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by klipt 601 days ago
Maybe we should subsidize plastic-free fibers instead. Cotton, hemp, wool...
4 comments

Or perhaps we could all agree to stop wearing so much clothing in warm climates? I have a hard time believing that out of all mammals that ever came to be on this planet, we just so happened to be the only ones with this unique need that our biology failed to provide us with.
Though I wouldn't expect the average consumer to take a full course in organic chemistry, perhaps we can train the public to see benzene rings.

Counting electron delocalization density and reactivity can be a rule of thumb for DNA mutation.

Basically a, "Does your chemical look like this? Maybe consume less of it." infographic.

> perhaps we can train the public to see benzene rings But benzene rings are everywhere, from deadly poison to essential nutrients.

And in fact, some chemicals that behave very differently may look extremely similar on paper. Especially when it comes to biology.

Linen; linen is made from the Flax plant.

Natural fibers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_fiber

Green textiles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_textile

There are newer more sustainable production processes for various natural fibers.

TIL that there are special laundry detergents for synthetic fabrics like most activewear like jerseys; and that fabric softener attracts mosquitos and adheres to synthetic fibers causing stank.

You still have massive downsides to new cotton or wool clothes. There's just less of the micro plastic downside. Clothing is just a place where we take a massive hit on everything from carbon output to micro plastics.

Another issue is clothing repair. I think the clothing repair thing is kind of brilliant. But for clothing repair to work you would need to disincentivize buying new clothes. Which subsidizing clothing would work against.

> for clothing repair to work you would need to disincentivize buying new clothes

Why? I repair clothes. I also like buying new ones. In between I ruin and lose items, or find that I no longer wish to wear them for purely stylistic reasons.

Higher quality clothes like in the past might be nice. Stuff seems to fall apart so quickly these days.
Older clothes weren't just made better, people also took care of them better. Partly because of cost, but also culture -- fewer changes in fashion trends with slower and more local communication, cheap labor to launder your clothes by hand (which puts much less wear on the garment). Also a culture of repairing and mending (also easier to do this when you have fewer things to occupy your free time).
Yes. But really, it was much worse in many ways. A 100 years ago, say, the people doing clothes repair for a living were desperately poor, and often being single women they often had to resort to prostitution to feed themselves as the income from repairing clothes simply wasn't enough.

I do think that from an environmental standpoint we should repair and recycle clothes a lot more than we do, but lets not romanticize the past. The small clothes repair businesses disappeared for a reason as living standards improved. Furthermore, today factory production of clothes is incredibly efficient and tends to be done in low-income countries, further making it even harder to restart some kind of clothes repair industry in high-income countries.

sad truth: dryers absolutely destroy clothes.