Slow Clothing is a philosophy. It is a way of thinking about how we buy, wear and care for clothes so they bring meaning, value and joy to every day. It is based on the premise that clothes do for us on the outside what food does inside. They warm and protect our bodies, and influence the way we feel and present to the world.
Slow Clothing considers what we wear from a health and wellbeing rather than fashion context. The philosophy is encapsulated in a book, Slow Clothing: finding meaning in what we wear, by Jane Milburn and available here. The book presents a compelling case for why we need to change the way we dress, to live lightly on Earth through the everyday practice of how we wear and care for our clothes.
Slow Clothing is the antithesis of fast fashion. It considers the ethics and sustainability of garments, values provenance and artisan skills while focusing on timeless style, comfort and connection. It is about thoughtful, ethical, creative and sustainable ways to enjoy the garments we wear every day while minimising our material footprint on the world. Slow Clothing manifests itself through 10 simple approaches – think, natural, quality, local, care, few, make, revive, adapt and salvage.
Jane Milburn wrote Slow Clothing: finding meaning in what we wear based on five years’ studying the need to transform the culture of excess in developed nations such as Australia. The book presents a compelling case for wearers to push back on fast-fashion culture that has led to exponential consumption and soaring use of synthetic fibres in the past decade.
Slow Clothing is about we – the wearers – taking action to buy, use and discard clothing in ways that minimise our material footprint. It includes a manifesto of actions and choices: think, natural, quality, local, few, care, make, revive, adapt and salvage.
Jane believes clothes do for us on the outside what food does inside. They protect and warm our bodies, and influence the way we feel and present to the world.
‘We eat and dress every day to survive and thrive, and in the same way we have become conscious of food and its impact on health and wellbeing, we are becoming conscious of the substance and origins of what we wear,’ Jane said.
‘With slow clothing, we reflect our own style and spirit, independent of fashion cycles. We buy carefully, gain skills, and care for what we wear as an embodiment of ourselves. Through this action we, the wearers, become original, authentic and resourceful.
‘Among other things, we are becoming interested in using simple hands-on techniques to make, recreate and repair some of our clothes. Until we make something for ourselves to wear, we cannot appreciate the resources, time and skill that go into the clothes we buy.’
The book includes simple upcycling techniques and ways to repair and mend clothes with diagrams of basic hand-stitching, and how to darn and sew on a button. It includes examples and profiles of slow clothing as lived practice.
‘Hand stitching is a mindful and useful activity. My book demystifies and makes it accessible to everyone – as a way to explore our own creativity and do our bit for planetary health by extending the useful life of existing clothes. When we can mend and make our own mark on things, we are liberated from commodification and an endless search for meaning though buying more stuff.’
Jane’s Slow Clothing philosophy and action is part of our revaluation of material things and the search for meaning beyond consumerism. It is about connection to what we wear, and about caring for planetary health and wellbeing rather than branding and image.
‘In the rush to own things for reasons of status and looks, we lose the opportunity to be mindful and resourceful through the act of making and creating,’ she said.
‘Australians consume double the global average and are the world’s second-largest consumers after north Americans, based on annual apparel fibre estimates. And two-thirds of new clothing is now made from synthetic (ie plastic) fibres, derived from petroleum.
‘Dressing is an agricultural act if we want to wear natural fibres such as wool, which is renewable and biodegradable. The alternative is synthetic fibres like polyester, derived from petroleum and known to shed microplastic particles into the ecosystem with every wash.’
Jane founded Textile Beat in Brisbane in 2013 as a way of exploring creative, sustainable, affordable and ethical ways of dressing that don’t harm people, places or the planet. She has presented and gathering information from hundreds of workshops and talks with various groups, teachers, students and local councils.
Rethinking clothing culture is essential to turning the tide on the exploitation of garment workers caught within global supply-chain empires that foster fast and wasteful consumption.
Slow Clothing: finding meaning in what we wear is a 192-page paperback with 250 illustrations, available in Australia via textilebeat.com for $28 plus postage and internationally via Book Depository and Amazon.
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In an era dominated by passive consumption of cheap and synthetic fashion, Jane Milburn arrived at the Slow Clothing philosophy by refashioning garments in her wardrobe to provide meaning and story.
It was also informed by The Slow Clothing Project, Textile Beat’s 2016 campaign to spark conversation about clothing use and reuse by creating a collection of garments handmade by individuals across Australia. The focus was on making your own garments, using natural fibres and textile reuse where possible. The 40 maker stories which are linked below. For more details about the project, scroll to the bottom.
Dr Nicola Smith – DIY enables direct engagement with physical world, for comfort and creativity.
Jennifer Bain – Meaningful making that reconsiders the wearability of items others discard.
Michelle and Grace McRae – skills valued for many reasons, including self-worth and resilience
Vivienne Poon – values the story and creativity that goes into making a garment of your own
Jenny Jackett – ‘through the hand-making process we learn the values of time, effort and quality”
Jemma Edwards – Rejects fast fashion in favour of unique, handmade garments
Deborah Palmer – Upcycling captures memories and extends the life of retired garments
Julie Livingstone – it is good for our mental wellbeing to be able to create something.
Bron Berkin – Observing something transform from a square of material is so satisfying
Eliza Kelly – Eliza believes there is huge value in using your hands to create
Wendi Trulson – The whole world needs a lesson, in repurpose, refashion, mend and fix
Sarah Lundgren – believes creativity is important for wellbeing and good health
Kate Fletcher – Kate’s favourite clothes are created with a conglomeration of different makers
Cathy Stuart – believes the act of making something can create a deep sense of satisfaction.
Denise Traynor – reusing items helps to counteract the wasteful, mass consumption model.
Mariana Kirova – professional upcycler, an eco-fashion educator and an agent for change.
Nina van Hartskamp – true empowerment comes when you create the life you want
Rozalie Sherwood – loves educating people about the potential of making one special jacket
Saadia Thomson – making for sustainability, creativity, self-expression, uniqueness, enjoyment
Sally Harris – ‘When you make something yourself, you have a greater sense of wellbeing’
Xin Wang – cherishes garments more since she knows the effort and time taken to make
Barbara Sherlock – “I adapt the clothing to fit my figure, my lifestyle and my age group”
Cath Jarvis – she learned to sew after realising these skills are useful for sustainable living
Genevieve Manhal – learning problem-solving and critical thinking through the design process
Frances Leske – making her own clothing brings joy and self-confidence
Tamara Russell – believes the slow, meditative process of stitching is great for body and soul.
Dr Jenny Ostini – ‘sewing gives me the chance to slow down and create’
Leeyong Soo – loves the palpable satisfaction of making and remaking her own clothes
Emma Williamson – ‘supporting handmade, ethically produced items has many benefits’
Kerri Harris – “it’s such a shame to lose sewing skills when they’re relatively easy to master”
Elizabeth Kingston – believes in shifting thinking from being ‘in fashion’ to being ‘in style’
Majella Albion – encouraging a more frugal attitude towards the use of material resources.
Paisley Park – conscious of what surrounds her, including food, clothing, people, environment
Miriam Gillham – sewing enables you to create clothing that is considered and thoughtful
Fiona Saunders – her life has always included handmade, recycled and repurposed clothes
Dr Libby Woodhams – demonstrating creative reuse and the wonderful properties of wool
Annabelle Brayley – a best-selling author who makes all her ‘good’ clothes from natural fibres.
Neroli Roocke – a journalist who believes thinking about consumption is a key to sustainability
Kylie Challenor – a professional editor who taught herself to sew as a adult
Julie Hillier – teaching handmade with a contemporary twist at Ministry of Handmade
Jane Milburn – project leader and founder of Textile Beat
After more than a decade of ‘disposable’ fast fashion, there’s growing interest in ethical and sustainable clothing with a good story to tell.
We created a collection of handmade garments during 2016, some of which will be showcased at a number of conferences and public spaces during 2016 and 2017. Each garment becomes a different story about mindful and sustainable resource use told through various voices.
These stories reflect Slow Clothing Manifesto actions we can take to reduce our clothing footprint: think, natural, quality, local, care, few, make, adapt, revive and salvage.
The project narrative weaves knowledge and skills to help people choose well, use clothes for longer and reduce textile waste in landfill. It celebrates the mindful/healthful benefits of handmade and will grow awareness of the usefulness of stitching and sewing. It explores the history of natural-fibre industries in Australia, and celebrates local growers and makers.
We are based in Australia, that’s local to us. Yet this project has a global mission which aligns with Goal 12 of the United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns.
from my childhood days i have seen my mother takes meticulous plans to make one dress for us, i grew up with this habit. sometimes i dont get time to make a complete dress. then i buy and remake it in new shape, embroider, add lace. and very recently i have a boutique named brush and needle. i am making clothes for friends
I don’t understand the obsession with shopping. Malls are close enough to hell, crammed full of poor quality clothing, all with the same look (the fixation recently on uneven hemlines for dresses, skirts AND tops.) And the explosion in synthetic fabric that is so wrong for Australia’s generally hot, humid summers.
There is a perception that buying something will make us happy. Well, it doesn’t. We all know that, if we are honest with ourselves. The whole consumer economy (and I mean over-consumption) is terribly damaging to people, their pockets and the environment. How can people possibly like a piece of poor quality merchandise made in a sweat factory using impoverished labour?
It’s always refreshing to see somebody making or wearing something that suits them, not the rampant clothing economy.
I make my own because I am me, not everybody else.
Well done Cate, for doing Indie Style. It is great you have time and skills to make something to suit yourself. Kindest, Jane
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LOVE your range. It’s breadth and depth is extraordinary.
Thanks so much Jo. I am excited by the Sustainable Island project you’ve initiated and look forward to being involved. 🙂