun way to take ownership of our fashion choices.

Making my own clothes empowers me to take better care of them and consider more deeply how clothing makes me feel. Using recycled yarn makes me even prouder to sport something handmade because I know my style hasn't harmed the planet in any way. And these days, that's a really rare thing to be able to say about your clothes.

So for the entire month of October, I want to offer Unraveling Club for $10, for everyone, no promo code needed (50% off the normal price).

I hope this can help inspire some people who have been curious to learn how to unravel knitwear but just didn’t have a good enough reason. As the month progresses, I plan on posting some more throughout the month about what slow fashion means to me (and how unraveling knitwear can help the problem!) I hope you'll join me!