Barbara Greenleaf: Clothes, Clothes Everywhere and Not a Thing to Wear | Homes & Lifestyle - Noozhawk.com

2022-05-28 13:17:48 By : Ms. Valley Yin

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According to a survey of 1,000 women by ClosetMaid, the average American woman has 103 items of clothing in her closet, but she wears only 10% of the them.

Apparently, she considers 21% unwearable, 33% too tight and 24% too loose. (I don’t know what’s wrong with the remaining 12%, but for some reason she is neither wearing them nor giving them away.)

Why don’t we purge? Studies show we justify holding onto clothes because a) they cost a lot, b) we have emotional ties to them, or, most commonly, c) we can’t face the decision necessary for winnowing.

And women may not be the worst offenders. Men tend to put the same laundered shirts and tees on the top of their clean pile week in and week out, yet they cling to the bottom of the pile as if those unworn coverings were religious relics. (“Relics” yes, “religious” no.)

But far and away the biggest culprits in today’s consumer society are teenagers. In the 1950s, Americans generally owned one pair of sneakers. Today’s teens own eight pairs on average and 30% of young adults buy a new pair every month. No wonder YouTube mavens are obsessed with utilizing every square inch of closet space in order to house all our clothing, shoes and accessories.

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Owning great amounts of wearables would merely be cause for a chuckle or a rueful tsk tsk if it weren’t for the massive environmental impact of producing and dyeing all the necessary raw materials, fabricating them, distributing them and then disposing of them.

In fact, the fashion industry accounts for 10% of the world’s gas emissions. The toll on its low-paid workers is equally horrendous as manufacturers chase the cheapest needle to the ends of the earth, especially to the southern hemisphere.

I don’t think of myself as particularly acquisitive, yet when I recently took a clear-eyed look at my closet, I was appalled to see how much stuff was in there. These items must date back to the Before time because during COVID-19, what did I wear beside a pair of ratty old nighttime pajamas and a pair of dressier daytime pajamas?

I’ve resolved to call a halt to my consumerism and reduce what ends up in the landfill — within reason. I’m finding there are a plethora of options for renting clothes: high end (Rent the Runway), budget (Nuuly) or vintage (20Age Archive).

Here in Santa Barbara, there are also REI’s returned items, Goodwill’s donated items and Renaissance’s consigned items. Finally, I am closing the clothing loop by giving away the usable things and driving the hopeless cases to the MarBorg Recycle Center at 20 David Love Place in Goleta.

I feel so virtuous with all this to-ing and fro-ing that I think I deserve to rent a halo. Maybe I’m a little behind the fashion curve as the halo was already passé during the Renaissance, but this testament to my attempts to live sustainably has a lot to commend it: a halo is lightweight, it adorns but doesn’t muss one’s hair, and it goes with everything.

Best of all, when I’m done with it, I can pass along the halo to another sister-in sustainability. It’s a win-win for the wearers and, most important, a win-win for the environment.

— Santa Barbara author Barbara Greenleaf founded ECO Team to help repair the world, one paper bag at a time. For information, please email her at [email protected] . Click here for previous columns. The opinions expressed are her own.

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