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    53) Building A Better Supply Chain: From Transparent Production to Authentic Marketing | with Sally Lim of 2°EAST

    enAugust 02, 2022
    What was the main topic of the podcast episode?
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    About this Episode

    In this episode, we'll be exploring a new approach to production with Sally Lim, the co-owner of 2°EAST. Sally is sharing:

    • An insider perspective into what goes into making a watch — and what that tells us about the rest of the fashion industry, too
    • What it's like to co-own a brand with the manufacturer
    • How this partnership enables far more transparency
    • The challenges of marketing in an ethical way that feels good
    • And so much more.

    Hit play and join us as we peel the layers of what transparent production looks like.

     

    Note: this episode was made as part of a partnership with 2°EAST. But it's not a promo episode — it's still as educational, inspirational, and useful as the rest of the Conscious Style Podcast episodes (hopefully!) are for you.

     

    FULL SHOW NOTES & TRANSCRIPT:

    https://www.consciouslifeandstyle.com/sally-lim-2-degrees-east

     

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    GET THE TRANSCRIPT
     

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    ***

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    Get 20% off site wide by using the code CONSCIOUSSTYLE20.

     

    ***

    SHOW NOTES:

    https://www.consciouslifeandstyle.com/kenya-wiley

     

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

     

    ***

    CONNECT WITH KENYA WILEY:

    🌐 Website: https://kenyawiley.com/

    📸 Instagram: @kenyanwiley

    💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kenya-wiley-558601b6/

    📱 Twitter (X): @KenyaNWiley

     

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    Get 20% off sitewide by using the code CONSCIOUSSTYLE20.

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    Get 15% off sitewide from June 20th to August 31st, 2023 by using the code CONSCIOUS15.

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    SHOW NOTES:

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    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

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    🌐 Website: https://queerbrownvegan.com/

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    95) Carbon Offsetting: Green or Greenwashing?

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    ***

    SHOW NOTES:

    https://www.consciouslifeandstyle.com/carbon-offsetting

    ***

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

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    94) Can Slow Fashion Businesses Scale Without Encouraging Overconsumption? With Mahdiyyah Muhammad

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    It’s no secret that we live in a world with far too much clothing. If we are to work towards a more sustainable fashion industry, we need to unpack the ways that fashion brands and designers can pivot away from the mainstream business model of take-make-waste and embrace alternative sustainable fashion business models that limit waste. And our mindset as consumers plays a pivotal role in this too.

    In this episode, we hear from Mahdiyyah Muhammad who is a sustainable fashion designer, circular fashion strategist, and educator. We’re talking about the realities of designing, building a business, and engaging with fashion and style in our current fashion system where all we need is less — less resource extraction, less consumption, less clothing waste, less focus on passing trends, and less exclusivity.

    But, as you will hear from Mahdiyyah, to make this happen, we need more community. Cultivating community is essential for sharing resources and ideas, and creating meaningful connections, as well as making the slow fashion movement more accessible and inclusive.

    ***

    EPISODE SPONSORS:

    Kotn

    Kotn is a slow fashion brand that's taking transparency to a new level with their fully traceable supply chain. 

    The brand sources the cotton for their collection directly from over 2,000 smallholder cotton farmers in the Nile Delta in Egypt and ensures living wages and fair working conditions along every step of the way, from seed to final stitch.

    Each piece from Kotn is made ethically and transparently with natural materials — like long-staple Egyptian cotton, recycled cotton, and linen — by people earning living wages.

    Get 15% off sitewide from June 20th to August 31st, 2023 by using the code CONSCIOUS15.

    Juliemay

    Juliemay offers a natural alternative to the synthetic-heavy lingerie market. They use GOTS-certified organic pima cotton as their main fabric, line all of their products with Mulberry peace silk’ and do not use harsh chemicals in production.

    The brand is accredited by AllergyUK to be friendly for people with allergic reactions to synthetic fibers and who have sensitive skin. This is something that I have become personally really interested in since I started to experience psoriasis after wearing synthetic undergarments myself a few years ago. 

    Additionally, Juliemay has bras for a wide range of circumstances, like post-surgery bras or bras that offer back support. Juliemay also supports several environmental and social impact nonprofits.

    Use the code SOCIAL15 for 15% off at Juliemay!

    ***

    SHOW NOTES:

    https://www.consciouslifeandstyle.com/mahdiyyah-muhammad

    ***

    TRANSCRIPT
     

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

    ***

    CONNECT WITH MAHDIYYAH MUHAMMAD:

    🌐 Website: www.mahdiyyah.co

    📸 Instagram: @mahdiyyahofficial

    💼 LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mahdiyyah-muhammad-423942a8/

    ***

    CONNECT WITH CONSCIOUS STYLE:

    📧Newsletter: https://www.consciouslifeandstyle.com/edit

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    93) What If Fashion Put Workers First?

    93) What If Fashion Put Workers First?

    What if fashion brands put garment workers first? What if a fashion brand set the prices they pay to their suppliers based on ensuring workers were making a living wage, rather than negotiating the prices as low as possible to maximize profits? 

    This is part of implementing more responsible purchasing practices — purchasing practices meaning not how the consumer buys something, but how the brand purchases their orders from their suppliers, since most brands do not produce their own clothes. 

    The reality is that right now the system is set up with the wrong incentives. For example, Buyers at many fashion brands receive bonuses if they achieve larger margins with their orders they purchase from their suppliers — larger margins meaning they pay their suppliers less, and thus the supplier will have less money to pay their workers fairly or invest in sustainability initiatives like transitioning to clean energy. 

    So we need a paradigm shift. True systems change. 

    And one proposal for doing so is worker-centric pricing, which Stella and I are going to dive into in this episode!

    >>> TRANSCRIPT

    *****

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

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    CONNECT WITH CONSCIOUS STYLE:

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    92) From Extractive to Regenerative Fashion: Slow Growth, Climate Beneficial Textiles, and Cooperative Models with Laura Sansone of New York Textile Lab

    92) From Extractive to Regenerative Fashion: Slow Growth, Climate Beneficial Textiles, and Cooperative Models with Laura Sansone of New York Textile Lab

    What if designers could go all the way back to the source of the fibers their garments are made from? Many of fashion’s favorite fibers — and our favorite garments — begin on farms. From cotton to wool, hemp, and linen. But, often, designers are so far removed from the places where these fibers are produced. Bringing designers back to the source would result in greater transparency and traceability in fashion that would allow designers to make choices that are kinder to people and the planet.

    The fast fashion system thrives on building one, uniform, global fashion system that requires a lack of transparency and traceability to continue perpetuating its profit-seeking harms. On the other hand, a more equitable future of fashion will comprise multiple regional and local textile systems that are each in tune with the contexts of local communities.

    But what will it take to get there, in practice? Well, in today’s episode, Stella chats with Laura Sansone, who is passionate about creating regional and regenerative textile systems. Laura is an Assistant Professor of Textiles at Parsons School of Design and she is the creator of New York Textile Lab (@nytextilelab) a design and consulting company that supports environmentally responsible textile methods and bioregional systems of production.

    TRANSCRIPT AVAILABLE HERE

    ***

    EPISODE SPONSORS:

    Kotn

    Kotn is a slow fashion brand that's taking transparency to a new level with their fully traceable supply chain. 

    The brand sources the cotton for their collection directly from over 2,000 smallholder cotton farmers in the Nile Delta in Egypt and ensures living wages and fair working conditions along every step of the way, from seed to final stitch.

    Each piece from Kotn is made ethically and transparently with natural materials — like long-staple Egyptian cotton, recycled cotton, and linen — by people earning living wages.

    Get 15% off sitewide from June 20th to August 31st, 2023 by using the code CONSCIOUS15.

     

    Juliemay

    Juliemay offers a natural alternative to the synthetic-heavy lingerie market. They use GOTS-certified organic pima cotton as their main fabric, line all of their products with Mulberry peace silk’ and do not use harsh chemicals in production.

    The brand is accredited by AllergyUK to be friendly for people with allergic reactions to synthetic fibers and who have sensitive skin. This is something that I have become personally really interested in since I started to experience psoriasis after wearing synthetic undergarments myself a few years ago. 

    Additionally, Juliemay has bras for a wide range of circumstances, like post-surgery bras or bras that offer back support. Juliemay also supports several environmental and social impact nonprofits.

    Use the code SOCIAL15 for 15% off at Juliemay!

    ***

    SHOW NOTES & LINKS:

    https://www.consciouslifeandstyle.com/laura-sansone

    ***

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