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CRITIQUE ON UP-CYCLING OF GARMENT By: Aakanksha Rathi MD/15/53 Semester 4 Submitted to NIFT in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Design (2015-2017) POST GRADUATION DEPARTMENT OF DESIGN SPACE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF FASHION TECHNOLOGY, MUMBAI (Ministry of Textiles, Govt. of India) Department of Design Space Faculty Guide: Mrs. Rupa Agarwal

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Page 1: CRITIQUE ON UP-CYCLING OF GARMENT14.139.111.26/jspui/bitstream/1/540/1/Aakanksha Rathi.pdf · CRITIQUE ON UP-CYCLING OF GARMENT By: Aakanksha Rathi MD/15/53 Semester 4 Submitted to

CRITIQUE ON UP-CYCLING OF GARMENT

By: Aakanksha Rathi

MD/15/53

Semester 4

Submitted to NIFT in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the

Degree of

Master of Design

(2015-2017)

POST GRADUATION DEPARTMENT OF DESIGN SPACE

NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF FASHION TECHNOLOGY, MUMBAI

(Ministry of Textiles, Govt. of India)

Department of Design Space

Faculty Guide: Mrs. Rupa Agarwal

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ACKNWOLEDGEMENT

It has indeed been a privilege to work under the enlightened guidance and supervision

of Ms. Rupa Agarwal her immense hold on the subject coupled with invaluable

suggestions on the same. Finally, I owe my heartiest thanks to my prestigious Institution

National Institute of Fashion Technology, Mumbai for providing me with such an

opportunity.

- Aakanksha Rathi

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ABSTRACT

It is a complex, creative and consumerism dominated world of fashion and textile. To

gain sustainability one needs long lasting environmental and social quality through

design it should be holistic and multilayered. Up-cycling helps in reduced resource

consumption. It is an inter-related product lifecycle rolls around cultivation, production,

manufacturing, distribution, consumer laundering, re-use and then final disposal.

Garments are most frequently laundered textiles. The consumer care phase of lifecycle

is the most crucial phase of any product. There should be a sense of shared and holistic

responsibility for impact reduction. Changing consumer behavior and improving the

efficiency of laundry practices is one of the solutions to extend life of garment.

Introducing alternate fibers, green manufacturing and smart textile is another way.

Fashion and textile industry‘s future success will depend on reduction of environmental

and social burden across the entire lifecycle.

Up-cycling is a process in which used materials are converted into something of higher

value and/or quality in their second life. It has been increasingly recognized as one

promising means to reduce material and energy use, and to engender sustainable

production and consumption. For this reason and other foreseeable benefits the

concept of up-cycling has been used by many designers and brands. With Fast Fashion everyone can enjoy changing trends with low prices. However, these fast fashion

production and consumption cycles have resulted in a trail of destruction, including

increased textile waste.

It is believed that Fast fashion result into quick discarding of clothes and this

contributes to landfill. Up-cycling can give clothes a second life with a unique identity

and can altogether bring sustainability. But the fact is the life of an up-cycled garment is

very short which leads the up-cycled garment into landfill again. The afterlife given to

the garment is very short and this garment cannot be re-up-cycled. The designers

practicing up-cycling do up-cycling not to bring sustainable fashion but to cut down the

cost required in investment in raw materials, craftsmanship, tailoring and other

resources needed in manufacturing. Many designers make one garment collection in

the name of up-cycling and then stop doing it. This one collection brings them limelight

and paparazzi but could not bring customers and profit. Many brands also create the

false brand image as an up-cycling brand but actually practice down-cycling and re-

cycling.

Within the fashion design process there is often no consideration for the life cycle of a

garment, garment end-of-life strategies, or any sense of responsibility for the textile

waste generated through pattern making, manufacture or use. Up-cycling definitely

brings re-use method of sustainable fashion but does not touch aspects of life cycle of

the up-cycled garment. The pre- production and production textile waste includes

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scraps of fabric, rejected fabrics which if up-cycled gives a life to these waste but in

case of post –production textile waste up-cycling gives second life to the used garment.

The life of the post-production up-cycling waste is much less than pre – production and

production waste. The life cycle of any up-cycled form depends on the form of the

product. If the up-cycling of the waste is done in the form of products other than

garments like cushion covers, tapestries, accessories than the problem of landfill can

actually be solved because life span of these products is much longer than the up-

cycled garments.

Designer can integrate sustainable design strategies during the fashion design process,

which can lead to a change in the way that fashion garments are produced, used and

discarded. Fashion design and production process requires a fundamental alignment

with life cycle thinking. The fashion designer needs to comprehensively understand

sustainable design strategies. Fashion designer should link sustainable design

strategies with the activities and phases of design and production.

Up-cycling definitely reduces new production and waste but does not save environment.

The environmental impacts of reuse have, however, received little attention the benefits

typically assumed rather than understood and consequently the overall effects remain

unclear. Many products‘ use-phase energy requirements are decreasing. The relative

importance of the embodied impacts from initial production is therefore growing and the

prominence of reuse as an abatement strategy is likely to increase in the future. Many

examples are found in the literature of beneficial reuse of standardized, unpowered

products and components, and repairing an item is always found to be less energy

intensive than new production. However, reusing a product does not guarantee an

environmental benefit. Attention must be paid to restoring and upgrading old product

efficiencies, minimizing over specification in the new application, and considering

whether more efficient, new products exist that would be more suitable.

The modern consumer lifestyle wants a new piece of garment every day. These

garments have very short life. As compared to other garment the one which carries an

emotional aspect or auspicious craftsmanship sustains a long life. Up-cycled garment

can also live a long life if combined with an emotional aspect.

Key Words: Up-cycling, sustainability, fast fashion, slow fashion, zero-waste,

carbon footprint, down-cycling, Sustainable consumers, sustainable

entrepreneurs, 3 R methods.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

SI NO CONTENTS PAGE

NUMBER

Chapter 1 Introduction 1

Chapter 2 Methodology

2.1 Aim

2.2 Objective

2.3 Significance of Research

2.4 Research Methodology

2.5 Target Population

2.6 Why sustainable Consumers?

2.7 Sampling

2.8 Sample Size

2.9 Limitation

2.10 Important terminologies used in research

4

4

4

6

6

6

6

6

6

6

Chapter 3 Review of Literature

3.1 Countries where textile waste goes to landfill

3.2 Why Slow Fashion is difficult?

3.3 Life of garment is dependent on Laundry

Practices

3.4 Why do Garments have a very short life as

compared to home décor products?

3.5 How changes in pattern of textile use can

bring sustainability?

3.6 Indian Scenario

3.7 Hierarchy of a Garment

3.8 Up-cycling in form of Craft Clusters

3.9 Down-Cycling

3.10 Trade and Supply of used garments

3.11 Recycling of Textile Waste

3.12 Second Hand Garment Markets

3.13 The Secret recyclers of India Waghri

Community

3.14 Role of the NGOs

8

8

10

11

11

12

13

13

18

18

20

26

28

30

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Chapter 4 Primary Research

4.1 Insights from Interviews

4.2 Analysis

4.3 Field Visits

4.4 Analysis of Field Visits

31

43

45

46

Chapter 5 Problem Area 53

Chapter 6

Case Studies: Existing Solutions

6.1 Case Study 1: Punah Project – Generating

circular Economy

6.2 Solution Approach: Extending life of a

garment: Adding emotional value to a garment /

interactive approach

6.3 Emotional Approach to extend the life of a

garment

6.4 Case Studies: Worn Stories – By Emily

Spivack

6.5 Bridal lehengas by designer Kresha Bajaj

6.6 Upcycled By Pero

55

56

58

59

61

66

Chapter 7 Conclusions 70

Appendix-

Questionnaire

Collection of worn stories

Sketches

72

Bibliography 101

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LIST OF FIGURES

S.No DESCRIPTION PAGE No.

Figure 1 Figure showing up-cycling of shoes 2

Figure 2 Over production due to fast fashion and cheap rates puts pressure

on resources and leads to production waste.

5

Figure 3 Consumer phase and repurposing of clothes 5

Figure 4 Patchwork from Saurashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan 14

Figure 5 Women making Kaudi blanket in Karnataka 15

Figure 6 Tanka Kaam of Rajasthan 16

Figure 7 Applique work of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Orissa 16

Figure 8 Patchwork of Jaiselmer 17

Figure 9 Contemporization of applique work and Patchwork 17

Figure 10 Graph Showing Leading Exporters of Used Clothing 19

Figure 11 Graph showing leading Importers of second hand clothes 20

Figure 12 Circular Supply chain of textile recycling 21

Figure 13 Rag Route showing Trade and supply of used clothes globally 23

Figure 14 Women busy in sorting of clothes at recycling industry, Panipat 25

Figure 15 Workers at Shoddy recycling industry, Panipat, Haryana 25

Figure 16 Waghari Community women at Anand market, Kopri, Mumbai 29

Figure 17 Up-cycled products of Green by Goonj 31

Figure 18 Sorting and Segregation of clothes at Goonj center, Mumbai 32

Figure 19 Up-cycled products by Cornucopia brand, Delhi 32

Figure 20 Up-cycling of textile waste by brand Chindi 33

Figure 21 Up-cycling and recycling of used shoes (GreenSoles, Navi Mumbai) 34

Figure 22 Cobblers making footwear out of discarded tyre at Padukas, Mumbai 35

Figure 23 Up-cycling procedure of brand Padukas, Mumbai 35

Figure 24 Up-cycling of plastic bags by team Aarohana Eco Social, Pune 36

Figure 25 Up-cycling of Sari by brand I was a Sari 37

Figure 26 Craftsman doing handwork at Ka- Sha, Pune 37

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Figure 27 Up-cycled bags and wallets at Doodlage 38

Figure 28 Closing of loop by House of Wandering Silk, Delhi 39

Figure 29 Garment and footwear out of Button Masala technique 39

Figure 30 Furniture, jewelry and Convertible garments by Button Masala 40

Figure 31 Up-cycled home décor products by Rug Republic 41

Figure 32 Up-cycled collection by AM.IT at Lakme Fashion Week, 2015 41

Figure 33 Up-cycled stoles by Metaphor Racha 42

Figure 34 Zero Waste patterns used by SUO 42

Figure 35 Vendors selling textile scraps at Chindi market , Kurla, Mumbai 45

Figure 36 Clothes which are sold by Chindi market vendors to industries for

cleaning purpose

45

Figure 37 Vendors selling second hand clothes at Aanand Market, Kopri 46

Figure 38 Waghari community at Aanand market, Kopri 47

Figure 39 Washing of second hand garment at Chor Bazar, Mumbai 48

Figure 40 Use of dye, patch work for value addition to second hand clothes by

tailors

49

Figure 41 Tailors doing alterations/ repair to second hand garments 50

Figure 42 Tailors repairing second hand jeans 50

Figure 43 Waghari Community women at Chor Bazar 51

Figure 44 Production waste generated while cut and sew method by tailors 51

Figure 45 Cleaning wipes which are thrown by industries 53

Figure 46 Up-cycled products out of used gloves as part of Punah Project 53

Figure 47 Collection of worn stories by Emily Spivack 55

Figure 48 Lehenga depicting love story of Kresha Bajaj 61

Figure 49 The venue leela palace embroidered on Kresh‘s wedding lehenga 62

Figure 50 Picture of first date of the couple embroidered on lehenga 63

Figure 51 Joining hands representing first meeting in satsangg embroidered on

lehenga

64

Figure 52 Wedding lehenga depicting the iconic monuments the couple is from 65

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Figure 53 Wedding sari of actress Samanth Prabhu with embroidered iconic

moments from couple‘s love story

65

Figure 54 Lehenga with embroidered love sonnets 66

Figure 55 Up-cycled shoes and jacket by UPCYCLED by Pero 67

Figure 56 Textile leftovers, beads, buttons, crochet flowers used for value

addition for up-cycling by Pero

68

Figure 57 Use of embroidery, patch work for value addition by Pero 69

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1

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION

Up-cycling is a process in which used materials are converted into something of higher

value and/or quality in their second life. It has been increasingly recognized as one

promising means to reduce material and energy use, and to engender sustainable

production and consumption. For this reason and other foreseeable benefits the

concept of up-cycling has been used by many designers and brands. With Fast Fashion everyone can enjoy changing trends with low prices. However, these fast fashion

production and consumption cycles have resulted in a trail of destruction, including

increased textile waste.

It is believed that Fast fashion result into quick discarding of clothes and this

contributes to landfill. Up-cycling can give clothes a second life with a unique identity

and can altogether bring sustainability. But the fact is the life of an up-cycled garment is

very short which leads the up-cycled garment into landfill again. The afterlife given to

the garment is very short and this garment cannot be re-up-cycled. The designers

practicing up-cycling do up-cycling not to bring sustainable fashion but to cut down the

cost required in investment in raw materials, craftsmanship, tailoring and other

resources needed in manufacturing. Many designers make one garment collection in

the name of up-cycling and then stop doing it. This one collection brings them limelight

and paparazzi but could not bring customers and profit. Many brands also create the

false brand image as an up-cycling brand but actually practice down-cycling and re-

cycling.

Within the fashion design process there is often no consideration for the life cycle of a

garment, garment end-of-life strategies, or any sense of responsibility for the textile

waste generated through pattern making, manufacture or use. Up-cycling definitely

brings re-use method of sustainable fashion but does not touch aspects of life cycle of

the up-cycled garment. The pre- production and production textile waste includes

scraps of fabric, rejected fabrics which if up-cycled gives a life to these waste but in

case of post –production textile waste up-cycling gives second life to the used garment.

The life of the post-production up-cycling waste is much less than pre – production and

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2

production waste. The life cycle of any up-cycled form depends on the form of the

product. If the up-cycling of the waste is done in the form of products other than

garments like cushion covers, tapestries, accessories than the problem of landfill can

actually be solved because life span of these products is much longer than the up-

cycled garments.

Designer can integrate sustainable design strategies during the fashion design process,

which can lead to a change in the way that fashion garments are produced, used and

discarded. Fashion design and production process requires a fundamental alignment

with life cycle thinking. The fashion designer needs to comprehensively understand

sustainable design strategies. Fashion designer should link sustainable design

strategies with the activities and phases of design and production.

Figure 1. Up-cycling of a pair of Shoes

https://hipcycle.com/what-is-upcycling

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3

http://www.freepressjournal.in/fpj-anniversary/reinvent-is-upcycling-the-new-fashion-

buzzword/892404

Up-cycling definitely reduces new production and waste but does not save environment.

The environmental impacts of reuse have, however, received little attention the benefits

typically assumed rather than understood and consequently the overall effects remain

unclear. Many products‘ use-phase energy requirements are decreasing. The relative

importance of the embodied impacts from initial production is therefore growing and the

prominence of reuse as an abatement strategy is likely to increase in the future. Many

examples are found in the literature of beneficial reuse of standardized, unpowered

products and components, and repairing an item is always found to be less energy

intensive than new production. However, reusing a product does not guarantee an

environmental benefit. Attention must be paid to restoring and upgrading old product

efficiencies, minimizing over specification in the new application, and considering

whether more efficient, new products exist that would be more suitable.

The modern consumer lifestyle wants a new piece of garment every day. These

garments have very short life. As compared to other garment the one which carries an

emotional aspect or auspicious craftsmanship sustains a long life. Up-cycled garment

can also live a long life if combined with an emotional aspect.

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4

CHAPTER 2

METHODOLOGY

2.1 Aim:

To prove following Hypotheses:

Life of home décor /products/ accessories is longer than that of garments.

Up-cycling of any fabric in the form of garment is not a solution to solve the

problem of landfill because the life of the Up-cycled garment is very short.

Any garment which has an emotional aspect lasts longer.

In India the major component of textile waste is production waste and not post-

consumer waste

2.2 Objective:

To research the flaws/gaps in the existing research about Up-cycling

To study the need of up-cycling in Indian scenario

To prove the hypothesis and identify the methods for which can increase the

second life of any discarded garment

2.3 Significance of Research

Fast fashion offers garments at really cheap rate. Due to this wardrobes are overflowing

.Young generation discards the garments very quickly. This leads to landfill. Many

designers are using the method of up-cycling to solve this problem of landfill. These up-

cycled garments are one of its kinds and are mainly purchased by the people who want

to stand out in the crowd and want to create their unique identity. To maintain this

unique wardrobe identity this user again stop wearing this up-cycled garment after few

washes after a short period of time they discard it and this again goes to the landfill.

This piece of garment cannot be up-cycled again and live its third life. Barriers to up-

cycled fashion purchases included concerns about sanitation and an increase in price

over comparable garments.

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Interest in the global production and consumption of new textiles and clothing is slowly

moving up the political agenda in the Global North, driven by general concerns of

environmental and social sustainability.

Figure 2: Over production due to fast fashion and cheap rates puts pressure on

resources and leads to production waste.

https://www.shutterstock.com/search/textile+industry

https://www.google.co.in/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&ved=0ahUKEwi0sqrKx4XUAhWHr48KHe

O1AukQjxwIAw&url=https%3A%2F%2Fchallenges.openideo.com%2Fchallenge%2Fbridgebuilder%2Fideas%2Fkhal

oom&psig=AFQjCNFBc2SymvrsB3iXmPHSxWVlJ8SNew&ust=1495613208246293

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Figure 3: Consumer phase and repurposing of clothes

http://www.genuinegildan.com/media/filer_private/2011/12/07/life_cycle.png

http://static.inditex.com/annual_report_2013/graphs-en/fabricacion-de-articulos-responsables-large.png

https://image.slidesharecdn.com/businesssocietyfinalproject-the3rsinditexmarinateam8-150729184411-lva1-

app6892/95/redefining-textile-industrys-recycling-process-4-638.jpg?cb=1438196626

2.4 Research Methodology:

1. Secondary Research: Journals, Books, Thesis Newspaper articles, online articles

2. Primary Research is based on Qualitative research:

Field visit and Personal interviews / in-depth interviews

Telephonic interviews

Interviews Via e-mail

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The responses will be analyzed to derive patterns ―ways of thinking‖ and for gaining

insight. This will be followed by data reduction and content analysis.

2.5 Target Population:

Sustainable/ Responsible Consumers

Sustainable/Green Entrepreneurs

2.6 Why sustainable Consumers?

Sustainable consumers can make the difference in changing consumption pattern of

others. They are the agents of change. They are the people who are prepared to make

lifestyle transition to sustainable consumption. They can provide insight to designers for

a perspective of design to move towards sustainable development.

2.7 Sampling:

Should be aware of the term sustainability.

Should incorporate some sustainable activity in their life.

Should be a decision maker in terms of shopping

Should be well educated

2.8 Sample Size: Sustainable consumers: 30, Green Entrepreneurs: 30

2.9 Limitation: This research is restricted to Mumbai.

2.10 Important Terminologies used in Research:

• Sustainable consumer: Sustainable consumers are the people who are

prepared to make lifestyle transitions to sustainable consumption.

• Sustainable /green entrepreneurs: Who are into green entrepreneurship, the

activity of consciously addressing an environmental/social problem/need with a

high level of risk, which has a net positive effect on the natural environment and

at the same time is financially sustainable.‖

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8

• Down cycling: Breaking an item down into its component elements. Once the

constituent elements or materials are recovered, they are reused if possible but

usually as a lower-value product.

• Life cycle is the resource extraction, manufacture, distribution, use, disposal and

recycling of product.

• Post-consumer waste is waste collected after the consumer has disposed of it.

• Pre-consumer waste is manufacturing waste that has not reach the consumer.

• Recycled is when a waste material or product has been reused and turned into a

new usable material or product.

• Reduce, reuse, recycle are the so called 3R‘s that classify waste management,

according to their order of importance. Reduce your consumption and usage,

reuse items again and recycle materials.

• Supply chain is the resources and steps involved in moving a product from raw

material to consumer.

• Sustainability is a lasting system, process, that meets the current needs while

preserving for the future.

• Sustainable fashion is clothing that is produced with respect to the environment

and social impacts throughout its lifespan.

• Sustainable textile is a textile that is produced with minimal environmental

impact.

• Textile waste is a material that is deemed unusable for its original purpose by

the owner.

• Zero-waste is a design technique that eliminates textile waste at the design

stage.

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CHAPTER 3

REVIEW OF LITERATURE

3.1 Countries where textile waste goes to landfill:

The total amount of clothing and textile waste arising per year in the UK is

approximately 2.35 million tons. This is equivalent to nearly 40kg per person per year, a

figure that includes waste from industry and domestic sources. Only around a quarter of

all waste textiles in the UK are reclaimed, with 13 per cent going to material recovery

and 13 per cent to incineration. The remainder (30kg per person per year) goes to

landfill, where textiles contribute to the overall environmental impact of these sites,

including production of methane emissions to air and pollution of groundwater through

toxic leachate .For the 25 per cent of UK clothing and textiles that are currently reused,

the reclamation process commonly involves collecting the used products either in textile

recycling banks or through a network of charity shops and door-to-door collection, then

transporting them to a recycling plant for sorting. The best quality items are resold as

nearly new garments in charity and second hand shops and a small proportion are

reworked into customized pieces (like at TRAID Remade, see below). The majority is

shipped to the Reuse, Recycling and Zero Waste used-clothing markets abroad, notably

in Eastern Europe and Africa where brokers sell it to traders who then sell it on at local

markets. In addition to reuse of complete garments, a small proportion of textiles are

recycled. They are used for wiping cloths, shredded for use as filling materials, such as

in mattresses, or broken down (either mechanically or chemically) and re-spun into a

new yarn. Approximately half of the clothing and textiles recovered are incinerated to

recover energy.

3.2 Difficulties in adopting Slow Fashion

There is very less scope of slow fashion as clothes are often shopped for habitually,

pressure to constantly reformulation of identity. It has been linked to psychological

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insecurity and rising level of mental illness. People meet their pleasures, new

experience and status and identity formation through buying goods and mainly clothes.

People have an inexhaustible supply of desires, consumption particularly for new items.

Purchase of each new item provides us with novel experience that we have not so far

encountered. We will express newness through changing our garments. People buy

afresh to make visible our identity both as an individual and part of larger social group

within a particular place and time. Consumption is a search for satisfaction. People are

considered poor if they can‘t satisfy our need for identity, participation and creation

(Kate Fletcher, 2014)

Reducing consumption and spending more on longer-lasting clothing is of course a

strategy rarely articulated as a viable option for the mass market. We shop for clothes

addictively and are trapped by record levels of credit card debt. The pressure to

constantly reformulate identity instigated by changing fashion trends feeds insecurity

and rising levels of psychological illness.

We meet our desire for pleasure, new experiences, status and identity. Formation

through buying goods – many of them clothes. And because we have an inexhaustible

supply of desires, consumption – particularly of new items – continues to grow because

we see the purchase of each new item as providing us with novel experiences that we

have not so far encountered. Fashion, in its worst forms, feeds insecurity, peer

pressure, consumerism and homogeneity.

No matter how many clothes we consume, we can never truly satisfy our psychological

needs. Fashion clothes are used to signal who and what we are, to attract (or repel)

others and to put us in a particular frame of mind. Our emotional needs are complex,

subtle and inexhaustible; where we try to meet them through our clothes, they lead to

an escalation in how and what we buy. It follows therefore that understanding more

about the relationship between fashion and sustainability is contingent on a greater

understanding of needs. In other words, we can‘t radically cut consumption of clothing

until we begin to understand its significance as a satisfier of human needs. The

consumption of fashion is a way to signal wealth, identity and social status and

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experience new things. Merely chanting ―slow fashion‖ is an insufficient and unrealistic

approach that ignores the aptness (wisdom) of sustainable development choice.

We are also poor if we cannot satisfy our need for identity, participation and creation –

three needs which can (at least in part) be met by fashion. Yet fashion clothes as we

experience them today are also the cause of multiple poverties.

Not all things are thrown away just because they are worn out, but rather, in most

cases, because people are bored with them. New clothes are bought primarily because

of a change in fashion and only very rarely to replace old, worn-out garments

Majority of environmental impact in lifecycle of garment arises from consumer use

phase. Mainly a user stops wearing a garment because of size, white color, color

bleeding, when garment becomes out of fashion or just for a change. This has become

a social paradigm of fashion and we resist changes in these paradigm. For existing

models, values, perception of habits of mind are themselves the root cause of problem

of unsustainability. Modifying laundry practices is not a guarantee of big sustainability

gains across the board. Ideas to change products or processes can be introduced more

quickly as they require a little change to establish behavior.

3.3 Life of garment is dependent on following factors:

Laundry Practices

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There are a limited, but growing, number of studies that give detailed lifecycle

assessments (LCA) for textiles and clothing and these confirm the high relative impact

of the use phase for frequently laundered clothing. Modifying laundry practices is not a

guarantee of big sustainability gains across the board. If we measure the environmental

impact of cotton in terms of toxicity rather than energy use, then changing garment

washing and drying practices brings almost no improvement. Similarly, modifying

laundering behavior brings little benefit for products that are rarely washed. This

includes furnishings, carpets and some garments, typically those made from wool. Even

if we wash woolen items frequently, they tend to be laundered on low temperatures and

are line dried (as they are largely unsuitable for tumble drying), and so for these types of

products the biggest savings can be made by improving production efficiencies, not by

concentrating our efforts on use.

White goods manufacturers and detergent companies have been aware of the

sustainability impacts of their products for several decades and many have taken steps

to reduce these impacts. The key issues include energy, water and detergent use in

washing, and energy use in drying and ironing.

The average piece of clothing stays in a person‘s wardrobe for 3 years 5 months, is on

the body for 44 days during this time and is worn for between 2.4 and 3.1 days between

washing. Yet even though the typical garment is only washed and dried around 20 times

in its life, most of its environmental impact comes from laundering and not from growing,

processing and producing the fabric or disposing of it at the end of its life. The washing

and drying of polyester blouse, for example, uses around six times as much energy as

that needed to make it in the first place. Just by washing the blouse half as often, the

product‘s overall energy consumption can be cut by almost 50 per cent.

Any stains to the garment cause it to be regularly laundered or even discarded. As the

stains dry, their hue changes and the tonality of the stained color gains depth. Major

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discrepancy between idealized notions of how long things ought to last and the starker

reality of what actually happens reflects a significant gap between the length of time

designers feel materials should last (‗all materials should be very durable‘) and the

average length of time the garment stays on trend (‗around six months‘).

3.4 Garments have a very short life as compared to home décor products

Clothes become out rated very quickly and this encourages the replacement of clothes

very quickly no matter how good the quality of the garment is. The craving of buying

new garments never gets satisfied. Average pieces of clothing stays in person‘s

wardrobe for 3-5 years is on the body for 44 days.(Worn between 2.4 – 3.1 days). Even

though typical garment is only washed and dried around 20 times in its life most of its

environmental impact arises from process of laundering and not growing of fibers. On

contrary rugs, mats, bags, carpets, table runners, covers and other items are used more

than 5-10 years in Indian society and they require less laundry as compared to

garments and are not as frequently changed with trends as compared to garments. In

case of frequently laundered garments like a cotton T-shirt use phase has the highest

impact and effect of reducing the energy used in washing, drying and ironing but for

carpets energy and environmental impact profile is weighted very differently. Furnishing,

carpets are used less and washed less. Majority of environmental impact in lifecycle of

garment arises from consumer use phase. Mainly a user stops wearing a garment

because of size, white color, color bleeding, when garment becomes out of fashion, or

just for a change. This has become a social paradigm of fashion and we resist changes

in these paradigm. For existing models, values, perception of habits of mind are

themselves the root cause of problem of unsustainability. Modifying laundry practices is

not a guarantee of big sustainability gains across the board. Ideas to change products

or processes can be introduced more quickly as they require a little change to establish

behavior. In up-cycling also the performance of final product is affected by consumer

behavior. (Kate Fletcher, 2014)

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3.5 Changes in pattern of textile use can bring sustainability

In the case of the use phase, there are great differences in the way textiles and

garments are used. There are areas of the textile lifecycle that have most impact and

where change could bring biggest benefit. For example, in the case of a cotton T-shirt,

the use phase has the highest impact and the effect of reducing the energy used in

washing, drying and ironing the T-shirt dwarfs the possible effects of changing

production methods. But for carpets, the energy and environmental impact profile is

weighted very differently. Here the materials production phase is very important –

approximately 71 per cent of the total energy4 – and disposal is also high impact,

meaning that innovation is best directed at phases other than use.

The more radical innovations focus on consumption patterns and bring the biggest

benefits because they are based on cultural change and shifts in consumer

consciousness, although they are both difficult and time consuming to influence. In

contrast, changes to products or processes can be introduced more quickly as they

generally involve familiar technologies and require little change to established behavior,

but they bring smaller scale improvements. In the case of furnishings, designing to

enhance durability and a ‗slow‘ rhythm of use would probably bring resource benefits.

For clothing, however, the picture is more involved because of the relative importance of

laundering behavior in determining overall lifecycle impact and because not all types of

clothing are worn and washed in the same way.

3.6 Indian Scenario:

In India the discarded garment does not actually contribute to landfill but they are

actually passed to some other user to live their second life. This not compulsorily

requires the process of adding value to the garment until the garment is in wearable

condition. In India women still take away old clothes from the households in exchange

of a few utensils. This caste based occupation has marked its existence with their trade

web that incorporates commodity exchange, up-cycling the clothes, various levels of

transporting the old clothes. The old clothes are processed and marketed to various

rural pockets where first hand clothes stand unaffordable. The non-wearable fabric is up

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cycled to its maximum usage by converting it in various forms like quilts, hand wipes for

factory workers, cushion covers etc. but not in the form of garments. This utensil

exchange practiced in the Chindi (rag) markets. These Bartanwalas and Chindiwalas

collect clothes in exchange of utensils. They manage to sell boxes, quarter-plates, even

the odd, stainless-steel dinner-set. For the last, they may charge 50 pieces of clothing.

Five typically fetches a two-kilo steel pan according to the kind of clothes and quality.

This aspect goes against the research which says discarded clothes contribute to

landfill. In a way it deals with post-consumer waste. In India Cloth is never simply

thrown away, and will be used up until it literally wears out.

If not chindiwalas/ bartanwalas it goes to some other member of the family or maid or is

used for cleaning purpose for dusting. A six-yard sari can become six one square yard

polishing cloths for the machine industry; dhotis are torn into three pieces, while shirts

become smaller dusters. These are then sold on to hardware shops, factories and the

machining industries.

The Delhi community of the Waghris uses new and old Gujarati embroidery to make

cushion covers, bedspreads and wall hangings made from scraps of embroidered

clothing for the export market. Benarasi brocades sari‘s zari borders and pallu in zari

are sold individually and the remaining, plainer silk scarves (chuni and headsquares),

used as lining material , sold for scrap (chindi, katran) to the local rag merchants.

Cushion covers and bedspreads are made up of a patchwork of these elements stitched

together on cotton.

Up-cycling is done in India by these people but they prefer converting the used fabric

into products other than garment.

Hierarchy of Use of clothes in India can be explained as - Garment is worn for Best and

then for everyday use and then for private use at home or passed to some other person

giving it a second life.

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3.7 Hierarchy of a Garment:

Hierarchy of use for clothes is well established on an individual level – first we wear a

garment only for ‗best‘, then for everyday use and eventually for private use at home.

Hand-downs that arrive in India are pulped to make everything from low- and mid-range

doormats and prayer rugs to blankets and bed linen. Leftover garments are cut into

square pieces to be sold as industrial wipers for the paints, chemicals and construction

industries, for both local and international buyers in Japan and Australia. Waste is used

to stuff pillows and mattresses. Up-cycling of old textiles specially Indian saris (which is

5.5 meters long piece of fabric) to cushion covers, bags, table covers, blankets by

quilting is a common practice at present in many places all over India.

In an average Indian household, an old shirt gets converted into a pillowcase. It then

morphs into a floor cover or a foot towel or even into a kitchen towel. My grandmother

used to speak of tearing the old shirt into pieces to be used as fuel for the chulha. Many

people give away old worn out saris, trousers and skirts each year to their house maid

or exchanges them for new steel utensils from the woman visiting her doorsteps once

every few months.

At home, techniques like replacing worn collars and cuffs, patching trousers and

jackets, unraveling old knitwear to reuse the yarn, cutting worn bed sheets into dusters

and darning holes were widely practiced.

3.8 Up-cycling in form of Craft Clusters:

International:

a) Boro: Japanese Folk Fabric:

Boro was born of forgotten values of ‗mottainai‘ or ‗too good to waste‘. Boro is the

clothing that was worn by peasants, merchants or artisans in Japan from Edo period up

to early Showa (17th – early 19th century).Clothes were crafted from cheaper materials,

but were no less beautiful than those worn by the upper classes. Literally translated as

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rags or scraps of cloth, the term boro is also used to describe clothes and household

items which have been patched-up and repaired many times. Once clothing was made,

it would be maintained throughout the owner‘s lifetime, or perhaps even longer.

The beauty of boro fabric is the highly sophisticated sewing and weaving techniques

used by the women who made it. For peasant families, each garment would last long

enough to be passed down through generations. Daily use would require frequent

repair. Made up of scraps of old clothes over generations, the timeline of the family

could be traced along its seams. Boro is a practical, utilitarian and cheap fabric. Each

boro item is by its very definition, absolutely unique. Now, it is valued as art and has

become highly collectible. Boro uses everything and wastes nothing. Boro shows us the

value of time spent, not money. Unfortunately, it also highlights the wastefulness of

modern lifestyles.

b) Indian Crafts

Originally, the incentive to repair was economic; labor was cheap compared to the cost

of textile materials and garments, so fabrics were carefully maintained and repaired.

These were then sold under the category of handicraft. Post-consumer textiles wastes

are still up-cycled in small Indian clusters. Traditionally, fabric from old cotton saris are

made into layers and stitched together using run stitches, to give a unique design effect.

This product termed as ―Kantha‖ is used for infants and children as blankets and wraps

as it is soft and suitable for the Indian climatic conditions. Kantha work is famous in the

eastern states of India like Bihar, West Bengal, Assam and Orissa. The nomadic

Bakkarwal and Gujjar tribes of Jammu and Kashmir use acrylic yarn for embroidery on

the old woolen felt blankets and convert it in to a beautiful needle worked handmade

rugs. This is a part of their tradition and culture and a method to preserve the old

textiles. They also use old textiles to make caps, bags and other accessories with

beautiful hand embroidery. Similarly, the nomadic tribes in Rajasthan do patch work,

embroidery and mirror work to give a bright new look to their dresses. A number of

accessories are also created on recycled textiles with surface embellishment by this

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community and marketed by different NGOs and traders for the domestic & international

market.

Patchwork from Saurashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan

Figure 4. Patchwork from Saurashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan

http://www.india-

crafts.com/textile/weaving_traditions/printing_tradition/embroidery_traditions/phulkari/ki

mkhab/kantha/chikankari/aribharat/applique/index.html

Kaudi blanket of Karnataka.

https://in.pinterest.com/pin/505740233139141555/

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Figure 5. Women making Kaudi blanket in Karnataka

https://in.pinterest.com/pin/505740233139141555/

https://varnatantu.wordpress.com/2014/07/17/upcycling-saris-into-quilted-blanket-cover/

Tanka-kaam of Rajasthan

Figure 6.Tanka Kaam of Rajasthan

http://gaatha.com/tanka-kaam/

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Applique and patchwork of Jaisalmer, Gujarat, Orissa

Figure 7. Applique work of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Orissa

http://www.craftmark.org/sites/default/files/P006%20Applique.pdf

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Figure 8. Patchworks of Jaisalmer

https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/patchwork-quilt-jaisalmer-india-107606111

Applique is one of the oldest and finest crafts of Gujarat. By using different patches of

fabric, beautiful forms of floral and animal designs are prepared for quilts, hangings,

modern household products and apparels. So by piecing cloth together as in quilts,

different patterns are made by applying cloth of different colors. Multicolored covering of

jigsaw pieces formed of geometrical shapes creating tensile texture and visual treat, is

the impression one gets while seeing an applique or patchwork. Colorful and vivid

shapes and forms of fabric patched together or on another surface create the most

attractive and vibrant textile products.

The art of decorating a textile product by applying fabric on fabric with the edges sewn

down by stitching can be termed as applique while patchwork is the art of sewing little

patches of geometric shaped fabric to form a textile pattern.

This craft is done in Saurashtra, Banaskantha, Patan and Kutch.

Figure 9. Contemporization of applique work and Patchwork

https://www.facebook.com/myvillage.rimzimdadu

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3.9 Down-Cycling

Down-cycling involves downgrading the quality of reclaimed materials immediately into

cheap, low-value end uses rather than maintaining them as a high-value product or

resource. This happens for example, when various fibres are mixed together to produce

a blend of lower quality that then goes into amorphous products such as insulation

panels or mattress stuffing, rather than being reused as high-value products such as

clothing.

3.10 Trade and Supply of used garments:

Many countries throw clothes after using it due to lack of resources. Many others do

export the used clothes to other nations for recycling. Many developing countries import

these used clothes and make utility products out of them which are later sold in other

countries.

A. Used wearable clothes enter the Indian retail market through two channels: Smuggling from special economic zones (SEZs).

Payment of a paltry penalty of Rs. 50 a kg at custom checkpoints. (Kandla, Falta)

57.6 million Garments enter the retail market every year through each licensee,

for resale through illegal channels from SEZs.

B. Used clothes are imported into India under two categories — wearable and

mutilated.

The import of wearable clothes requires a license from the government, with the

condition of 100 per cent re-export ( 30% of imports)

The government‘s approval isn‘t required to import mutilated clothes ( 60 % of

import)Yarn extracted from mutilated rags and woolens is used to make blankets,

sold at about Rs 80-100 each in the open market.

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Figure 10. Graph Showing Leading Exporters of Used Clothing

http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/india-emerges-top-importer-of-

used-clothes-115100800540_1.html

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Figure 11. Graph showing leading Importers of second hand clothes

http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/india-emerges-top-importer-of-

used-clothes-115100800540_1.html

3.11 Recycling of Textile Waste:

In the UK in 2008 more than half of annual clothing purchases were simply thrown

away, and only a quarter collected for reuse and recycling (Morley et al. 2009).

Rag collectors and shoddy manufacturers have been recovering and recycling fibre for

hundreds of years. Individuals too have been reusing, repairing and reconditioning their

own household textiles and garments for generations. Unsurprisingly therefore, there

are a large number of designer- and producer-led initiatives focusing on textile waste

and its management, mainly through reuse and recycling.

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The method of extracting fibre from fabric has stayed the same for the last 200 years

and involves mechanically tearing the fabric apart using carding machines. The process

breaks the fibres, producing much shortened lengths, which when spun tend to produce

a bulky, low-quality yarn.

Figure 12. Circular Supply chain of textile recycling

http://www.ecouterre.com/hm-kering-team-up-to-close-the-loop-on-textile-

recycling/kering-h-and-m-worn-again-2/

Post-consumer textile wastes are recycled in the industrial sector as well as in almost

every Indian household. In 2004, worn garment imports were placed under the

restricted list, meaning a commodity trader can bring in goods only a single time after

paying a penalty. The government had, however, relaxed the rule for some: 14

companies located in Gujarat‘s Kandla SEZ have licenses to import freely for sorting

and repairing clothes for exports to Africa. This has led traders to complain of

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monopolistic practices and unfair advantage. SEZs are allowed to send 15% of the cost

insurance freight (CIF) value for sale in the local market.

SEZ operators have also been accused of importing fresh clothes as old ones. Used

garments pose health risks. The Clothing Manufacturers Association of India (CMAI)

claims goods worth Rs550 crore enter illegally every year through India‘s ports and

international airports.

The Textile Recycling Association, representing the Kandla sorting companies and

recyclers, however, maintains that only inferior clothes meant for use by the poor enter

the country. All shipments are fumigated by certified international agencies.

The Kandla SEZ, according to the association, imported goods worth Rs297 crore in the

last fiscal, contributing Rs315 crore to the country‘s foreign exchange through exports.

In this labour-intensive, big-volume, low-margin business, workers are needed to sort

and grade clothes; the SEZ employs 3,000 people every year.The business of textile

waste recycling is less known. But for decades, second-hand garments from the West

have created a thriving business in India, as cheap clothing for millions of the country‘s

poor. The trendier lots routinely resurface in urban flea markets such as Sarojini Nagar

in New Delhi and Linking Road in Mumbai, where fashionable college goers and their

mothers pluck bargains at dirt-cheap rates. But now a huge amount of discards from

well-heeled consumers in the US, Canada and South Korea are ending up in Panipat,

Asia‘s biggest textile recycling hub, to get a second life. Annual sales of the global used-

clothing industry are estimated to be $1 billion (around Rs4,740 crore) —half a per cent

of the $200 billion clothing industry, according to a 2005 study by Sally Baden and

Catherine Barber for international charity house Oxfam. It has grown 10-fold globally

since 1991. Recycled yarn keeps prices low. Around 30 units produce 500 tons of

recycled yarn a day out of cotton pants and T-shirts that is used to make mats.

Recycled cotton yarn is production-friendly. Besides, customers want good rates; they

are less quality-conscious.

In 2008, the Indian parliament imposed a ban on the import of international old clothes

seeing it as a potential threat to the country‘s export-driven clothes manufacturing

sector. However, this ban is only on non-mutilated clothes. Mutilated clothes have a

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conditional entry into India‘s ports. The importers ensure the processing of the mutilated

clothes and the subsequent export as blankets, rugs, pillow stuffing. These waste

clothes thus get a second life in Asia‘s biggest recycling shoddy industries of Panipat.

The real catch in importing these international clothes lies in proving that they are

mutilated. Few investors at Kandla special economic zone of textile recycling

association have obtained licenses to import these old clothes and set up sorting plants.

They claim to provide the sorted worn garment directly to the Indian poor.

Often the containers departing from the Kandla port of Gujarat display mutilated clothes

outside and hide stacks of non-mutilated second-hand clothes inside. As a result, the

Clothing Manufacturers Association of India claims that goods worth Rupees 550 crore

illegally enter India every year through its ports and through international airports.

In the case of recycling of post-consumer wastes of wool and acrylic waste in India,

Panipat, in northern India, is the world‘s largest hub, producing reclaimed ―shoddy‖ wool

yarns and blankets out of used winter clothing. The raw material is sourced from the

international second hand clothing market of the developed countries like USA & UK.

Small industries produce yarns, blankets, felt products cotton durries, made-ups, throws

and mats. For example, Wilcox has estimated that up to 20% by volume of its turnover

is exported to India for recycling. The business of using recycled acrylic and woolen

threads for blanket manufacturing has annual revenues of INR 700- 1,000 crore in

Panipat alone, according to the All India Woolen and Shoddy Mills‘ Association. The

trade is not illegal, as the clothing is mutilated before it crosses the Indian ports.

a) Kishco Group, Mumbai:

India deals with import and export business related to recycled clothing to serve various

industries. Materials that are imported constitute residues of all types (cotton, acrylic,

wool, polyester, nylon etc.) from different stages of production in the textile industry like

fibre manufacturing , yarns spinning, fabric weaving/ knitting, new garment manufacture,

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etc. Some of these materials are converted to fibers like poly waste yarn, poly-

regenerated fibers, etc. Used clothing comprising of wool, acrylic and cotton sweater

are converted into re-generated fiber by Kishco Group. The business of sorting and

grading of textile consumer waste imported from the developed countries happens in

the Kandla Special Economic Zone in Gujarat, 600 kilometers to the north of Kishco‘s

Mumbai base. It is one of the largest centers of India where sorting and grading of

textile wastes takes place. Some of the used clothing waste imported into India is also

used for wiping material. The supplies mainly come in from U.S.A. and Europe

b) Panipat Textile Industry:

Figure13. Rag Route showing Trade and supply of used clothes globally http://shirahime.ch/2013/01/panipat-stories-textile-recycling-hardcore/

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Every year, about 1,44,000 tons of mutilated worn clothes and textiles that are trashed

by America, Europe and parts of Asia. They are imported to Indian dock, via containers,

at ports in Mumbai and Gujarat. Then they are purchased by Panipat's shoddy

manufacturers for recycling. Labels, zippers and buttons (resold at 25 paisa a kg) are

separated from the fabric. Fabric is then shredded. Discarded wool and acrylic clothing

from the West is converted into yarn in India. They are woven into blankets, blazers and

shawls. They are sold to the poor, to people affected by disaster, to the army, to school

children, and even to passengers on the railway.

It's hard to imagine that the coarse grey woolen blankets issued to the rural poor could

conceal a shred of Chanel or a fibre from Fendi. Unknown to villagers, high fashion -

removed by several industrial processes, down an inverted value chain - sits heavily on

their shoulders.

Of all the ironies inherent in recycling, this is most piquant: discarded wool and acrylic

clothing from the West is converted into yarn in India and woven into blankets, blazers

and shawls that find their way to the poor, to people affected by disaster, to the army, to

school children, and even to passengers on the railway.

It's the working of what's called the 'shoddy' industry in Panipat. This historic city in

Haryana is in fact the global capital of textile fiber recycling. Every year, about 1, 44,000

tons of mutilated worn clothes and textiles that are trashed by America, Europe and

parts of Asia are imported to Indian docks, via containers, at ports in Mumbai and

Kandla, in Gujarat - are purchased by Panipat's shoddy manufacturers for recycling.

Signs of the trade are everywhere - trucks piled high with clothes lumber down gritty

gullies towards recycling units, beyond whose gates are passageways lined with textile

scraps and loose buttons. Further in are cavernous warehouses, where women sort the

clothes into color families of reds, browns, greens, etc. Labels, zippers and buttons

(resold at 25 paise a kg) are separated from the fabric, which is then shredded on

mounted scythes to collect strips of solid color. Three tons of fabric produces around 1.5

tons of yarn, which is woven back into shoddy fabric. The labor is divided: women sort

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and strip, men work the shredding and carding machines. Impressively, textile recycling

put Panipat on the global map. Polyester, which makes a cheaper, lighter, more supple

blanket, is starting to edge 'shoddy' out of the textile stakes, leaving shoddy yarn

manufacturers with dormant carding machines, mountains of untouched clothes and a

depleting workforce.

Figure 14. Women busy in sorting of clothes at recycling industry, Panipat

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-times/deep-focus/Worlds-cast-off-capital-goes-from-riches-to-rags/articleshow/49612121.cms

There were around 600 to 700 shoddy yarn and textile manufacturers in Panipat up until

2012; now there are barely 150 units.

Around 30,000 to 40,000 kg of old clothes comes to factory every day. Many

organizations like the UN, non-profits, governments, the army, hospitals and even

prisons buy shoddy blankets. At the time of the 2001 Bhuj earthquake, around 10 lakh

blankets were picked up from Panipat. During the Nepal earthquake in 2015 four to five

lakh recycled blankets were sold. Some of these manufacturers have shut shoddy units

and started manufacturing polyester blankets. The odds are in favor of synthetic. A 1.5

X 2m polyester blanket weighs 300 grams and costs Rs 70; its shoddy counterpart

weighs 1.5 to 2 kg and costs Rs 100. Polyester lasts about 3-4 seasons; shoddy

probably two.

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Figure 15. Workers at Shoddy recycling industry, Panipat, Haryana

http://www.livemint.com/Companies/x9tnCSRrdT3RSn3BXfRtON/Old-clothes-spin-a-new-yarn-in-India.html

Not surprising, during the 2013 Uttarakhand floods a disaster risk management team in

Delhi, dispatched polyester blankets to the hills. Polyester blankets are warmer, lighter

and easier to transport, which matters when you're covering inhospitable terrain.

New polyester mill has a daily production capacity of 7,000 kg. Many sole proprietors

believe the future, with polyester, is bright. In shoddy factory, women sit around scythes,

mechanically slice coats and trousers, jackets and shirts of almost all international

leading brands.In 2010, the production value of shoddy industries was around Rupees

90 crore a month. In 2015 it was reduced to Rs. 35 crore. The industry imported around

800 containers of mutilated clothes a month; now it's down to 300 (each weighing about

25 tons).According to the Bureau of International Recycling, headquartered in Belgium

the decline of Panipat as an industry will impact the recycling of worn clothing to a huge

extent. This will decrease the import of used clothes in India and export will be diverted

to other countries like Pakistan, China, Morocco, Kenya and Tanzania.

More than 30% of the world's manufactured clothing is recycled. Some of it is converted

into yarn, while the balance is utilized by the cleaning industry. If this industry were to

close it would be a very big problem globally as there would be more of this material

going into landfills, adding to the problem of pollution.

Now, Panipat's labor force - which used to number around 90,000 in its heyday - is also

retreating home to Bihar and UP or seeking jobs elsewhere in Panipat. While there will

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be work in the new polyester factories, being far less labor-intensive, they'll absorb less

than a quarter of the shoddy workforce.

c) Jindal’s Recycling Plant, Dharam Pal Woollen Industries:

Rejected garments of every kind—furry caps, extra-large cardigans, and outlandish

overalls—arrive from across the world to Jindal‘s recycling plant in this textile town

90km north of New Delhi.

This company makes 10,000kg of yarn a day from 20 tons of used clothes that lie in an

open tin shed, ready to go into the shredder for extracting flossy fiber. This raw material

is then used to produce yarn for making blankets, school blazer fabric and red-and-

black checkered drapes popular among the Masai population of Tanzania and Kenya.

And out of the jumble may emerge a vintage piece of period value that special clothes

stores in the West die for, says Gurvinder Toor, who runs a recycling plant in Gujarat‘s

Kandla special economic zone (SEZ). Vintage clothes are sent back to the US and they

fetch a good price. Nothing is wasted by US Clothing India Pvt. Ltd which handles

75,000kg of old clothes a day.

Bathroom mats that use recycled cotton yarn is a Rs 2000 crore industry. The business

of using recycled acrylic and woolen threads for blanket manufacturing has annual

revenues of Rs700-1,000 crore in Panipat alone, says the All India Woolen and Shoddy

Mills‘ Association

3.12 Second Hand Garment Markets:

Few people seem to realize how much used clothing is profitably sold abroad, and

those that do know a little about the market are completely unaware of its value, scale,

and impact. The value of the global trade in secondhand garments has risen to US$2.97

billion in 2010, an increase of 13 percent from 2009 alone (Comatrade, 2011).

The old worn out shirt finds its way across states and nations to create a billion-dollar

industry of second-hand clothes. What is old and disposable for one becomes brand

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new for another. Changing fashion trends and improved purchasing power has led to

the consumers purchasing clothes more than needed and discarding them much earlier.

This provides a greater volume of discarded clothes available for sale as secondhand

clothes. Used clothing is one of the most popular items sold in the flea markets all over

the world. Norris, (2010.137) in her study on recycling Indian clothing in New Delhi has

described the Chor Bazaar at the Red Fort in New Delhi as the most hidden-away

markets, overflowing with used and reused clothes that were also found across the City

1. Delhi’s Azad Market:

It is country‘s biggest wholesale old clothes market. Clothes are unpacked from arriving

bundles, mended and iron-pressed before they are resold. In this largely all-cash

unregulated trade, old jeans are bought for Rs25 per piece from importers and are sold

for Rs35. Traders say 90% of the goods arrive here from Kandla port, Gujarat.

2. Anand Market, Kopri, Thane:

In a bustling corner in Thane‘s Kopri area is Anand Market, where hawkers have been

gathering since the past four decades to sell second hand clothes. Here the hawkers

swear by the barter system. They procure the clothes by going door-to-door and offering

utensils in exchange for them.

They start their day by going door-to-door to ask for used clothes and provide utensils in

exchange for them. They first collect the clothes by going to people‘s homes in harsh

sunlight and then sell them in this open market.‖ The buyers are rarely individuals

shopping for personal use, but are wholesale traders. However, there are times when

they go back home without selling anything. The monsoon period is a challenging time

as they cannot sell in the open and have to struggle to keep the clothes dry.

The sold clothes subsequently find their way to different markets in the city that sell

second hand clothes. There are some others who prefer second hand clothes as they

come cheap. Many buyers buy the clothes from here as they get good clothes at a very

low price. The Kopri area of Thane bustles everyday with men and women from the

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waghari community setting up a market by the roadside. Some sell old clothes, others

buying utensils from wholesale stores nearby and a few searching for clothes to take

back to their villages. Waghari community members collect clothes door to door in

Kandivali, Dombivli and Borivali areas. They make a profit of Rs100-200 per day. Many

of them come to Thane every evening to sell all they have collected throughout day.

3. Chor Bazar:

The main center in Mumbai for dealing in imported Western and Indian clothing is

located near Bhendi Bazaar at Mumbai Central. The well-known 'Chor Bazaar' in

Mumbai offers interesting shopping. It is not that the bazaar is patronized by the poor;

there are college students, office goers, tourists and people from all walks of life

belonging to all age groups who head to the place. An early morning visit on any day, to

the seven lanes starting from Do Taki junction, one will see a flood of brightly colored

clothes in all sizes. The business is brisk here much before the shops open for

business. The sale of these is visible all across the city in lots on footpaths, railway

bridges, road side and weekly bazaars. It is estimated that thousands of people earn a

living out of sale of used clothes. The clothes that are sold in Chor Bazaar come from

another Flea Market called the Waghri Bazaar. It is situated at the grounds of Lane No

13, Kamathipura, near Mumbai Central. This wholesale flea market opens up at 4 am

every Friday and closes by 8 am. Most of the sellers are Gujarati Hindus and most

buyers are Muslim dealers from Chor Bazaar.

4. Chindi Bazar:

In the wee hours of the night, the colorful labyrinth of lanes at the secluded periphery of

any city in India is home to a chindi bazaar. This is the nerve center of the second-hand

intra-recycling system that is unique to India and is known as the Waghri Chindi (rag)

trade.

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3.13 Waghri Community:

The Waghris, a nomadic community of India, identifies itself with the word ‗chindi’ and

has been operating the informal old clothes recycling trade for a century-and-a-half now.

They traditionally barter old clothes for new utensils from various households of almost

all cities across India.

Waghri woman is usually draped in a Gujarati-styled sari walking across the urban

residential lanes, typically on a late afternoon, balancing a bundle of clothes on her

head and a stack of utensils on her shoulders. Waghri community women take away all

the old clothes in exchange of aluminum or steel vessels. They also call themselves

Kathiawadis, there are two groups - one which collects old clothes in exchange of

utensils and the other which buy these old clothes to further sell them in villages, usually

in the interiors of Gujarat. They come to cities once a month to buy clothes to sell them

in villages. They pick these clothes, wash them and iron them to make them as good as

new.

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Figure 16. Waghari Community women at Anand market, Kopri, Mumbai(Source: Self

Clicked)

Around 500 of them travel from Gujarat, first halting at Chor Bazaar to look for cheap

clothes to recycle, and then come to Kopri. Though they find quite a lot of western

clothes, they still opt for traditional wear. Apart from Mumbai, the Vagharis visit Surat,

Rajkot and Ahmedabad in Gujarat to buy and sell old clothes.

Wagharis who are seeing a decline in this business are looking to educate the younger

generations so that they can get better jobs. Currently, the men have started to get

trained in skills for a stable job and their wives or daughters take over the cloth

business. Slowly, their community is encouraging children to continue schooling for

better prospects in life.

The chindiwalis (as they call themselves) meticulously bargain at doorsteps and

continue a five-to-six hour pheri or collection rounds on hot afternoons across city

spaces. These clothes are further sorted, stitched, darned, patched up and ironed. The

sorting spaces are either the narrow alleyways of their slums or are under railway

bridges, flyovers or footpaths.

They further sell their collection in the chindi markets often held at odd hours in the

city. A glance through the markets unveils traders (Waghri women and men) squatting

in long lines with their clothing collection and calling out to buyers who they refer to

as vyapari or middleman. The women haggle at the top of their voices to strike the best

buy. These vyaparis further travel to nearby towns and cities to sell the clothes in small

vending shops or pavement carts. The next set of customers spotted in these Waghri

markets are the construction workers, rickshaw pullers, and women and their children

from a nearby slum.

The Waghri women further travel to nearby villages and in their weekly markets sell the

clothes to the rural population that cannot afford first-hand clothes. A sari for Rs 30, a

shirt for Rs 40 and clothing for children for Rs 35 are some basic rates at which the

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clothes are sold to the customers. The Waghri trade, created out of a thick mesh of

inter-state, intra-community linkages, gets replicated in each of India‘s cities. This

informal trade industry, based on the traditional barter system, brings affordable

second-hand clothing to India‘s rural and urban poor. Despite providing affordable

clothing to the poor, the Waghri community faces absolute dejection, constant struggle

to hold a fixed market in Indian cities and meager economic returns.

3.14 Role of the NGOs:

Goonj:

A non-profit organization that distributes old cloths is that the need for clothing has not

been filled in India. Out of the collections it receives, they use the cloths to make

reusable sanitary pads for rural women. There‘s a poverty level where people continue

to suffer during winter because they don‘t have enough to cover themselves.

The privileged across the globe – those who can afford first-hand clothes and discard

them after minimal usage or once they are no longer in fashion – believe that they have

been helping the poor by these donations. Goonj is working extensively to provide

clothing for Indian poor, reveals some alarming statistics of people suffering in the

winter solely because they do not have enough to cover themselves and of women who

still use old newspapers during menstruation.

Clothes that charities cannot sell locally are sold to commercial textile recyclers, who

also buy the clothing dropped into textile banks. The ostensible function of clothes

donated by NGOs can be non-fashion clothing material as their prime objective is to

protect skin, modesty and keep them warm.

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CHAPTER 4

PRIMARY RESEARCH

4.1 Insights from Interviews:

a) Sussana Cherian, Goonj Mumbai

Life of rugs, mats, home décor products is more than that of garments as they require

less number of washes and maintenance. But in NGOs the garments are actually

passed on to the rural people who actually need that garment. Unlike urban people they

don‘t discard garments very early. People are enthusiastically coming to give their stuff

to Goonj because they know it is for a noble cause and the fact that it goes to the needy

people in rural areas. The garments they give are in a wearable condition. Second life of

the garment is also user dependent.

Figure 17. Up-cycled products of Green by Goonj

Source: Self Clicked

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Figure18. Sorting and Segregation of clothes at Goonj center, Mumbai

Source: Self Clicked

b) Manisha Desai,Co-Founder Cornucopia , Environmentalist

Figure 19. Up-cycled products by Cornucopia brand, Delhi

https://lbb.in/delhi/cornucopia-picks-old-clothes-turns-quilts-covers/

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As far as longevity is concerned product have longer life as compared to garments as

they need less care, less number of washes, unlike garments they are not worn, they

don‘t have risk of wear and tear. People have accepted home décor stuff over

garments. Acceptance and demand makes ultimately brings Business sustainability.

c) Mehera Shaw,Co –founder, Mehra Shaw, Jaipur

Women are the leading buyers and can probably bring the best. One should think about

life cycle of the final product. Definitely home décor and other products have a longer

life. But garment production is required because it is more in demand and makes good

profit. Garment‘s life can be extended by quality design, sustainable fabric. Garment

should be worn well over time and reflects the story of its production.

d) Tanushree Shukla,Co-Founder, Chindi

Figure 20. Up-cycling of textile waste by brand Chindi

https://www.chindi.in/

Make whatever out of up-cycling we are at least not using new resources. Those who

make garments they mainly export because western world knows about sustainability

and they understand its need. Aesthetic value and price are given more value than any

other environmental reason. Until its customization level we don‘t want to deal with used

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garments. It‘s the women who have the veto power to take all decisions when it comes

to shopping.

e) Shreyas Bhandari, Founder, Greensole

For garments women are the leading buyers but for products both men and women

have equal buying behavior. Whether its product or garment its life depends on user.

They specifically make it for needy Also their buyers are sustainability conscious

consumer. In any sustainable business also as entrepreneurs one has to cater the profit

making division.

Figure 21. Up-cycling and recycling of used shoes by GreenSoles, Navi Mumbai

http://www.greensole.in/

f) Jey Rege, Co-Founder, Padukas

Figure 22. Cobblers making footwear out of discarded tyre at Padukas, Mumbai

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http://www.theweekendleader.com/Innovation/2098/green-cobblers.html

Washes decide the life of the garment. Garments have comparatively shorter life than

other textile products. By doing up-cycling or down-cycling at least we are saving raw

material. At some point one has to throw the garment even after down cycling. There is

a limit of down cycling also. For business purpose even the discarded waste should be

first hand to ensure quality, it should generate some profit .Not just sustainability

comfort and aesthetic value brings client

Figure 23. Up-cycling procedure of brand Padukas, Mumbai

http://www.theweekendleader.com/Innovation/2098/green-cobblers.html

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g) Nandan Bhatt, Founder, Aarohana

A social entrepreneur should manage to create a win-win situation for all. A sustainable

business should look at both needs and impact assessment. Life of the up-cycled

products is more than that of garment as they need less maintenance.

Figure 24. Up-cycling of plastic bags by team Aarohana Eco Social, Pune

https://www.facebook.com/aarohanaecosocialdevelopments/

h) Stefano Funari, Founder, I was a Sari

There are resources available in form of waste but approaching the activity in a

traditional way was not going to create anything sustainable. In order ensure the brand

would not have to depend on grants the products should be sold at a premium. This can

possible by exporting the items. In the US, for instance, a scarf is sold for an average

price of $25. In India it would cost Rs700 or around $10.Selling in India, on the other

hand, has been challenging for the brand. One of the reasons is that most middle-class

Indians are averse to wearing used clothes unlike the West where vintage and thrift

stores are common. Export is required because selling sustainable products in India is

challenging as other countries are more aware about sustainability, they are willing to

pay, they have shown more acceptance, also Indian ,middle class averse to wearing

used clothes.

- Stefano Funari, Founder, I was a Sari

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Figure 25. Up-cycling of Sari by brand I was a Sari

http://realitygives.org/iwas_project.php

i) Karishma Shahani, Brand Owner Ka – Sha

Up-cycling saves raw material. For Indian market we make different collection because

they are really unaware about up-cycling. For Business sustainability it is important to

make Profit .For Indian clients we up-cycle their worn garments mostly life cycle is in the

consumers‘ hands.

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Figure 26. Craftsman doing handwork at Ka- Sha, Pune

https://www.facebook.com/label.Ka.Sha/

j) Kirti Tula, Co-founder, Doodlage

Customers rarely buy products only to support a cause. At the end it should be

aesthetically appealing and attractive. But up-cycling post-consumer waste and its

acceptance in Indian market is still a long way to go. One can make furniture and soft

furnishings but using the same to create another garment to be worn by someone else

is a tough business in India to sell. Up-cycled garment can in a way promote slow

fashion. The life of the products is longer but the challenge is understanding the

business side of things.

Figure 27. Up-cycled bags and wallets at Doodlage

www.thealternative.in/.../doodlage-fashion-rehab-indias-first-upcycled-clothing-label

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Figure 28. Up-cycled products and garments at Doodlage

http://www.thealternative.in/lifestyle/doodlage-fashion-rehab-indias-first-upcycled-clothing-label/

k) House of Wandering Silk

People dry clean silk fabrics as they are sensitive to water. It consumes a lot of energy

more than fabric damage; the big concern is color damage. The moment you realize

something has lost its vibrancy, you discard it. Brand should make such products which

don‘t need much care and thus can have longer life.

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Figure 29. Closing of loop by House of Wandering Silk, Delhi

http://www.wanderingsilk.org/

l) Anuj Sharma, Owner, Button Masala

Figure 30. Garment and footwear out of Button Masala technique

https://www.facebook.com/buttonmasala/

Button masala is all about making products that can be recycled. The idea also being

that once worn, it can be undone and re-fashioned into something else. This technique

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can be used to deal with any kind of waste (chindi/second hand clothes). Up-cycling is

only for our unsold collection. Sustainability is for me more than my clients as it saves

my resources. It should not be about sustainable material but sustainable practice

Figure: 31 Furniture, jewelry and Convertible garments by Button Masala

https://www.notjustalabel.com/designer/anuj-sharma

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m) Team Rug Republic, Rug Republic

Color is a not a restriction for up-cycled category. Celebration on color is an expression

of free individuality. A reincarnation of a vast variety of post primary use materials are

as vibrant and lively but at same time expensive.

Figure 32. Up-cyled home décor products by Rug Republic

https://www.therugrepublic.in/

n) Kevin Nigli, Designer Team, AM.IT

Making an up-cycling collection is tougher and more time-consuming than creating a

normal collection. Making garments out of fabric cut-pieces have length and width

restrictions. Getting the correct shape of the garment required a lot of effort. It needs

more time consumption and more labor which increases the price. So the buyers

become very specific which restricts us to do up-cycling as a special collection only

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Figure 33. Up-cycled collection by AM.IT at Lakme Fashion Week, 2015

http://www.thehansindia.com/posts/index/Sunday-Hans/2017-02-12/Upcycling-in-Fashion/280087

o) Ravi Kiran, Co-founder Metaphor Racha

If we up-cycle something secondhand than it becomes very expensive. For home décor

products buyers have to consider the color palette always, it should go with their

interiors. Color scheme is not a restriction for our wardrobe but it comes into play for

home décor. Up-cycling of garments in form of garments should be in the form of

customization. It should be more like a DIY approach.

Figure 34. Up-cycled stoles by Metaphor Racha

https://in.pinterest.com/pin/536350636856185654/

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p) Anwar Khan, Co- founder and designer

Fusion of sustainability and commerciality is quite difficult. For sustainable fashion ―Zero

Waste‖ technique should be used in which fabric waste is eliminated at the design stage

itself. For many of us sustainability is more of a business opportunity along with social

and environmental responsibility. It‘s more like a sub label or special collection for

designers.

Figure 35. Zero Waste patterns used by SUO

https://www.seamwork.com/issues/2016/05/zero-waste-design

4.2 Analysis:

Life of textile Products like rugs , mats, etc. is more than that of garment

There is a relation between cleanliness and social and cultural values such as

success, acceptance and happiness.

It signifies respectability Life of any garment or product is dependent on

consumer care (Laundry, no. of washes)

Second hand Garments should be up-cycled in form of another garment at

individual level and not mass level

Every up-cycled garment or product should have an aesthetic value

Mostly large scale production waste is used because for business sustainability.

There should be a steady supply of waste fabric

The value of the product ―maker‖ is not really in consumer‘s mind

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What matters to buyers is aesthetic value

Up-cycling of a used garment at individual level is more of a DIY approach.

Efficiency of convertible and reversible garments is user dependent.

Up-cycling saves resources for new production also saves investment.

To bring change is in women‘s hands.

SWOT Analysis of Up-cycling of garments (Business Plan):

Strength:

Up-cycling of textiles and garments saves investment in sourcing of raw material and

resources as compared to the investment required in with manufacturing new items.

The application time is also comparable, which saves money and labor since there is no

need to purchase and apply additional products. Financial benefit is probably the main

motivation for most people who are into up-cycling. Entrepreneurs can buy textile waste

at low cost to create garments and sell them at extremely high prices, because of their

aesthetic and environmental value. Even if they don‘t up-cycle, they can earn a lot just

by selling their trash instead of paying someone to take it to a landfill

―Zero waste‖ is one of the latest practices in manufacture, deriving from the idea of

sending ―zero‖ amount of waste to landfill. These are all great news for the environment

as all branches of industry are making a special effort to lower the consumption of raw

materials.

Opportunities:

A growing demand for greener products

Demand for reduced water usage and lower carbon footprints.

As waste reduction becomes a growing problem across the nation and the world, Up-

cycling as business plan realizes that in this problem lays an opportunity for a solution.

Unwanted clothing will be transformed into wanted items for which customers are willing

to pay.

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The market of environmentally conscious people is in need of new and innovative ways

of reducing waste.

Others, who may be as environmentally conscious, will enjoy the fashionable item

produced.

The needs for environmental sustainability and fashion are two drivers which encourage

up-cycling.

In the future it can extend its reach of sustainability to an audience that appreciates

both a green and fashionable lifestyle

Threats:

All the existing textile retail brands of clothing and textile offer fresh material and low

price range

Sustainable Competitors: Organic textile is a dominant market trend. It has created a

good market for itself in past years by offering its advantages over chemical

competitors. Recycled textile offers a valuable product, at low cost.

Weakness:

While making garment out of Chindi waste getting the correct shape of the

garment required a lot of effort. For production waste (Chindi Waste) fabric cut-

pieces have length and width restrictions.

In terms of sustainability the benefits of up-cycling are normally not felt quickly

and it does not fit in with business and profit cycles.

Making garment out of up-cycling consumes more time as compared to that

required in making a new garment.

The target population of any up-cycled brand is very limited.

It hard to control standards and quality. The need for low cost of the garments

needs to be balanced against producing good quality.

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4.3 Field Visits:

Chindi Bazar, Kurla:

They sell used clothes at 10-12 Rupees per cloth. They even sale laces taken out from

sari. Women use these clothes as sanitary pads. They are also used for Buffing. Imported used clothing that has been manufactured across the globe and cast off from

Western wardrobes (―Godi Ka Kapda‖).They are imported directly via Kandla Port in

Gujarat and ports in Mumbai and are traded through long networks of middlemen.

Figure 36. Vendors selling textile scraps at Chindi market , Kurla, Mumbai

Source: Self Clicked

They are sold as Industrial wipes to different industries in India. Bales each weighing 50

kgs., are packed in plastic bags and transported to the brokers. They are sold for 10

Rupees per kg. The brokers retail the shirts in small lots at Rupees 125 to Rupees150

per Kg. On an average there may be four shirts per kilogram.

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Source: Self Clicked

Figure 37. Clothes which are sold by Chindi market vendors to industries for cleaning

purpose

Source: Self Clicked

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Aanand Market, Kopri Thane

The wearable clothes are sold through agents. Alternatively they are sent to remote

villages to be sold. The torn and non-wearable clothes are sold by weight to rag

merchants called ―Chindhiwale‖.Left over clothes are further utilized by being sold as

industrial wipes.

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Figure 38. Vendors selling second hand clothes at Aanand Market, Kopri

Source: Self Clicked

Figure 39. Waghari community at Aanand market, Kopri

Source: Self Clicked

3. Chor Bazar, Bhendi Bazar, Mumbai

They sell used and reused clothes (―June ka kapda‖) – collected by Waghri Community

from door to door all over the Mumbai.They also sale imported westen clothes. (―Godi

ka kapda‖).50% of total stuff is from Waghri Community. The shirts are washed,

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bleached if necessary, rinsed and sun dried. At least 50 to 60 shirts are processed in

plastic drums at a time (400 to 500 shirts per day.)Ironing costs Rupees 1.25 per shirt

(Around 200 shirts are ironed per day.). Sorting, Mending, Removal of stains, Bleaching

Many garments are dyed , those of kids shirts are dyed in quirky tones of yellow, pink,

blue while few denims are dyed in Indigo and black. To enhance the look of jeans they

make it rugged, add colored fabric to it. Tailors do up-cycle the torn out clothes enhance

the design transform the pattern, do embroidery to hide stains. They add two layers of

clothes to form a stronger layer. On an average, Rupees 3 and a maximum of Rupes12

may be spent on finishing. These are purchased by people who may not have sufficient

means to shop in local stores and also by the street vendors from garment finishers.

The finishers sort the shirts according to color and design in checks or stripes. The

shirts are then checked for missing buttons, slipped stitches, torn parts, cuts, stains and

other damages which are rectified. Clothes sourced locally and those from imports offer

a continuous supply to meet the clothing needs. There is a huge demand for second-

hand imported shirts to India in particular.

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Figure 40

• The shirts are washed, bleached if necessary, rinsed and sun dried.

• At least 50 to 60 shirts are processed in plastic drums at a time (400 to 500 shirts

per day.)

• Ironing costs Rupees 1.25 per shirt (Around 200 shirts are ironed per day.)

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Figure 40. Washing of second hand garment at Chor Bazar, Mumbai

Figure 41 Use of dye, patch work for value addition to second hand clothes by tailors

(Source: Self Clicked)

• Many garments are dyed, those of kids shirts are dyed in quirky tones of yellow, pink, blue While few denims are dyed in Indigo and black.

• To enhance the look of jeans they make it rugged, add colored fabric to it.

Figure 42. Tailors doing alterations/ repair to second hand garments

Source: Self Clicked

• Tailors do up-cycle the torn out clothes, enhance the design, transform the

pattern, do embroidery to hide stains

• They add two layers of clothes to form a stronger layer

• On an average, Rs. 3 and a maximum of Rs. 12 may be spent on finishing.

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Figure 43. Tailors repairing second hand jeans

Source: Self Clicked

Figure 44. Waghari Community women at Chor Bazar

Source: Self Clicked

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CHAPTER 5

PROBLEM AREA

A) Production Waste or Chindi Waste

Fashion industry is the second largest pollutant in the world. Out of all waste produced

the production waste is the major part which actually go to the landfill. It is estimated

that we make 400 billion meter square of textile annually, 60 billion meter square is

cutting room floor waste. All the textile scraps/ second hand clothes from Kurla - Chindi

Market goes to Industries for cleaning machines. (10 Rupees for 1kg clothes)Finally

industries throw these clothes to landfill.

Figure 45. Production waste generated while cut and sew method by tailors

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17543266.2013.837967?src=recsys&journ

alCode=tfdt20

B) Post-Consumer Textile waste discarded from Industries

Dumping of waste somewhere is done from ages but it was primarily organic and would

decompose leaving no trace. Today's industrial society deals with a much wider material

palette, that old mind-set is still there and garbage keeps piling up. 'Until it piles up, it's

sustainable' - that is the old notion.

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Figure 46. Cleaning wipes which are thrown by industries

(Source: Self Clicked)

http://www.prnewswire.co.in/news-releases/godrej-unveils-the-punah-project-a-unique-

approach-to-industrial-waste-as-a-valuable-resource-594421081.html

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CHAPTER 6

CASE STUDIES OF EXISTING SOLUTIONS

6.1 Case Study 1: Punah Project – Generating circular Economy

The punah project was done with the industrial waste stream of Godrej & Boyce, a

major Indian manufacturing conglomerate. It was done to make both business and

environmental sense the legitimizing of new raw materials as opposed to secondary

waste or by-product. At the stand, prototypes and iterations were presented, including

cotton gloves that had become a chair seat and varnish transformed into amber-like

tiles. Also on display was the mapping of 600 materials across all Godrej & Boyce sites:

a beautiful, bound inventory, containing both compelling photography and practical

information. They proceeded methodically in order to the set criteria so that it does not

conflict with the secondary waste economy in India, level of harm for the environment,

costs associated with down-cycling that Godrej has to cover, potential for the material to

cross-over as many as possible of the sub-businesses so that the related platform is

really relevant and triggers the widest involvement. In conclusion, PUNAH is a two-

sided approach to industrial waste. On the one hand they build a viable business

platform able to generate a relevant impact on Godrej. On the other, they encourage a

cultural-shift amongst end consumers, exposing them to the material streamline that

goes into everyday products - this would make consumers aware and demand more

from the ecosystem surrounding those products.

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Figure 47. Up-cycled products out of used gloves as part of Punah Project

http://www.prnewswire.co.in/news-releases/godrej-unveils-the-punah-project-a-unique-

approach-to-industrial-waste-as-a-valuable-resource-594421081.html

On surface level one can shift from garments to home décor production. Imported

clothes are sold to industries as wipes because that business makes profit otherwise

people dealing with it might have started some other business. Any sustainable

business plan is dependent on an unsustainable resource. Business Sustainability is

required for any Business plan.

- Shubhi Sachan

Design Specialist/Material

Futures, Punah Project

Lead, Godrej

6.2 Solution Approach: Extending life of a garment: Adding emotional value to a

garment / interactive approach:

Fashion should just not be something which should be turned into a commodity and

bought and sold. They should reflect value and generate a broad spectrum of fashion

activity. Human possess specific, identifiable needs that are the same regardless of

nation, religion or culture are physical needs like subsistence and protection and

psychological needs like understanding, affection, participation, creation, re-creation,

identity and freedom.(Kate Fletcher, 2014) It should not be just a commercial thing but it

should be a very emotional service that we provide to people. The emotional aspect can

bring attachment to garment so that people don‘t discard it. Thus up-cycling garments

can have a longer life if they get an emotional aspect within itself. Beauty of greatness

will be seen in garments that value of process, participation and social integration. For

eg: activity of friends knitting together will be valued as beautiful. A user can begin the

process of understanding garment at an emotional and intuitive level which can

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ultimately provide longer life to a garment. Engaging the user with the garment can

actually give a responsible garment.

Celebrating fashion as a significant and magical part of culture (while divorcing it from

rampant material consumption) is an interactive approach where production of clothes is

based on values, skill, and carefully produced fibres. The success of flourishing fashion

ethic can be secured in the relationships it fosters. One can see beauty and greatness

in garments by value process, participation and social integration, in pieces that

advance relationships between people and the environment.

As recently as two generations ago and for centuries before that, textiles and garments

were regularly made and maintained by the wearer himself yet few people have those

same skills today. Ready-made garments appear to offer us the promise of something

better than we could make ourselves.

Interactive approach can develop as a result of a ‗long conversation‘ between designers

and users about the garment they want that is customization which is more like a

therapy session. This can also develop by individuals cutting, sewing and making their

garments themselves. These approaches are implicit in a shift from quantity to quality

that is central to sustainability. This method can improve user‘s satisfaction with material

consumption because when one is more confident about an activity he gains more

pleasure from it. Most of the people when list their favorite clothes, handmade items are

highly represented. It is suggested that having some control over the garments, either in

a practical way through making, or more conceptually through influencing the design,

brings people pleasure. Making exquisite hand-stitched products using age old

craftsmanship of local artisan strive to bring a contemporary context to traditional

techniques. Allowing user engagement in production of garment has become a

noticeable design trend, promoted by many new designers like Kresha Bajaj, Aneeth

Arora. Participatory design is about a shift in emphasis away from control. It allows

greater transparency of the design and production process. It generates interest in

transformative act of change that furnishes user with relationships and experiences

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along with skill and products. This allows them to become better engaged with

themselves and the material world.

Participatory design is built on the idea that those who ultimately use a product are

entitled to have a voice in determining how it is designed and that the quality of design

increases if the stakeholders are included in the design process. The implication here is

that everyone is a designer and that design is no longer just the work of specialists.

Instead users (acting as designers) and designers themselves learn and create

together. This is a substantial change for many designers, as user involvement with the

design process or extended user-engagement with the product is rarely part of the brief.

If it happens at all, it tends to be something that happens in spite of the will of the

designer, rather than because of it. When design is no longer about surface styling and

more about promoting action, its aim is to increase the potential of the user and its focus

becomes social change. The wearer is no longer a passive audience, but rather a co-

creator and partner.

It is also unpredictable, something that is an implicit part of working with cooperative

processes. The garments or products produced may also look very different to those

designed today. It is likely that they won‘t conform to visual norms, perhaps be ‗clunky‘

and confusing (although they may of course be nicer too). As such these items may be

rejected by mainstream fashion as unworkable or unattractive. But the products are

concerned with the empowering act of user involvement and are a complement to, not a

replacement for, other types of design production. Participative designed garments are

rooted in a more ecologically and socially aware partnership model of aesthetics, which

can be contrasting sharply with the dominator model of aesthetics that controls the

visual agenda of art and design today. The relationship model can already be seen as

supporting a more participative process in other sectors.

Participatory design in fashion and textiles is concerned with a therapeutic alliance

between designer and user and attempts to empower individuals to become more

engaged with the design and production of their products. To make user involvement

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possible, the design and production process itself has to be made more transparent.

This would aid a greater understanding of materials and of the culture they represent,

so that we act not only on a practical, physical level, cutting and sewing fibres and

garments, but also politically, ecologically and even economically. Participatory design

reconnects maker and user, commonly by reframing the user as maker. To make user

involvement practical for people it must be low-tech and inexpensive. This provides no

barrier in fashion and textiles as most user involvement necessitates hand work with

needle, thread and scissors or, at the most high tech, a domestic sewing machine.

While the goal of participatory design is to devolve the role of the creator and promote

action and participation in users, a key spin-off of many of these design processes is

that they can in a small, widely dispersed way lead to a reduction in what we buy and

discard. They do this by infusing a product with the user‘s touch, giving it a different and

hopefully richer product meaning that means that it will be worn and found pleasurable,

for longer. User engagement is used as a route to produce more customized and

unique products. The ground between fashion and textiles and participatory design

processes (that is, fabrics and garments designed and made with rather than for

people) is little explored and potentially abundant, perhaps because it is complex

ground in which to affect change.

Participatory design and individual and social action will probably define an important

component of sustainable fashion and textiles activity into the future. This can be done

by a book, video lessons showing series of DIY methods for remaking new pieces from

old garments just like ‗cook books‘ and produces collections of methods (not collections

of garments) where the aim is to teach basic skills to liberate the ‗chef‘ from the buying

of ready-made pre-packaged items. This method uses culturally rich symbolism as a

tool for wider expression and participation. The act of reformation of garments is political

in nature and describes the reforming of clothes is a way to reprogram the garments‘

meaning when their fashionable image has gone ‗dry‘ and then insert them back into the

fashion system, ‗acting in reverse consumerism‘.

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6.3 Emotional Approach to extend the life of a garment:

Approach which involves the ideas of essence celebration: celebration of the glorious

bits of fashion (a fast layer, dealing with newness, change and fashion symbolism) and

of really good making and material quality (a slow layer, dealing with resourcefulness

and optimization). It requires user to find ways to extend the value and use of the

garment while simultaneously learning how to express the fashion moment while

minimizing the impact of material consumption ways. The length of time for which a

garment lasts is influenced by culture, behavior and emotion as well as purely technical

or material factors. Without this broader appreciation, a strategy of making all fabrics

and garments last decades even if they are only worn once wastes resources.

Making a product last is very different to making along-lasting product. At the core of a

fabric or garment‘s lasting usefulness is the idea of appropriateness. Appropriateness

reflects the degree of ‗fit‘ that an object has with place, function, user, maker and

environment. Rather, finesse means resisting the force of speed through aesthetic and

sensitive behavior. Sustaining the use of a fabric or garment into the future requires

sensitivity to a number of factors that are not the usual concern of designers today. This

strategy involves knowing more about how long fabric last, about how products are

used, and about why products stop being used how the user was attached to that

garment.

The result should be the selection of materials appropriate to their expected lifetime‘s

task; the development of design strategies such as versatility and reparability to keep a

product relevant; the promotion of emotional bonds with a product which encourage

ongoing use; and an overall sensitivity to how fabrics and garments are actually used.

But it is not enough for a product to provoke an emotional response in the user on one

occasion; it must do this repeatedly. In effect a relationship must be developed between

user and object over an extended period of time. The garments should be specifically

designed to age with the user. Growing old with a fabric (perhaps upholstered on a

chair), witnessing it change over time and in response to the user‘s actions and

behavior, is fertile ground from which emotional attachment and long-term product use

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springs. Fabric should be pleated, tucked and shorn, to enhance (not resist) ageing and

to further emphasize unique and beautiful qualities that spring from user engagement.

Small additions can begin to trigger meaning and emotional connections.

This strategy can connect a person with a garment and reinforce a bond of ownership.

For example, signing a garment as you would a contract can also is seen as declaration

of responsibility and expression of long-term commitment.

This act can help bring to the surface the relationships one has with his clothes the

customer can add their feelings about their garment, why they no longer liked it and why

they had originally bought it. This allows people to think about their garment and

articulate their emotions and preferences about it. The values and meaning influenced

by a complex mix of factors can be triggered in simple ways. Learning to trigger

meaning in clothes could for example add reuse value and cachet to second-hand

pieces, possibly increasing the likelihood of a second life. Yet even if materials are not

the chief factor influencing an object‘s sustainability, they still play an important role.

Resources can be saved by matching quality of materials to utilization time so that

physical durability is extended only when it is needed. To do this effectively we need to

know more about the energy and resources that go into making fabrics maintained is

central to using ideas of speed to build a more sustainable industry.

This helps users to distinguish between pieces that are consumed as quick, immaterial

fashion ‗hits‘ and others which are bought for more functional, material reasons. For

those garments that are rarely washed and which are worn for years design strategies

supporting both physical and emotional durability are likely to bring most benefits.

6.4 Case Studies: Worn Stories – By Emily Spivack

In Worn Stories, Emily Spivack has collected over sixty of clothing-inspired narratives

from cultural figures and talented storytellers.

Clothes can be an ―evolving archive of experiences, adventures, and memories‖.

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They can be a powerful storytelling device. It can tell intensely personal, courageously

vulnerable sartorial memories into a colorful tapestry of the human experience. It can be

the lifelong quest to find the ideal, and as it turns out mythic, outfit that would capture

once personality perfectly and be therefore bought in multiples to be worn forever.

They narrate some wearable personal histories from the living archives of some of the

most interesting minds of our time. We weave our lives of stories, stories woven of

sentimental memories, which we can‘t help but attach to our physical environment.

- Emily Spivack Artist, Writer, Editor and Smithsonian's blogger

Figure Book ―Worn Stories‖ by Emily Spivack http://www.amazon.in/Worn-Stories-Emily-Spivack/dp/1616892765

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Figure 48. Collection of Worn Stories by Emily Spivack on her website and on Social media. http://www.papress.com/html/product.details.dna?isbn=9781616892760 https://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/07/books/review/worn-stories-by-emily-spivack.html?_r=0 6.5 Bridal lehengas by designer Kresha Bajaj: ―Translating someone‘s personal story on to a garment is quite sensitive and can even

end up looking comical. When I consult with the bride on her likes and dislikes, it almost

feels like a therapy session,‖ laughs Bajaj. ―The end result, though, is always special.‖

Kresha Bajaj, Founder, Koesch

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Kresha Bajaj designed lehengas which were not just outfits. She designed wedding

couture that can be the piece of artwork that unfolds not just wearer‘s persona, but also

memories, relationship and meaningful experiences. She started Indian wedding trend

where the brides give a personal touch to their garment and are getting their love story,

the proposal scene, the initials, and couple‘s common interest uniquely stitched on

them. Through advanced embroidery techniques, thread and material the trained

craftsmen weave magic into the bride‘s outfit. They sew designs and patterns on the

garments depicting romance, the venue scene, and their memories and create a

fairytale lehenga that can be preserved like a snapshot.

Figure 49. Lehenga depicting love story of Kresha Bajaj

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2016/06/27/this-indian-bride-showcas_n_10653894.html

Kresha‘s sentimental tailor-made lehenga narrated her entire world of love with a record

of her special moments and ‗past feelings‘ sewed up on the garment. Her relationship,

courtship, the scene of her first meeting, the venue (Udaipur palace) and the memories

with her better half; each and every story was beautifully depicted through

different kalis (panel) of the lehenga. Post marriage now her lehenga not just sits in her

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closet, but stands as a special piece of artwork and beautiful memoir. Her genius outfit

depicts a lot many things like the newlyweds‘ names in a repeated format done in zari,

the image of clinking glasses, and the hem with jumping dolphins which represented the

couple‘s project on dolphins‘ captivity.

Figure 50. The venue leela palace embroidered on Kresh‘s wedding lehenga

https://www.weddingsutra.com/real-weddings/stylish-brides/kresha-bajaj

Figure 51. Picture of first date of the couple embroidered on lehenga

https://www.weddingsutra.com/real-weddings/stylish-brides/kresha-bajaj

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Most bridal dresses are destined to be relegated to some corner of the closet after they

serve their purpose on the day of the wedding. For the brides who don‘t want to get sick

of looking at my wedding outfit this option was like a savior because nicest thing one

can never get bored of looking at is their love story.

Kresha‘s client Sonam Nanwani who wanted to go down the memory lane the same

way as Kresha contacted her and requested her to turn her wedding trousseau into an

artifact of the life she has lived with her fiancé. She got her outfit symbolically linked to

her personal history. The lehenga reflected the different monuments and moments

Sonam had experienced in her relationship. Sonam also got the satsang-her first

meeting place with her would-be hemmed on her outfit through two joining hands- like in

a prayer and diyas around. She also got one of the many letters written to her by her

hubby transposed on the entire length of dupatta. The name of the couple was weaved

vertically through the lehenga also created a sense of intimacy.

Her client Ridhi Ved wanted a remarkable cross-cultural lehenga that could tell the story

of a quintessential bride. The bride who was from Mumbai and her groom-to-be was

from London got the cities‘ elements beautifully skilled on her lehenga. The London

Eye, Sea Link, the proposal that happened at Venice was all etched forever as

memories on the hem. She also had the ice-skating scene recreated on the lehenga by

designer Kre Adding love story of the couple to their fashion couture made them a lot

more than just the outfits. Specific details stitched on the fabric sound extraordinary and

exciting. The brides chose to keep it fun by recreating the bits and pieces of their love

story on their wedding attires. The emotional approach of creating clothes that can

speak louder than words by illustrating a dramatic moment of wearer‘s life is also the

craziest way possible to depict couple‘s love story. The exceptional embroidered

technique can turn an outfit into a storyteller. In this way outfit becomes one of its kind

by never replicating an exact design. Working with individuals generates ideal silhouette

and color palette and then designs bespoke clothing that has a wonderful edge making

the clothes fun and memorable.

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Figure 52. Joining hands representing first meeting of couple at satsang embroidered on lehenga

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/lifestyle/fashion-and-beauty/250616/designer-weaves-her-love-story-into-her-bridal-lehenga.html

Figure 53. Wedding lehenga depicting iconic monuments of the cities the couple is from

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http://www.vogue.in/content/this-fairytale-wedding-lehenga-actually-details-the-couples-love-story/#s-cust0

http://www.hindustantimes.com/brunch/love-story-lehengas-what-if-your-wedding-lehenga-narrated-your-love-story/story-cm6zA5xkmb03R46lRMblkO.html

Figure 54. Wedding sari of actress Samanth Prabha embroidered with some iconic

http://www.vogue.in/content/this-fairytale-wedding-lehenga-actually-details-the-couples-love-story/#s-cust0

Tracing moments of couple‘s love story:

This method helps those who don‘t like not being able to use the same garment multiple

times on multiple occasions. Brides do acknowledge that their wedding lehenga would

be something they are going to wear only once. By this approach they can turn it into a

future piece of art that they can frame in the house later.

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Figure 55. Lehenga with embroidered love sonnets

http://www.hindustantimes.com/brunch/love-story-lehengas-what-if-your-wedding-lehenga-narrated-your-love-story/story-cm6zA5xkmb03R46lRMblkO.html

These classic lehengas‘s pattern has to be made in panels or kalis. For surface

embellishment beautiful mix of traditional materials like saadi, nakshi, kardana, salli,

tikki, zari, pearls, zardosi and aari embroidery techniques can be used. From collecting

landmark milestones of a story, documenting them, assigning pictorial depictions to

them, translating them on the actual garment to making it all look tasteful and elegant is

an amazingly creative task.

6.6 Upcycled By Pero:

The label has setup an email address for applicants to send in their stories that explain

why the piece of clothing is special to them. If the story makes a connection with the

brand, they will gladly help you up-cycle the piece. The tradition of hand-me-down

signifies a deep emotional connect. The brand does the process of value Addition in

form of craftsmanship. This includes secret embroidered messages, appliqué hearts,

crochet flowers, Trims, Buttons, Pins, Embroidered patch, and patch work on heirloom

saris, lace and chikankari.

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Figure 56. Up-cycled shoes and jacket by UPCYCLED by Pero

http://www.vogue.in/content/upcycle-your-favourite-piece-clothing-with-pero/#upcycled-

jeans-from-the-ss15-show

―UPCYCLE by Pero‖ started from Aneeth Arora‘s patched old jacket Ralph Lauren

Jacket which she loved by adding more patches, details to it each time it was damaged.

First, a few pins were tacked on, then a trim from her first collection, an embroidered

patch from the second, a button or two from the third. And before she knew it, her

favorite denim jacket became her first up-cycled garment. After that Aneeth‘s

photographer and client Dayanita Singh got her old black coat up-cycled into a fresh

new jacket with buttons and details and luxurious hand woven textiles on the back that

made it wearable inside out. Brand has up-cycled old white shirt, boyfriend jacket, jeans

from 10 years ago that one is still emotionally tethered to and resurrected the pieces

into garments that one can wear today. Soon people felt in love with the personal

narrative that Arora‘s jacket had and that‘s how the sub-label started.

Up-cycling is now an integral part of each collection, furthering the idea of slow fashion.

Taking fashion classics to the next level, Péro has begun to play storyteller as it stitches

into the vintage a bit of itself. Initially open to friends of the brand, the service is now for

anyone who can make a case for themselves. The label has setup an email address for

applicants to send in their stories that explain why the piece of clothing is special to

them. If the story makes a connection with the brand, they will gladly help you up-cycle

the piece. It is done only at customized level.

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Figure 57. Textile leftovers, beads, buttons, crochet flowers used for value addition for

up-cycling by Pero

http://www.freepressjournal.in/fpj-anniversary/reinvent-is-upcycling-the-new-fashion-

buzzword/892404

Pero by its emotional approach allows one to hold back to wearer‘s treasured

possessions. It‘s like a service that recruits well-loved garments in need of care and

restores them to full health. There are some pieces of clothing that one falls in love with,

even with the way they age and fade but one might want to upgrade it, make it

wearable, even special again. The process is like making renovations in home one has

lived in for many years. The only two components they are using for up-cycling are love

and stories. It‘s based on up-cycling the garment that has been carefully preserved or

something with history. The love part of her love and stories are not restricted to

clothes, they have also up-cycled old pair of shoes. The client participates in choosing

color palette, style, etc.

She used artisanal crafts like embroidery, patchwork and appliqué to up-cycle vintage

garments. She used patch work, lace and chikankari to up-cycle heirloom saris. She

adds leftover cloth and trimmings from old collections onto the pieces. She uses

Japanese Boro techniques of mended and patched fabric swatches. It is like a memory

project and also a way to conserve and protect fashion from unnecessary wastage.

Aneeth drifts off into a patchwork of her own, pulling scraps of cloths from memory like a

secret love note embroidered on the inside of a jacket for a client‘s boyfriend‘s birthday.

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The secret embroidered messages and applique hearts adds special value to the label‘s

aesthetic.

These up-cycled collections always contain a surprise on the inside, the sleeves that roll

up to reveal pretty fabric. The checkered fabric dresses can be reversed with client‘s

initials embroidered at the hem.

Péro does not change the original label of the pieces and claim ownership of the original

structure as they are just adding layers to the garment. Unlike a formal and conventional

design process, it is an unconventional teamwork by label favored by the owner.

Despite the extensive conceptualization and planning that often goes into each Pero

UPCYCLE piece, Aneeth retains the garment‘s original label, but also adds her own. It

turns into a kind of collaboration.

Figure 58. Use of embroidery, patch work for value addition by Pero https://www.facebook.com/ilovepero/

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CHAPTER 7

SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION

Flaws in up-cycling are as follows:

Up-cycling of garments can be done only at individual level and not at mass

level.

It takes lots of time and labor to up-cycle just one garment.

Up-cycling handles only limited amount of textile waste (Both production waste

and industrial waste)

Sometimes the fabric quality of the discarded garment is so low that the value

added in the process of up-cycling cannot give strength to the final garment

More time consumption and more labor increase the price. Thus the final

garment becomes very expensive.

To handle waste at mass level recycling is more efficient method then up-cycling.

For production waste (Chindi Waste) fabric cut-pieces have length and width

restrictions.

While making garment out of Chindi waste getting the correct shape of the

garment required a lot of effort

Making an up-cycling collection is tougher and more time-consuming than

creating a normal collection.

Repair and reconditioning of textiles and garments also saves resources

compared with manufacturing new items, although resource savings are less

than for reuse because some labor and materials are usually needed to retrieve,

fix and upgrade the products.

The financial incentive to repair has largely disappeared, mainly because the

price of new garments and textiles has fallen dramatically relative to the cost of

labor. Repairing garments at home- if it takes place at all – is now motivated less

by economics and more by ethical factors or lifestyle choices like down-shifting or

voluntary simplicity.

It is not enough to specify materials that can be up-cycled, for without a market

for the up-cycle, a high-value second life is unlikely.

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Markets for up-cycled textiles are effected by the fad color, low fiber type, fiber

quality and the purity of the old textiles/garments themselves.

Up-cycling of textile waste in form of garment is not a strategy for success over

the long term, because it does not reach deep enough. It works within the same

system that caused the problems in the first place, merely slowing it down with

moral proscriptions and punitive measures. It presents little more than an illusion

of change because they focus on optimizing one small part of the system, rather

than the whole.

Up-cycled garments are rooted in a more ecologically and socially aware

partnership model of aesthetics, which can be contrasting sharply with the

dominator model of aesthetics that controls the visual agenda of art and design

today.

In terms of sustainability the benefits of up-cycling are normally not felt quickly

and it does not fit in with business and profit cycles.

While up-cycling lightweight fabrics one may end up wasting resources at the

end of final product.

The garments produced by up-cycling may also look very different to those

designed today. It is likely that they won‘t conform to visual norms, perhaps be

clunky and confusing. As such these items may be rejected by mainstream

fashion as unworkable or unattractive.

Many People face quite a few issues regarding cleanliness and sanitation while

using old garments. One of the strongest resistance factors for up-cycled fashion

was the concern for germs, insects and disease.

The value addition process of up-cycling which involves high end craftsmanship

is particularly suited to the high-end market. The traditional crafts techniques use

quality materials and highly skilled craftsman which becomes very expensive.

These techniques naturally chime with many sustainability values pursuing

strategy but are really expensive, exclusive and unrealistic. It demands massively

outstrip supply and the final garments can only be perceived and preserved by

the rich and not by any other economic class.

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Doing up-cycling as sub-label brands get restricted by time and resources, the

label get lots of pressure to come up with a way to keep the up-cycling service

alive without taking the focus from the main collections.

One cannot change the original label of the pieces and claim ownership of the

original structure as they are just adding layers to the garment. Despite the

extensive conceptualizing and planning that often goes into each up-cycle

piece one has to retain the garment‘s original label even if the designer

adds their own label.

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APPENDIX

Questionnaire:

Personal Interviews were based on following questions:

Q. 1 What do you think has a longer life Product or Garments? Why?

Q. 2 How frequently you wash your clothes?

Q. 3 How frequently you wash your rugs, carpets, etc.?

Q. 4 Do you throw your clothes after its life is over?

Q. 5 Do you have any garment to which you are emotionally attached?

Q. 6 What do you do with your clothes after you stop wearing it?

Q. 7 Who according to you is takes more participation in shopping (Men or Women)?

Q. 8 What are the challenges you face as sustainable entrepreneurs?

Q. 9 Which type of waste are you dealing with?

Q. 10 What is your target population?

Q. 11 Do you face any kind of competitions with other brands?

Q. 12 What is most important to be into sustainable business?

Questionnaire for sustainable consumers:

Q 1) Are you aware of the term sustainability?

Q 2) What words come to your mind when you think of sustainability?

Q 3) Do you integrate any of these in your lifestyle?

Q 4) Which product you own you think is the most durable, long lasting and organic?

Q 5) What is the good thing about the product?

Q 6) What do you do with your old stuff/garments?

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Q 7) Are you aware of the term up-cycling?

Q 8) Are you aware of the terms like slow fashion and fast fashion?

Q 9) Do you think you can accept slow fashion?

Q 10) What factors lead you to shop for more and more garments?

Q 11) What words comes to your mind when you think about up-cycling?

Q 12) Have you ever bought any of the up-cycled products?

Q 13) What is more valuable to you when it comes to shopping a garment?

Q 14) How many times do you wear a garment?

Worn Stories:

Collection of stories about how people are attached to their garments done as part of

primary research:

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1) Few years back when I was studying Fashion Designing I used to love fabrics. One

day my mom showed her bridal outfits to her which she wore on her engagement and

wedding. They had become fad and dull with time but still they looked beautiful. And I

fell in love with those pieces of fabric which had impressions of my mom. But I didn‘t

mention that to mom how much I loved it. I thought mom would never give it away to

anyone except me. Years went after. Every year I asked mom to show those garments

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again. I touched them, understood the dyeing and embroidery techniques and every

time I saw them I loved them.

One Diwali my mom gave that outfit to our maid as it is Diwali ritual in Jaipur that we

give sweets and fabrics to people who serve us. When I got to know this I was

anguished with mother, I cried like anything, I pleaded my mom to get that back. When

my mom watched me in pain she felt really sad but was also happy that her daughter

loves her used garments more than ever she did.

So next day my mom called that maid and her to get that salwar –kameez back. But the

maid lied to mom, she said she don‘t remember it having. So mom tried to bribe her

saying that she would give her a brand new sweater. But that maid wasn‘t ready to say

that she would get that salwaar kammez. My mom was in a dilemma how to make me

understand the situation worriedly said to me ―Nobody can take anything which belongs

to you‖. The next day that maid got that old salwaar kameez as she wished to have a

new sweater. As promised my mom gave her the new sweater.

When I came back from school I was so happy to get that salwar kameez back. I took a

promise from my mom that she would never give her clothing piece to anybody other

than me. I am the right full owner of her each piece of cloth.

Yeah! She still keeps that promise.

- Kirti Singh

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2) When I was in 7th class my cute little brother was born, he was one of the special gifts

god could ever give me so from him first toy to his first garment, all are very special to

me. Since he was small he is wearing designer dresses but one t-shirt made by my

grandmother is his favorite. He can never hand it down to anyone. No matter that t-shirt

doesn‘t fits him anymore.

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3) My Nani had a sari when she got married which her mother gave to her and then she

handed it down to my mom and finally my mom gave it to me for my wedding. Since it

has become a part of our family tradition it is really special to me.

- Yashika Chowdhury

4) My Teal Blue Shirt

It was 2003 or 04, I was on a trip to Chennai with my friend‘s family to support in their

medical need. It was less medical and more fun trip for me and my friend. We were

exploring the city, language was a big barrier. We wanted to go somewhere but buses

were porting us somewhere else. Suddenly we reached to a shopping mall which was

probably our first experience of urban market, we were amazed. However I found a teal

blue shirt with lustrous finish. My eyes were locked there. It was too expensive as per

my 1500 Rs. monthly stipend. So I had to leave my heart there.

It was haunting me till my last day of the trip and I kept on going to see the shirt every

day. Getting enough courage getting a huge loan from his mother I went to buy that

shirt. Knowing that I was going to skip my breakfast for next 3 months to repay I bought

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my dream shirt. It was amazingly nice feeling to buy a new shirt for myself for first time. I

was so happy.

After two days I reached my hostel, I was so tired. I just threw my luggage and slept

next afternoon I woke up with an irritating sound. I looked at my luggage big fat rat

hurriedly vanished behind my bookshelf. I ignored it and went to freshen up; I took bath,

and planned in detail to see my girlfriend after a couple of weeks with a stunning look

wearing my new shirt. I thought she would be speechless; I was in seventh heaven and

came out of the bathroom. My eyes got stuck to an uneven hole in my bag. Oh shit the

rat cut through my bag. I hurriedly opened my bag assuming that my darling shirt is

safe, I took that out.

Oh! I was motionless, the shirt was in my hand, but the right sleeve was missing, the rat

must have a wonderful dinner throughout last night.

Later I made that shirt a half sleeve with a very bad fitting by a crazy tailor; I still love to

wear it.

- Bilashendu Shil

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It‘s a pashmina shawl my nani gave to my mom few years back, its 50 years old and

super special to her, she loves the work done on it, I wear it occasionally in winters, and

whenever she wears the shawl we get to hear stories about our great maternal grand

mother

- Anjali Namdhari

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This tooch kambhal bought 100 years ago in Pakistan by mom‘s grandmother, which

was handed on to my nani then my mom. Mom now thinks that we aren‘t responsible

enough to take care and understand the value of these articles so yeah we won‘t get

them.

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This Pashmina coat was gifted by some angrez to my grandparents at that time my

grandparents were royals. My Nani gave it to my mom. My nani still gives her all the

valuable ancient stuff.

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- Anjali Namdhari

During M.Tech all my hostel friends gifted me a beautiful dress ordered from Canada. I

loved it. They gave it to me a day prior so that I can alter it according to my size. I took it

for alteration with one of my friend to Lajpat Nagar we left for shopping after leaving it

for alteration and then collected it and got back to the hostel. They asked me to try the

dress to check the alterations and then what happened next left everyone in shock,

dress was not in the poly. I got tears in my eyes, everyone searched in the room, but we

didn‘t find it. We were not allowed to go outside the hostel to search for the dress

because of the time limit. I was not in a mood to celebrate my birthday. Everyone was

trying to cheer me up but nothing could make me forget thee mistake I did. I went to that

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alteration shop again the next day to enquire for the same. After seeing me uncle said I

knew you will come back. He told me that I dropped the dress outside the shop and a

man passing by picked it up and gave it to him. He came outside to search for us, but

he couldn‘t find us, so he kept it with him. I was really happy to see it again. Now that

dress is really close to my heart. It makes me remind of my friends who did everything

to make me smile.

- Tanushree Doi

Whenever we are away from each other we put our perfumes on it and give to each

other. So that whenever we are missing each other we can smell it and feel that we are

still together.

- Anupriya Rajput

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When my princess was 9 year old I bought the pink woolens for her and It was the first

time when she started walking. That scene is still in my eyes, in my thoughts I would

never forget it for lifetime. I don‘t like giving it to anyone, I always want to keep them

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with me, as one day my daughter will grow up and get married and she will leave this

house but these clothes will always remind me of her first baby steps of her life.

- Raksha Sharma

I am proud of myself for all years I have devoted loving and supporting Selena Gomez

genuinely Selena because I have always looked up to her and she has always been

inspiration to me. I have been a selenator since I was 13 and I am 23 now so it has

been 8 years. I still remember the first day I saw her on Wizards of the Waverly Place

and she immediately became my role model. My inspiration.

She had never been here. It is my dream to see her once, hug her once. Now this

Selena tee is makes me feel like I am closer to her. I can hug this tee to myself and feel

better every time. Knowing that this tee has a signature of her it makes me feel as if I

have met her. I feel I inspire people by wearing it and walking across the streets with a

positive smile and feeling proud inside, and yeah she is my idol.

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This t-shirt was worth Rs. 4,000 but for me it is priceless. She is more than just a

celebrity, an inspiration, an idol. Keeping her in my heart I wish and try to achieve every

milestone and dream of my life. Wearing her T-Shirt makes me feel proud of what she is

and it keeps me boosted, I keep on trying to be successful like her and it gives me

immense happiness to know that world is blessed with such a beautiful person and soul

like her.

I can spread a message in my college, town and bring positivity. I can stop people

getting labeled and judged. I can do that without this t-shirt too, but with this tee it will be

1000 times stronger.

- Mitali Sharma

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Sketch 1.

Sketch 2.

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Me and My Messi Jacket:

I have always been a diehard fan of Argentina football team and their legend football

players – Diego Maradona, Leonel Messi. I was a big fan of maradona then and a fan of

messi now. So I always look forward to keep the omnipresence with me because I know

it is nearly impossible to meet him in person.

So once I went I went to a mall, I had some 2,000 in my wallet and at same time I saw

this jacket in ADIDAS store, It was worth Rs 3,000 and I felt I should buy this and I felt

like I might not get the same one if I don‘t buy it now. So I borrowed 1,000 from my

friend and I bought it. I cannot pass it on or gift it to anyone. If I don‘t wear it I feel

something is missing in my routine. I wear it every day at least for some time. I see that

omnipresence and my respect for Messi in this jacket. This jacket is really special to me.

- Duppalli Sai Krishana

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It was my final year of M.Tech. I got placed in IBM, Bangalore. My childhood‘s best

friend was also there in Delhi only. We used to meet a lot, almost thrice a week. But it

was time for Good Bye now. I had to move to my home town till I got my joining and he

dad to move to US for further studies. Last few days were full of mixed emotions. It was

hard to digest that everything was coming to an end. It will never be same again; we

were not going to meet this frequently. I didn‘t realize but it was just not friendship, but

more than that. Finally the day came, I was leaving for my home town and he had his

flight on the same night. He came to wave me bye. And then something happened

which was never expected, he proposed me for marriage. I was lost in the moment; I

don‘t know what happened the next. I was just starring him. I wanted that moment to get

freeze. Before going he gave his favorite t-shirt. That t-shirt holds a special place in my

heart. I used to always wear it whenever I miss him.

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When I shifted to Bangalore I used to wear that t-shirt almost regular. One day I washed

the t-shirt and took it to terrace for getting dry. When I came back from office, it wasn‘t

there. I was heartbroken. It was the only thing which used to make me happy in

Bangalore. I tried a lot to find, I asked everyone in PG for it, but didn‘t find it. I lost all

hopes of finding it back. My boyfriend said that he will get me a similar t-shirt, but I

wanted that t-shirt only. I had feelings attached to it. Regularly I used to go to terrace

now, just to find it thinking that may be one who stole it, put it to get dry. I used to pray a

lot to get it back and then one day I saw that t-shirt lying down on terrace floor, al dirty. I

didn‘t know how it reached again on terrace. I washed it and let it dry in room only. I

really can‘t express how I felt when I get it back. It is really special to me, and I cannot

give it to anybody ever.

When I was a kid during night I never wanted to sleep alone. I used to tell my mother to

sleep with me but she had all household work to do so she used to keep her stole by my

side and used to say ―Now you think that I am here with you‖. So I used to always sleep

with my mother‘s stole. Now I am 19 years old and I still have her stole.

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It is my favorite skirt which I bought when I was 9th standard. I wore it during Christmas

party in my school. I still have it because it is all handcrafted and has got a bling and it is

very special to me because I feel it is a rare piece and I won‘t get it anywhere else. So

my school memories are attached to it and it makes me very nostalgic when I look back

at it.

- Priya Mahajan

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It was the time when I started loving basketball as much as I love my family. Now this

sport has become like a family member. Now this sport has become like a family

member. I went for daily practice; I got my game improved very much. I was the first

one to enter and last one to leave the court. I was on the top of my basketball game

career. It was in the year 2014, when I was in the beast mode. At that time Rawatbhata

organized an open championship tournament. I was in one of the weakest team, but

that was my first tournament officially on such a big level. I wanted to prove everyone

that the time I spend on court didn‘t get wasted.

So finally tournament started and as expected we lost our first game by big difference. I

was very much disappointed. I couldn‘t sleep that night. Next morning I woke up early

and went for a walk. I started running; I was running very hard in the colony. There was

a fire inside me this time; there was zeal to win. Then I saw some failure and

motivational videos on Youtube. Then I learned from the legend of basketball - Michael

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Jordan ―I keep on falling and failing again and again that is why I succeeded‖ Then

something inside me changed suddenly.

Next evening of Day 2 of our tournament started. I gathered my whole team. I was the

captain, I motivated my team and asked them don‘t panic, we are going to win. As

expected we won. There was happiness all around. My team was cheering me. And

then we kept on winning the matches and we won the finals by beating the last time

champion team. I was awarded the man of the meet. I was so happy and then that

special guest of honor gifted me this jersey. It had my name written on it. That guest of

honor observed me in the entire tournament and got my name printed on that jersey

already. And he told me even if I lost that final match he would still gift that jersey to me.

- Gaurav Kelwa

Sketch 3

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Sketch 4

Whenever my grandmother took her old Kameez out of that old trunk she completely

used to get lost in her marriage thoughts when her father gifted that kameez to her. It

reminded her of all Rasams and Riwaz she had during her marriage. One day she said I

should give this to our maid, at least she can use it. But I interrupted her and asked her

to give it to me. She was a bit shocked and overwhelmed, we generally asked our

parents for new clothes only. She said to me that it is really old, its color has faded, and

it has got torn from many places, it has got really old motifs, has got old design. I said I

will manage everything, it is really beautiful and I want to keep it. Since then I am having

that Salwaar- Kameez.

- Anisha Arora

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My t-shirt says, ―ABSOLUT BANGALORE‖. It is very old, I still wear it and I will never

ever throw it or pass it on to someone as my cousin sister bought it for me. We don‘t

talk anymore. So it is now more special to me. Well, this cousin sister of mine bought it

for me one evening when she had come to meet us. Since childhood this cousin sister

and her elder sister, both cousins have been my favorite cousins. Favorite means I used

to worship them. But because of several problems we have not been able to talk or

communicate with each other anymore. It hurts a lot to not have her in my life. So this is

like the last thing that she bought for me just because I liked it. It had a sarcastic

undertone to it: the writing on the t-shirt. Whenever I wear that t-shirt it makes me feel

like she is still in my life and I am still loved and remembered by her. It is like the last

strand of connection that I dearly hold on to. It makes me believe in something that does

not exist anymore, hanging on to this t-shirt makes it real for me. It makes me feel like

may be nothing has changed. Even today this tee holds the same value and feelings

which my cousin had while gifting it to me. I will never let it go. Ever.

- Trina Biswas

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I got my first pair of black jeans when I was in 7th class. Before that I never wore black

jeans. I always used to wear blue jeans. They were super comfortable. I started wearing

it with almost everything. After some time it started getting faded. I still wore it, even

though they faded. After sometime it got torn off from the area of knee. At that time torn

jeans was in fashion, so I got torn it out nicely from that knee area and I still wore it.

Then it got faded even more so I kept it in my cupboard. When I went to my under grate

I cut them and made shorts out of it. The leftover fabric after cutting I used it for one of

my assignments for surface ornamentation, and I made cushion cover out of it. I still

wear those shorts.

- Anahita Bindra

It used to be my mom‘s most favorite sari. It was special to her as it was gifted to her by

my dad oh their first anniversary. After sudden demise of my mom I used to look at her

garments and I specially loved this one. It got torn out from many places. I could not use

it as a sari again. So I made a long skirt out of it. Whenever I wear it I feel the warmth

of her.

- Somya Gupta

I have woolen socks which I got when my nani passed away. I have kept safely with me

as I wear them I feel the warmth of her.

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- Saumya Aggrawal

Story of my lucky tie

- Nitish Kumar

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My wedding day, my wedding lehenga is really special to me.

- Pramilla Singh

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