100-mile Suit

It may not be pretty, but several weeks ago a group of designers unveiled a genuine 100-mile suit with all parts and labor sourced within 100 miles of Philadelphia. The blog following progress of the 100-mile suit includes fascinating details of the sourcing and labor, as well as close-up images of the work in progress and finished.

The 100-mile diaper stash that we suggested last year was only BOUGHT within 100 miles. There are more steps to take after buying local.

  • Item bought locally
  • Product manufacturered locally
  • Materials sourced locally
  • Resources grown locally

How far can you go? It’s a great experiment.

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Picking Your Cotton Carefully

Pick Your Cotton Carefully - Environmental Justice FoundationOde Magazine has a beautifully photographed story this month on cotton in India — on conventional, pesticide-laden cotton in India. The farmer suicides continued at a rate of one every eight hours as the photographer was visiting. Expensive pesticides and genetically modified seeds (which mean they can’t save seed for planting next year) have meant soaring costs, leaving the farmers in debt they can’t overcome.

Add to this the rising cost of water, decreasing soil quality, health problems caused by chemical exposure and the absense of other jobs in the rural areas, and it’s easy to see why India’s farmers are desperate.

They don’t see any other way out. The situation is not better in other cotton growing countries.

At London Fashion Week a couple of weeks ago, Kathrine Hamnett (known for many slogan T-shirts in the 1980s) did not show a new collection. She showed a film on the impact of the global cotton industry’s pesticide use. The film is part of the Environmental Justice Foundation’s Pick Your Cotton Carefully campaign. Why whitewash cotton? The true of child labor, slavery, and health and environmental degradation is nasty.


Cotton is a serious choice
, not a pleasant way to make yourself feel good about your environmental choices. When you choose cotton, organic cotton is essential to the well being of other humans.

Pick your cotton carefully. Ode could only manage to list a couple of high-profile celebrity designers using clean cotton. You can find many more organic sources than that. Ask for organic cotton. DEMAND organic cotton.

As Kathrine Hamnet said, “It’s not about choosing something else, it’s about choosing the right cotton.”

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Buy Local Diapers, Seriously

An article this week on pollution caused by the global shipping industry left me thinking, yet again, about buying local.

The group behind the report, the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT), also said the shipping industry emits more of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide than many industrialized nations.

Serious sustainability considers carbon emissions at every step along the way. This includes shipping, particularly long-distance shipping. Those looking to green their lives should consider taking the carbon out of the equation when they buy cloth diapers. Whether you are considering a 100-mile diaper stash or any other way to buy local cloth diapers, buying local is a great way to build community.

Am I asking you not to buy diapers from Firefly Diapers? Of course I’m not! I would love to sell you a great organic cotton cloth diaper, and I have sent Firefly Diapers around the world.

I also know that there are local cloth diaper manufacturers in every country where I send diapers. I am suggesting that if you consider carbon emissions as part of your overall footprint on the earth, you may want to choose to buy cloth diapers manufactured near you. Get to know your local cloth diapermaker. This is just one connection in your local web.

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What’s In Bottled Water?

I just entered my bottled water’s label into Environmental Working Group’s database for Project Bottled Water. They are going to study where bottled water comes from, how it’s processed, and if it’s really worth the expense — but they need your help and a few minutes of your time.

Grab the nearest bottle and go here to enter in its label information: http://www.ewg.org/issues/bottledwater/

This is part of the Environmental Working Group’s larger project to investigate drinking water, which they do in addition to many other environmental issues.

What does this have to do with diapers? It doesn’t take much to connect many diapering choices to environmental toxins. I’m interested to see how we will end up stepping away from the industrial age choices like buying our drinking water in plastic bottles and covering babies bottoms with super absorbent polymers. It is all related. Once the inevitability of embracing renewable resources really dawns, diapering will again mean cloth diapering.

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