logo
Experts reveal concerning issue plaguing popular fashion brands: 'A race to the bottom'

Experts reveal concerning issue plaguing popular fashion brands: 'A race to the bottom'

Yahoo22-03-2025

While fast fashion is doing numbers for the apparel industry, the quality of the products churned out to consumers is not up to par.
Vogue refers to fast fashion as quickly produced clothing trends sold at cheap prices. However, since the products are manufactured rapidly, the end product isn't always satisfying and usually not long-lasting.
According to NBC News, experts revealed that fabric accounts for 60% of a garment's total production. When retailers need to save money, quality fabrics are often the first thing to go.
Experts believe the decline of quality clothing escalated following the pandemic as retailers tried to recover from poor sales and disorganized supply chains. Margaret Bishop, a professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York, said the current state of the fashion industry has prompted "a race to the bottom," per NBC News.
Despite the less-than-stellar quality, fast fashion appeals to consumers because of the low cost. While overall consumer prices have risen 26% over the last five years, apparel prices have only gone up just 6%.
Demand for fast-fashion apparel has spiked in recent years, with the top three global fast-fashion retailers nearly tripling their U.S. market share. Unfortunately, fast fashion is taking a huge toll on the environment.
According to Business Insider, the fashion industry produces about 10% of global carbon pollution. It's also the second-largest consumer industry of water. For context, about 700 gallons of water are needed to produce one cotton shirt.
Fast fashion also contributes to overflowing landfills. Earth.org reports that the average American generates 82 pounds of textile waste each year.
Slow fashion is an appropriately named movement in reaction to fast fashion, as Earth.org explained. The goal is to convince companies to stop excessive production and advocate for sustainable fashion practices.
Consumers can save hundreds of dollars a year by investing in high-quality clothes rather than fast fashion. Consider shopping at thrift stores or check out resale platforms like ThredUp for apparel that costs less and will last longer.
What should the government do about the fast fashion industry?
Set strict regulations
Incentivize sustainable options
Use both regulations and incentives
Nothing
Click your choice to see results and speak your mind.
There are also precautions consumers should take when searching for sustainable clothing. For example, keep an eye out for greenwashing. Certain corporations advertise misleading claims about sustainability while still causing harm to the environment. It's a good idea to research the company or brand prior to making a purchase to confirm the claims are true.
Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

American's wild shopping cart claim Aussies agree with
American's wild shopping cart claim Aussies agree with

New York Post

time15 hours ago

  • New York Post

American's wild shopping cart claim Aussies agree with

An American women living in Australia has made a bold claim about the shopping carts at some of our biggest supermarkets — and hundreds of Australians agreed with her. Lex B, known as @LexInWonderland on TikTok, said she had a 'controversial' opinion after living in Australia for nine months. Advertisement The expat, who is originally from Houston, Texas, said while she has been in Australia she has shopped at Coles, Woolworths and fruit shops. 3 Lex B, known as @LexInWonderland on TikTok, shared her 'controversial' opinion after living in Australia for nine months. @lexinwonderland / TikTok 'I'm not a controversial person, but here we go. This is a thought I've had for a long time — basically since I've been here,' she said in the clip. 'American trolleys [shopping cart] are better than Australian trolleys.' Advertisement She said it was 'comical' that it was her 'biggest gripe' about living Down Under, revealing she located here due to her husband's job. 3 'American trolleys [shopping cart] are better than Australian trolleys,' Lex B said. @lexinwonderland / TikTok 'I dread having to make a turn at the supermarkets, I suck at it and of course the story in my head is everyone's watching me and they know I am a foreigner,' she said. She explained to that the only difference between shopping carts in the US and Australia — besides what they're called — is that in America the two back wheels were locked. Advertisement 'You'd think this would make it harder to manoeuvre but it's quite the opposite! I recently went back to the US for a visit and actually posted a video of me using an HEB trolley so folks could see the difference,' she said. Start and end your day informed with our newsletters Morning Report and Evening Update: Your source for today's top stories Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Her video racked up hundreds of comments, with many people offering tips — or taking the opportunity to have a little joke. 'Aussie trolleys don't just get you through the supermarket – they prepare you for life. If you can steer one with a rogue wheel through a Woolies car park, you can handle a stampede of bin chickens, dodge a snake in your backyard, and wrestle a croc if it comes to it,' one said. Advertisement Another wrote: 'On the bright side, they do give you a good core workout while shopping. And there is the exciting mystery of not knowing where it is going at any time.' 3 'On the bright side, they do give you a good core workout while shopping. And there is the exciting mystery of not knowing where it is going at any time,' one comment on her video read. phpetrunina14 – 'They have suggested pushing the trolley from the side or front instead of from the back,' she said. 'Others have suggested turning your body in the direction you want to go first, then letting the trolley follow, essentially over-exaggerating the turns. And many have said there are no tricks and they are just awful! 'What's funny is the majority of Aussies agree that the trolleys here are difficult to manoeuvre. I was shocked at just how many agreed with me. We all share the same struggle.' The expat said she found that if she turns her body first, it has helped out a little. She also shared other things that she's noticed about the key difference in Australian and US supermarkets. 'Americans generally shop one spot for all the things they need, whereas here it's more common to visit several shops for your items – bread, produce, meat, etc. I'm enjoying the change and find the quality is much better when I do this. 'I've also noticed the supermarkets are smaller here, but then again I'm from Texas where everything truly is bigger! Although I miss some of my fave US products, I do like the smaller shop vibe here in Australia, as I find myself not as burdened with decision fatigue.'

How to clean your favorite hat without ruining it
How to clean your favorite hat without ruining it

USA Today

timea day ago

  • USA Today

How to clean your favorite hat without ruining it

How to clean your favorite hat without ruining it Show Caption Hide Caption How to clean hats without ruining them Clean your hats properly so you don't ruin them. Problem Solved, USA TODAY Baseball caps are as American as the Fourth of July. These ubiquitous hats are as good for recreation as they are for sports, but they do collect their fair share of dirt and sweat. While that may be a badge of honor on the mound, that grimy peak may not look as good in the bleachers. So, how do you get a baseball cap clean? Due to its delicate materials and unique construction, cleaning a baseball hat is an art - one misstep can lead to disaster. While hat cages offer a tempting shortcut, as you can theoretically toss your cap in the dishwasher or washing machine, they can also potentially ruin your cherished head wear. But fear not! With a few simple yet effective cleaning techniques, you can restore your beloved hats to their original glory without compromising the shape, color or fabric. Here's all you need to know about how to easily clean baseball hats without ruining them. Watch this video to learn how to easily clean hats without ruining them. Shop top-rated related products: How to easily clean a hat without ruining it When it's time to wash your hats, hand washing is the best bet. This gentler method helps prevent potential damage that could be caused by machine washing and preserves the shape and materials of the hat. Most modern hats can be soaked in water and hand-cleaned. To clean a baseball cap: Fill a large container or bucket with water. Make sure it has enough space for the hat to be fully submerged. If you have tough stains on the hat, use a stain remover and a toothbrush to pre-treat. Add a dash of mild detergent to a bucket of water and stir. Soak hats for 15 to 20 minutes in the water/detergent solution to clean. Soak for up to an hour for a deeper clean. Rinse the hat under cool water to remove any soap residue. Place the hat over a bowl to dry and shape. You can also stuff it with a towel to dry and help keep its shape. Check the hat's tag to confirm what materials the hat is made from. Different materials require different care methods. To avoid damaging the hat's materials, test detergents on a small, hidden area inside the hat before washing.

Magic vs. Logic: Analysts Get Creative and Start to Weigh In on Designer Appointments
Magic vs. Logic: Analysts Get Creative and Start to Weigh In on Designer Appointments

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Magic vs. Logic: Analysts Get Creative and Start to Weigh In on Designer Appointments

Fashion with a capital F has always had its tribes. More from WWD Inside VivaTech: LVMH Spotlights AI and Sustainability at Innovation Awards Shoppers Are Investing in Luxury Handbags Over Stock 'Walking Alongside' American Designer Claire McCardell in New Book There's the design crowd, where aesthetic is king and people ooze with personality. Then there's the more buttoned-up business side that lives and dies by the spreadsheet and ups and downs of the market. Of course, that oversimplifies things and there have always been crossovers who naturally think with both their right and left fashion brains. But the people who really get both the dollars and fashion sense of the industry are rare. Many — most? — people have only a vague understanding of what the other is really up to. So there's a kind of truce that's held, with the fashion folk holding tight to their mood boards and the finance gang following their tickers. But that delicate peace has been rattled. Financial analysts are increasingly weighing in — not just on sales and profit margins or even stores and product, but on the design talent pulling together the vision. They are now more actively picking design winners, not just market share winners. Jonathan Anderson got the thumbs up when he moved to Dior at LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton. 'Anderson has a strong track record from his time at Loewe — one of the top-performing brands at LVMH's fashion and leather in the past few years,' said Jelena Sokolova at Morningstar. 'It is a positive that he'll be the sole creative director of Dior, where priorly creative director roles for menswear and womenswear were split. This should help Dior create a more consistent brand representation and improve its stance amongst peers.' Likewise, HSBC's Erwan Rambourg, said: 'We remain believers that 'Dior is not the next Gucci.' We trust that with Jonathan Anderson running the creative show there is more poetic positive potential than risk. We expect the brand to rebound starting from Q2 2026.' But true to form, it was Demna who was there right on the edge when Team Design and Team Dollar started to clash more this year. Demna is loved by the fashion crowd, from his conceptualist streetwear at Vetements to his willingness to shake up everything at Balenciaga (even if dancing on the edge meant sometimes falling over it, with kids posing alongside handbags that looked like stuffed bears dressed in bondage). For the analyst types, that controversial, zeitgeist-grabbing approach was fine and good for Balenciaga. But bringing all of that to Gucci — Kering's now underpowered powerhouse — was just too much. 'At this stage, the announcement brings as much risks as opportunities,' said Carole Madjo, an analyst at Barclays, pointing to Demna's 'bold and sometimes controversial aesthetic.' Bernstein's Luca Solca rated the Gucci appointment a five out of 10 and said, 'We are not sure that Demna measures up to the task, nor that he is the right fit for Gucci at the moment, but we understand their risk-minimization strategy: going for the well-known.' Not everyone who understands how to discount a cash flow was up in arms, however. 'Demna leading Gucci should drive commercial, cultural and artistic impact, which could support [long-term] growth,' said Oliver Chen at TD Securities in a research note in March. 'Demna has the potential to be a great leader for the next era of Gucci.' The question is: Who has the right to declare that Demna or Anderson are right or wrong for their new jobs? Wall Street has had its say. Critics and the chattering masses on Instagram will have another chance to weigh in as the designers' first collections hit the runway. And shoppers will get the final word when the looks finally go up for sale. Where you stand might depend on where you sit. Fashionistas want excitement, a chill down the spine, elegance or some aesthetic that will move the great project of design and culture forward. The business side wants dollars and cents and efficiencies, great machines made up of human capital and intellectual property to create the value that everyone along the way taps into to pay for those Hamptons summers. The equity analysts weighing in on design are doing their level best to get their brains around the whole of the enterprise, to understand how it all works to see if it will succeed. 'The framework is, there's magic and logic, but you want some logic that helps support the magic,' said TD Securities' Chen in a follow-up interview. 'For analysts to be good at this, it's slightly a balance of pattern-hunting plus being forward-thinking about change in art and culture and also juxtaposing that with logic around merchandising policies and then making a forecast. 'What analysts try to do is understand the biography of the creative,' Chen said. 'Basically, you look at the past. For me, it's OK, I understand some of Demna's product attitude and I understand what Gucci needs. If anything, the Balenciaga story has been around innovative experience and excitement. 'If you're not relevant, people don't necessarily want to pay extra,' he said. And to work, from any perspective, luxury always requires something a little extra, designers have to deliver and shoppers have to pay. It's that friction, that need to satisfy the demands of both art and commerce, that keeps fashion exciting. The Bottom Line is a business analysis column written by Evan Clark, deputy managing editor, who has covered the fashion industry since 2000. It appears periodically. Best of WWD Harvey Nichols Sees Sales Dip, Losses Widen in Year Marred by Closures Nike Logs $1.3 Billion Profit, But Supply Chain Issues Persist Zegna Shares Start Trading on New York Stock Exchange Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store