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Recycle Old Worn Out Clothes
Just because that old shirt you
used to love is too threadbare to wear anymore doesn’t mean it has to end up in
a landfill. “Consumers don’t understand that there’s a place for their old
clothing even if something is missing a button or torn,” says Jana Hawley, a
professor of textile and apparel management at the University of
Missouri-Columbia. “Ninety-nine percent of used textiles are recyclable.”
Non-profits like Goodwill and
the Salvation Army play a crucial role in keeping old clothes out of the waste
stream. When they get donations of clothes that are too threadbare to re-sell in
one of their shops, they send them to “rag sorters” that specialize in recycling
pieces of fabric large and small. Says Hawley, these textile recyclers sell
about half the clothing they get back overseas in developing countries, while
unusable garments, especially cotton t-shirts, are turned into wiping and
polishing clothes used by a variety of industries and sold to consumers. She
adds that other textiles are shredded into fibers used to make new products,
such as sound-deadening materials for the automotive industry, archival-quality
paper, blankets and even plastic fencing.
Outdoor clothing and gear maker
Patagonia, which plies a strong environmental mandate in key aspects of its
operations (from sourcing of raw materials to managing waste to making grants to
environmental nonprofits), in 2005 launched its innovative Common Threads
Garment Recycling program. The program was originally begun so customers could
return their worn out Capilene long undies for recycling, but has expanded to
taking back Patagonia fleece and cotton t-shirts as well as Polartec fleece from
other manufacturers. Consumers wanting to unload items that meet the program’s
criteria can do so at any Patagonia retail store or by mailing them into the
company’s Reno, Nevada service center.
Of course, do-it-yourselfers
handy with needle-and-thread or sewing machines can turn their old clothes into
new creations such as quilts, handbags and smaller items. The website Expert
Village, which claims to have the largest online collection of “how-to” videos,
offers a free series called “How to Recycle Old Clothes into New Fashions.”
Short step-by-step videos in the series cover such topics as transforming old
garments into works of art; sewing patches, buttons and beads onto old clothes;
deconstructing a wedding dress; ironing graphics onto old garments, and much
more. Another good use for threadbare clothes (as well as sheets and towels) is
pet bedding, whether in your own home or donated to a local animal shelter.
According to the non-profit
Institute for Local Self-Reliance, textiles make up about four percent of the
weight and eight percent of the volume of all municipal solid waste in the U.S.
The commercial recycling company U’SAgain—which runs private for-profit
recycling services in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Minneapolis, Seattle, St. Louis
and elsewhere—finds that some 85 percent of the 70 pounds of textiles the
average American purchases each year ends up landfilled. That means the typical
U.S. city with 50,000 residents has to pay (with local tax dollars) for the
handling and disposal of some 3,000 tons of textiles every year. The shame of
such waste is that textiles are so easy to recycle or otherwise find new uses
for.
CONTACTS:
Goodwill,
www.goodwill.org;
Salvation Army,
www.salvationarmy.org;
Patagonia,
www.patagonia.com; Expert Village,
www.expertvillage.com; U’SAgain,
www.usagain.com.
Reprinted with permission
EarthTalk, c/o E - The Environmental Magazine
http://www.emagazine.com/earthtalk/thisweek/
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