
Fashion
What does it take to be considered one of the best sustainable fashion brands featured on The Wellness Feed? We research, review, and ask brands hard questions to provide transparent articles with reasons as to why a brand is sustainable. Here are a few of the questions that we ask brands whether researching or interviewing them:
How is their brand sustainable? How is their brand not sustainable? Are their materials organic, natural, biodegradable, upcycled, or recycled? What dyes do they use? Are their clothes made in factories that meet ethical standards? How do they vet factories? Are garment workers in their partner factories paid a living wage? How do their factories reduce fabric and water waste? How do they manage CO2 emissions from transporting raw materials and finished garments? What certifications do they have- OKEO-TEX, B-Corp, Fair Trade, etc? Is their packaging single-use-plastic-free? How do they give back? Do they transparently show their product's impact to customers? Do they publish an impact report? What are their sustainable goals for the future?As to what you'll never see recommended on The Wellness Feed, here are our 'nos':
Fast fashion brands. We might cover news about Boohoo, Shein, and others. But, they're not recommended as sustainable fashion brands that we support. Virgin plastic-based materials. We will never recommend 100% polyester or nylon clothing. Single-use plastic packaging. Forest Stewardship Council Certified paper packaging is always better than plastic. Brands that have been profiled by the Human Rights Watch or other nonprofit human rights organizations for workers' violations in their factories.With an understanding that everything we make, produce and consume has an impact, we're not here to offer perfect sustainable fashion brands. The Wellness Feed reviews, interviews, and round-ups focus on brands making the best sustainable decisions from sourcing to end-of-life.

#WhomakesYourClothes? A t-shirt isn’t simply a tee shirt. It’s 2,700 liters of water, formaldehydes (a respiratory irritant), chemical dyes (like azo which is carcinogenic), and the story of inhumane working conditions. These films aren’t as light as The Devil Wears Prada, but they’ll tell you a whole lot more about that $5 tee shirt.

Did you know that recycling and reusing clothes could save 400 million+ pounds of CO2 yearly? It’s time to start reducing, reusing & recycling.

Garment workers at a denim factory had a major labor rights win this month. Here are ethical Mexican clothing brands to support.

Learning about hemp from 8000 Kicks co-founder, Bernardo Carreira, whose waterproof sneakers might be more sustainable than cotton.

Zero-waste. Ethical. Humane. Slow. We’ve rallied up the experts’ answers to learn what ‘sustainable’ truly means.

What would happen if fashion focused on natural solutions instead of plastic?

We chatted with the founder of the La-based brand Whimsy + Row about what it takes to be a good brand.

A new study shows that 80% of items on popular fast fashion sites are made from plastic-based materials.

The average American’s fashion habits contribute 1620 Lbs of carbon emissions yearly. Here are tips to bring that number down.

Evan Streusand, the founder of Fortress of Inca shares how he created a ‘responsible’ shoe brand.