Sass Brown's book, Eco Fashion, is the Bible for anyone with interest in slow design and handcrafting.
Eco fashion has emerged as a counterculture force, confronting flaws in the current system and consolidating change.
Reuse of post consumer waste is probably the best-known type of upcycling when it comes to garments and materials, yet it is simultaneously one of the most challenging, when it comes to taking it to scale.
Viennese label km/a embodies the concept of the fusion of fashion, art and performance, while producing a beautiful, functional, wearable collection. As a label, they consistently utilize non traditional, discarded and end of life materials, to hand craft their unique one of a kind pieces.
Ecouterre is a website devoted to the future of sustainable fashion design, dedicated to showcasing and supporting designers who not
Fiber artist and knitwear designer, Julia Ramsey, creates rich, dimensional knitwear that connects fiber to figure through oversized knitted drapes. Her custom knitwear collection emphasizes handwork, craftsmanship, and an appreciation for raw materials and the techniques that transform them.
Guðrun & Guðrun is a Faroese company, owned by two women, living in the remote Faroe Islands. With a vision to simply make a difference, Gudrun and Gudrun’s ambitious intent is to make clothes that live up to the standards of conscious consumers who care about their clothes, their environment and their natural resources.
Italian label, Silent People make a beautiful and creative collection of mostly bags from a diverse range of vintage and recycled materials, putting an entirely new twist on heritage.
Avant-garde, Danish designer Barbara Congini is one of a group of designers that participated in Bright Green Fashion, a collaborative project that showcases sustainable fashion, as a means of striving for greater environmental and social responsibility.
Christine Mayer is the designer behind the Mayer Peace Collection, which represents the fusion of fashion, charity and the transformation of recycled materials.
SLOWFASHIONUY, is a new Uruguayan blog on slow fashion, and a lovely feature on my first book Eco Fashion, or Eco Moda in Spanish where it was published by Art Blume.
Ecomoda, o Ecofashion que es mas chic
La Republica on Eco Fashion by Sass Brown.