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By (Author) Patrick Grant
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
17th September 2024
9th May 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Material culture
Apparel, garment and textile industries
Consumerism
Environmental economics
Apparel and fashion: technology and techniques
Self-sufficiency and green lifestyle
338.47391
Hardback
368
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 35mm
620g
Clothes are important. They define who we are, impact our mood and influence how people think of us. Today the average person buys 60% more clothes than they did 15 years ago and wears them for half as long. Last year 100 billion garments were made worldwide, most by workers paid virtually nothing and 70% from plastic textiles made from oils that dont recycle. 30% of all clothes are never sold and two thirds of clothes we own we never wear. The equivalent of one bin lorry full of clothing is dumped in landfill or burned every single second.
In this passionate and revealing book about loving clothes but hating the way theyre made, Patrick Grant considers the crisis of the global fashion industry and how to set it right not just by changing what we wear but by valuing quality and provenance across our lives. Weaving in his personal journey through fashion and clothing he explains how when it comes to our wardrobe, less is more. This is a book that celebrates quality, craftsmanship, making things well and mending them when needed. About buying high quality things made locally to help sustain skilled manufacturing jobs, and bringing prosperity and hope back to places in our country that have lost out to globalisation, offshore manufacturing and to the madness of price being the only thing that matters.
Patrick Grant has a lot to say about clothes; how many we buy, how we value them, what theyre made from, and importantly who made them and where. His campaigning clothes brand Community Clothing supports local clothing and textile manufacturers across the UK and Patrick is an outspoken advocate for radical change in the fashion and clothing industry moving beyond sustainable to circular and regenerative. He is also a host on The Great British Sowing Bee.