Issues > September/October 2006 (#116) > Seasonless Green Fashion

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about ANNE WALLACE

Anne Wallace McAndrews writes from Long Beach, California. Her work has appeared in Surf Life for Women, the L.A. Times Magazine, Christian Science Monitor, Golf for Women, and elsewhere.

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1% For The Planet (FTP), is a coalition of companies who've pledged to donate one percent of their sales to environmental groups around the world. Patagonia (which gives more than 500 grants annually to grass roots organizations), Stewart + Brown and Anna Cohen are among the almost 400 members of 1% FTP. Over $3 million was donated in 2005 and more than $10 million to date, with grants going to non-profit organizations to further research, activism or environmental education. Among the recipients is Global Green USA, an organization that recently sponsored a design competition for a green apartment complex to be built in a low-income New Orleans neighborhood destroyed in 2005 by Hurricane Katrina.

Support the 1% FTP program by patronizing member companies. For a full list, see www.onepercentfortheplanet.org.

Photo: Seasonless Green Fashion

Hail in September? Hot spells and sunburns in October? Icy autumn mornings with short-sleeve afternoons? What's a green shopper to do this fall?

For starters, you can toss those seasonal do's and don'ts out of your mind and closet. In this epoch of global warming, fall fashion rules are also undergoing climate change: It's OK to wear knee-high faux fur boots with a light cotton skirt and wool sweater. Wear white after Labor Day. Pair open-toed shoes with corduroy pants and a wool scarf tossed over a sleeveless silky top. This autumn, prepare for erratic weather by taking a middle ground, putting warmer wraps over something skimpy, Robert Sullivan advised in the March Vogue. And, wondering what President Bush might wear next season, Sullivan posited that it may come "to the point where we are all hoping to have any clothes on at all by the time he's out of office."

Other style cognoscenti are finding that, as the climate begins to change more quickly than fashion, the sensible new trend is to let temperature, not season, dictate what to wear. "Fall in Southern California can be hotter than summer," says Lindsay Steenblock, an interior designer. "On those chilly L.A. mornings when I'm wearing a suit and nylons, by noon, when the sun hits the mirror-glass buildings, I'm panting like a race horse!" Steinblock often finds herself wearing sandals with a coat slung over cotton skirts and T-shirts in October, and sees "other people doing the same thing."

The timing also couldn't be more ripe for eco wear. As editor Roberta Myers notes in Elle's trend-setting May green issue, "Young designers offer style with a conscience, including alternative materials such as organically grown cotton and bamboo, and supporting sustainable labor practices." National sales of organic cotton--versatile, affordable and breathable—soared from $86 million in 2001 to $275 million in 2005, and double that figure for global sales, reports Organic Exchange, a non-profit organization.

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Filed under: Clothing and fabric, Compassionate consumerism, Fair trade clothing, Environmentally friendly product

Green Guide 116 | September/October 2006 | For Yourself