Olsen Haus Features DB & GGA!

March 31, 2009

First, check out the exclusive interview Chloe Jo and I did with Elizabeth Olsen on set of her photo shoot!

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Olsen Haus genius, Elizabeth Olsen is finally doing mens’ shoes! She asked me to model them for her new Fall/Holiday 09 lookbook! Showing the ladies shoes are Chloe Jo Berman of Girlie Girl Army, Marisa Miller of Kind Green Planet, Princess Supertar, Samantha Ragsdale of Farm Sanctuary and Ashley Lou Smith of Bloodless Bling! The very talented, vegan, awesome friend of DB, Ryan Pfluger took the photos. Check out the rest by scrolling below:

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jenith


Zuriick

March 16, 2009

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Zuriick is a pretty rad shoe line out of Salt Lake City, UT. They have many animal-free, vegan-friendly shoes, and I was assured by the lead designer that they are sweatshop-free. There’s tons of style/color combos to choose from, so check them out here. Zuriick does make some leather styles – click here to find out why we’re not so stoked on leather – so make sure to double-check your item description before purchasing.

http://zuriick.com/b03.jpghttp://zuriick.com/b04.jpgImage of BEATA BLACKImage of BEATA NAVYImage of ALBERT OCEAN HIGHTOPImage of PARKER AQUA MARINEImage of AKE RUBY & GOLDImage of AKE OLIVE & GREY

if you are in NYC, our pals at ALTER have styles for men and women!


Fresh Friday Finds

March 13, 2009

Fact! There are 700,000 homeless people in the U.S., and 18 million vacant houses and apartments…
Source

1. Turk + Taylor, Spring 09 is looking good! T+T is one of our favorite designers, who we’ve been following for a few seasons now. The collection is almost 100% organic cotton. Check them out! Also check out their new organic tees.

2. These shoes are golden! Cool, Vegan, fair-trade, and eco-friendly, does it get any better than that ? Jinga was started 3 years ago by two gals who give back at least 5% of sales to a social project in a Rio de Janeiro favela (shantytown) which provides activities and education to children to keep them away from gangs! (Thanks to reader Michael B. for this info!)

Bronze Classic Black

3. Undercover Animal Lover. This guy is an ethical vegan who risks his safety killing animals all day and shooting undercover footage so we can get a glimpse into the heavily-shrouded meat and dairy industries. Can you imagine? Read this rare interview with TIME magazine, and check his HBO documentary Death on a Factory Farm airing March 16.

4. This Sunday, March 15th, eat good vegan food and help farm animals!

Farm Sanctuary’s Dinner Night Broadway East
171 East Broadway, New York, NY 10002
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Reservations for your party are available between 7:30 and 10 p.m.
Reserve your table online at
www.opentable.com or by calling Laurie at 212-228-3100.
Be sure to mention Farm Sanctuary when making your reservation.

5. One of our favorite organic companies, Loomstate, is having a party at one of our favorite eco-boutiques, Kaight, on Friday March 20th. Get a free Loomstate organic tee with any purchase of Loomstate S/S ’09!loomstatess091

http://origin.ih.constantcontact.com/fs015/1101388046492/img/141.jpg?a=1102501343552 Loomstate Tosh S/S Button Down

6.  Person to know: Historian and Activist GEORGE DRAFFAN

” ‘Development’ is a euphemism, much like the word ‘efficiency.’ Efficiency within the current system is really about how fast you can turn forests and mountains into wastepaper and soda pop cans. Is that good? If the purpose of life is to consume and destroy, then international trade and industrial civilization are definitely proven ways to speed that up .”

The Elite Consensus: When Corporations Wield the Constitution

Welcome to the Machine: Science, Surveillance, and the Culture of Control

Strangely Like War: The Global Assault on ForestsRailroads and Clearcuts: Legacy of Congress's 1864 Northern Pacific Railroad Land Grant

gg125x125.jpg7. Chloé Jo and the GGA weigh in on the myth that leather can be ‘eco-friendly‘ , on the best Vegan Cheeses, and on the controversy surrounding veganizing your companion animal. Watch out for those crazy cat people! They get their claws out!

Inside a typical tannery

Parma, you so fine.  I wanna make you mine!

8. You might need a french terrycloth motorcycle jacket. I’m just saying….

9. From the folks who brought you EcoRazzi, Veg Daily is Born!veg daily logo, vegetarian, vegan, veggies, eating healthy

10. Veteran vegan rockers Propagandhi talk to VegNews about their forthcoming album, Supporting Caste.


Brogue Basics

December 2, 2008

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These Portuguese-made, eco-friendly, vegan microsuede “Simpatia” wingtip shoes from BoBo are my new obsession. Great with a tux or just a pair of skinny jeans – wingtips, otherwise know as the brogue, are a boys best friend. Wanna know why we steer clear of leather at The Discerning Brute, Click Here, and don’t have a cow!

Check out all the other vegan wingtips & brogue shoes:

Mens Brogues (Black) - click to enlarge http://www.bboheme.com/images/SIMPATHIABROWN.jpgLiam Shoe (Brown) - click to enlarge

Brogue (Tan) - click to enlarge Jacob

ASOS Canvas Brogue Plimsoll

Tom

Tom Brownernest3ASOS Canvas Brogue Plimsolls

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Loud Men: Interview with Luxury-Eco Visionary Linda Loudermilk

June 27, 2008

by Joshua Katcher

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

Linda Loudermilk is making waves that are hitting the coasts of Europe, Asia, and both sides of North America. She is also turning the seaweed in those waves into textiles. With almost a decade of experience in eco fashion, Linda is finally being ecstatically celebrated for her investments and achievements. Everyone is talking about her – and getting a seat at her runway show is a coveted pilgrimage.

After abandoning the Haute Couture runways in Paris to feed her soul by conducting research with environmentalists, scientists, and textile innovators – she is responsible for many of the eco fabrics that are gaining ground (and body coverage) and being recognized as both necessary and desirable. Her cri de coeur is both aesthetic and holistic – citing the healing power of nature that saved her very life – and the overlooked health and environmental devastation from conventional garment production. Linda Loudermilk design is for rock stars and creative professionals alike – and she has a loyal and growing clientele including discriminating celebrities and eco warriors. Like any visionary, she admits she is perpetually learning – lamenting about her use of leather in the past, but looking forward to creating an entirely vegan shoe line for men and women in the near future.

Beyond her personal collection is the LUXURY ECO™ Stamp, which is part of her vision for how the very best products can be identified based on everything from labor practices and environmental impact, to design and aesthetic.

I had a few moments on the phone with Linda recently. Here is our interview:

DB: When did you start making menswear and what kind of man wants to wear Linda Loudermilk?

LL: A man that wants something different! I have preppy men, creative men, and stars all as fans of my menswear. I’ve got it all. Adrian Grenier, Leonardo DiCaprio, producers – even computer geeks, and they all just wanna wear it because it feels good. Its for the 20 to 50 year-old that wants a nice cut and that are professionals, but still creative.

I stared making menswear about 2 years ago – but I started very slowly with simple Tshirts. Within the last year the quality of woven fabrics I was looking for finally enabled me to get the shirting and suiting fabric I needed to do the collection in the way I wanted it. I noticed that men really felt the difference in the fabric. The men that wear the seaweed shirts – I can’t even explain the look on their face! They have a look like “I’ve never felt something like this before in my life!”. With men its always been about comfort – at least in the last 50 years. They really can feel the fabric feeding their skin -the seaweed with the sea salt. Same with bamboo – its much better for your skin because it wicks away moisture and has antibacterial properties. Seacell is seaweed bonded to wood pulp – they bond it naturally on a molecular level. Its not forced with chemicals – and when your skin warms up the fabric, the benefits of the seaweed nourishes the skin. I’ve been working with the textile company to design these fabrics – that’s why I’m a leader in the industry – because I hook up the scientists with the fabric manufacturers.

I used to do couture in Paris, but I realized no matter how honored I was to be there, it didn’t have any meaning to me. So I had to reinvent my profession. 8 years ago I came back to states and worked on sustainable fabrics. The quality of the mens fabrics is amazing right now. We have suits & tuxedos made out of sasawashi – its a leaf from japan that is anti-bacterial and anti deodorant. They first used it to make sushi (it regulated small) and it also was used as insulation in homes. So I made fabric out of it and now its a fabric in line! We don’t have to use synthetics to create what we need a fabric to do.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: Is ‘Eco’ finally becoming sexy? Do you see yourself playing a role in this?
LL: Yes! and yes!

DB: What kind of materials and processes do you use, and why?
LL: One process I’m a huge fan of is ozone wash. It doesn’t break the fiber down – it’s a molecular process, and thats how I treat my jeans. Its entirely environmentally friendly. Health-wise too. Time, energy, water usage, and the water is actually returned cleaner than when it came out! I don’t know why everyone doesn’t do it. Actually I do know why – because people get partnerships with wash houses that don’t want to change. Its so much cheaper to do once you do it, but switching over seems overwhelming. Money-making industry doesn’t like change.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: How did you become an environmentalist? Do you have role models?
LL: I was cured through nature of a debilitating disease, and through that experience I realized that I experience my spirituality through nature. It’s all about respect of nature and animals. I found out who I was. I set forth to do everything I could to spread that message because it was and is so monumental. When I started – no one else in fashion was doing this. I created ‘lux eco fashion’ – the high fashion aspect. But I had to! I had to feed my soul.

I just watched a documentary on Frank Lloyd Wright – his god is the one that starts with an “n” – nature. He was a rebel. He was a maverick and I really respect him and his way of thinking. It was all about his truth. If we keep to our truth and the greater truth we would all be doing great things.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: What other areas of your life are affected by your eco-ethics? Is ‘fair-trade’ important to you? Why?
LL: Everything! Its been a slow process, but when I first got into this I didn’t trust labels, and I still wanted my life to be stylish and sexy. So I started the ‘lux eco’ stamp of approval so people can know that something’s been well designed, its not gonna fall apart, and it’s environmentally benign. But most importantly, it’s something with a design you can respect. A lot of people subscribe to labels in order to showcase a certain taste level. That’s what high fashion and labels are all about! So instead of wearing Fendi or Gucci to represent the qualities we want to espouse – it would be great if we could go look for the ‘lux- eco’ stamp of approval and be able to support a more evolved set of aesthetics and values. It applies to anything! Restaurants, gloves, garbage cans – anything can be stamped. Every area of my life has been affected by this.

As far as sweatshops and fair-trade, it’s a hugely important issue. I think we are 80% perfect – we make sure to check people out, but when you turn your back you never know. It becomes a complex question.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: How has mainstream fashion and media’s response to your work changed over the last few seasons?
LL: Well, I’ve gotten a lot more press attention lately – all these green TV shows are coming and shooting in my salon. Finally people are paying attention! It’s putting ‘eco’ in a new light and convincing people that there is a new light – proving it by putting a product out there and investing everything in creating a news platform. People are finally understanding my knowledge base. They can come to me to find out certain things. They are valuing the research I’ve done for over 8 years.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: If you could put an end to any element of the fashion industry you see as destructive, what would it be and why?
LL: Water usage. Access to clean water is the biggest problem we have right now globally. Also the dye process, because there’s a lot of chemical dyes we’re exposed to, not knowing that our bodies are trying to fight it off. As a result people get sick and doctors don’t know what it is. It’s really the wash process and they way the fabric is treated. Thats why ozone is a great solution.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: If fashion is a form of visual communication, what is someone who wears Linda Loudermilk saying about themselves to other?
LL: I hope they are expressing truly who they are. That’s why I make such a diverse line. there is something for everyone. People who wear my garments are also saying “I am is someone who likes quality. someone who likes personal expression – no matter what it is.” Be who you are! If its yucky express it. If its rock, express it. My clothes are more sculptural and rock oriented. I have no problem with Gucci or Fendi, but if you’re wearing it just for the label you’ve lost your own identity. I never buy big logos.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: What is your opinion on the fur and skins trade?
LL: Don’t support it! The thing is, we need to keep innovating products that mimic what hides and fur can do. There are certain properties that come out of nature that are pure – so there is nothing exactly like shearling – you can’t duplicate it – but if we’re going to try to lessen the fur and leather trades, we need innovation because those trades have been around for eons and won’t go away without a fight. I often subscribe to the Native American philosophy of only taking what you need and being grateful for it. Unfortunately, Thats not how the industry or this culture is set up – and even if they say they are, they’re not. So I avoid it. I am ashamed to say I used to use leather a lot – because it is so sculptural. It’s so easy to make something look expensive with leather. There is some rubber and some organic cotton dyed with mud and it looks like leather- but it doesn’t sculpt. We really need more innovation.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: What is your understanding of the environmental crises we are immersed in? Is looking fashionable important to having the environmental message heard?

There is simply a loss of respect. That’s it. You can go on and on about every issue. But if you look at the core – it’s lack of respect for the earth and people and animals. If we really respected ourselves we wouldn’t be in this crisis at all. Being fashionable is very important because we (environmentalists) exist in the ‘hippie granola scientist’ realms and it needs to grow and needs to be fashionable – its a hook.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: Anything else?

LL: People should apply for the stamp of approval because its gonna make a big difference! Visit my website. We can have a stamp of approval on almost anything . I am looking for high-end, well made cool fashionable items of any kind – or people who do services! Anything! Tell me how are you eco, where do you stand and why.

Also – big news, I am coming out with vegan shoes for men and women!

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Linda appears in W Magazine

Bourgeois Boheme Shoes

February 13, 2008

Bourgeois Boheme Shoes

Bourgeois Boheme, one of the UK’s most popular online fashion boutiques, has launched its very own range of vegan footwear for men. “Footwear for the ethically conscious” appears on the sole of each shoe.

“We saw there was a gap in the market for footwear that is not only animal-friendly but also stylish and affordable. It’s something we’ve looked for without success for years, so we finally made our own.” – Alicia Lai, founder

compassivo

The shoes are handmade and ethically produced in Portugal and India, and are made of microfibre, the highest quality and most eco-friendly leather alternative. They are 100% animal-friendly and even the glue being used is water-based.Simpathia

The London based company is catering to the continually growing movement of people who demand accountability from those they do business with. You can have peace-of-mind knowing exactly how their shoes have been made from design to finished product.

Espiritual ‘Full of Spirit’ is a range of men’s shoes handcrafted in Portugal. The collection presents eight shoe styles which include the dressy patent Liberto meaning ‘Free’; ‘Simpatia ‘Kindness’, ultra-luxurious and chocolaty, suedette brogues; faux crocodile shoes called Compassivo ‘Compassionate’; and Vida or ‘Life’, comfortable yet elegant slip-ons.

PensadorThe range is a rare find in the ethical shopper’s world where organic and ethical often means either high-priced or low-style. Bourgeois Boheme has produced a range of smart shoes that ticks all the animal-friendly, ethical and style boxes and yet is still affordable to the general market.

If you are not familiar with the leather industry, click here and get educated! Leather production is an ecological disaster, an ethical blight, and is not always a by-product of beef. In India, where cows are considered sacred, they are led outside the boarders of the country under horrendous conditions to be slaughtered specifically for their skins.

“Vegetarians who might consider wearing leather, because it is only a by-product, should consider that leather is the most economically valuable by-product of the meatpacking industry . The sale of leather goods bolsters the economic success of slaughterhouses and dairy farms.” - Karen Dawn, Thanking the Monkey

In addition to shoes, Bourgeois Boheme also carry a nice selection of bags and other accessories. Check them out!

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© Just Screw It

February 2, 2008

Adbusters is not just a great magazine. (If you don’t read it, you certainly should.)

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Taking the momentum from anti-globalization activists of the mid-late nineties and crafting it into a refined movement of ‘culture-jamming’, the Adbusters community focuses on questioning corporate control of…well, everything. Who determines the status-quo? Who has permission to challenge and change it? Adbusters has grown into a Media Foundation:

“We are a global network of artists, activists, writers, pranksters, students, educators and entrepreneurs who want to advance the new social activist movement of the information age. Our aim is to topple existing power structures and forge a major shift in the way we will live in the 21st century.”

http://www.drivl.com/img/articles/Nike-sweat-shop.jpgFamous for making spoof-ads which file grievances with a plethora of coporate scum-bag-ness, Kalle Lasn and the folks at Adbusters Media Foundation are also the brains behind a shoe that aims to ‘unswoosh’ Nike. What’s the beef with Nike? Sweatshops, for one. Add environmental recklessness and the power of a true corporate colossus, and it looks like a real monster. Find out more on why a Discerning Brute should never be caught in Nikes HERE. Can the David that is Adbusters take on a Goliath? Time will tell…

http://www.educatingforjustice.org/nikewages/graphics/nike_ad.jpg

The classic Blackspot Sneaker and v2.0: The Unswoosher are both designed by John Fluevog, known for his cutting edge innovativeness and flair. The shoes comply with vegan standards, and are being monitored by Robin Webb of Vegetarian Shoes in the UK.

Order Blackspot V2

“…the Blackspot, from it’s red toe-tip and hand-drawn anti-logo to its renegade billboards and TV ads, is designed to do only one thing: kick megacorporate ass. We’re going to cut into Nike’s market share, unswoosh that tired old swoosh and give birth to a new kind of cool in the sneaker industry.” – Adbusters

What I love about these shoes is not just things like recycled tire parts (which makes so much sense to use for shoes – designers, pay attention) but the integrating of social, political, environmental, and animal advocacy into a product. Consilience! This is a paradigm shift within the capitalistic model – and a testament to to our generation that says :‘cool’ is not one-dimensional. ‘Cool‘ is comprehensive and multi-dimensional, and should meet our need to take responsibility for things aside from aesthetics or how much money one can make at any cost.

Order Blackspot Sneakers

DB’s Etiquette Recommendation: The fact that a product like this exists is extraordinary in itself. Hold on to your standards! There is no reason to expect any less of the companies with whom you do business than an accommodation of your demand for accountability. You are paying for a product – but you are also paying for how it was made. If you wouldn’t force a child into sweatshop-labor, kill and skin a cow, or destroy a river with chemicals, are you OK with paying someone else to do it just because it’s out of sight?


Friday: Top 3 Affordable Finds

January 25, 2008

1. Ethletic Blackout High-tops. Retro ‘blackout’ high-top sneaker made with 100% cotton canvas upper and tough rubber sole. Sole is produced and stamped with all natural and sustainable latex. A Fair Trade premium is paid to both the rubber producers in Sri Lanka and to the shoe stitchers in Pakistan. Certified by the Fair Labeling Organization and the Forest Stewardship Council. 100% Vegan. $56

Esthletic Black Hi-top

2. Nutella, eat your heart out. RAWtella does it betta’ with 100% raw, vegan, organic ingredients. Who knew that indulgent dude-food could be so chocolaty and… chocolaty? $11.95

RAWtellaEmpowered Foods

3. “Postman” Organic Hemp Bag by SATIVA. Hemp and cotton, finished with metal buckles and plastic zips. Made in Hong Kong, China in an audited factory ensuring no child or prison labour. Only $79.95

Hemp Bag

DB’s Etiquette Recommendation: Using leather is unnecessary – alternatives are abundant. SATIVA does use leather in some of their products. Click HERE to find out why not to support the leather industry.


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