12.29.2014

100% Traceable Down

From fall 2014 forward, all Patagonia down products contain only 100% Traceable Down. This means of the down in all of our down products can be traced back to birds that were never force-fed and never live-plucked. The Traceable Down Standard provides the highest assurance of animal welfare in the apparel industry. We began working in 2007 to achieve this, and are the only brand to have done so.
Wanting to help improve animal welfare throughout the down industry, we've been sharing our work with down suppliers and other brands that also use down. Since 2013, when we introduced our first 100% Traceable Down products, we have presented our findings at conferences at the Outdoor Industry Association, the American Apparel and Footwear Association, and ISPO. We've also worked closely with Four Paws, an international animal welfare organization, whose campaign against the mistreatment of down-bearing birds first led us to examine our down supply chain. Four Paws has been quite supportive of our efforts to ensure animal welfare in our down supply chain. We continue to collaborate with them and other stakeholders to improve animal welfare industry-wide.
We're often asked how we can ensure every bird is treated humanely. This can only be achieved by examining every single like in the down supply chain.
We start by auditing the parent farms, where birds are raised to produce eggs. This is where the highest risk for live-plucking occurs, as animals live here up to four years. Even through we don't get our down from these birds, we feel obliged to look out for their welfare as they are an essential part of the down supply chain. This is what sets us apart from other brands also concerned about animal welfare.
The eggs produced at parent farms are transferred to other farms, where hatchlings are raised for their meat. We audit these farms to ensure sound animal welfare practices. Down is a byproduct of the food industry, and the down we buy comes exclusively from slaughterhouses. After the down is collected from geese that have been killed for their meat, we follow it through washing, sorting and processing facilities to ensure proper traceability and segregation from untraceable down. We continue our audits all the way to the garment factory, where we make sure our down is kept apart from that of other brands, and used only in our clothing. It's a lot of work. But this is how we ensure every bird whose down we use has been treated humanely.
From the moment we started his journey, we knew we needed an independent third-party to help us understand and verify sound animal welfare practices in our down supply chain. Th that end, we partner with traceability experts at Arche Advisors.
Fall 2014 marked a proud milestone for us. The assurance of sound animal welfare inherent in our 100% Traceable Down is the result of thousands of hours of work from our executives, designers, material planners, sourcing department, suppliers and corporate social responsibility team. It was neither cheap nor easy, and we had to change our strategy and business operations to accomplish this. But building a product that helps you stay warm in good conscience is a legacy we are proud of.
As we move forward with our efforts to ensure animal welfare, we are partnering wit NSF International to continue to evaluate our down supply chain. NSF is a nonprofit standards and certification organization that is helping us to move beyond verification to gain certification for 100% Traceable Down in fall 2015. We will also continue working with others in the down industry to move toward a single certification standard. In the short term, this includes working with Four Paws, the Outdoor Industry Association, European Outdoor Group and the German Sporting Goods Industry Association to evaluate existing standards and with the Textile Exchange steering committee to help improve its responsible down standard.
Patagonia

Push To Pedal II


Carhartt

Product Introspection: F/W 14-15 II

Indigo Skein Dyed Check Fabric

This is an indigo skein dyed wool fabric. In contrast to natural indigo dye, synthetic indigo dye is known for maintaining an even color all the way through to the center of the yarn. We have taken this dye and hand-dyed yarns while still in their 'skein' state (loose bunch of yarn), creating a unique, uneven look that is different from both synthetic indigo dyed fabrics and natural indigo dyed fabrics.
A young artisan from Kojima, Okayama, famous for its denim production, is pushing the envelope for what is possible with synthetic indigo. We're tackling new problems together using a very experimental trial and error process, and look forward to the day that our current research initiatives come to life as Visvim products.

Wale Corduroy

In order to recreate a material that embodied the spirit of the 1960's, we mixed cotton and linen of varying fiber lengths to create an uneven, thick-rigged corduroy that is full of character. Of course, the corduroy that was produced back in the 60's was limited by the production techniques of the time and it's likely that the unevenness was unintentional, but to those of us who are surrounded by flat products in this modern day and age, it's refreshing to see garments with an imperfect, almost humanistic side.
Trying to remake products exactly as they were years ago is futile, since we cannot reproduce the techniques and processes, and even if we could, the meaning behind the product would change along with the intention of the creator. Rather than simply reproducing old products, there are more possibilities in exploring old techniques as a basis and an inspiration for fresh, new products.
Visvim

12.14.2014

Yours And Mine

Beyonce

Product Introspection: F/W 14-15 I

Products that age beautifully

There are products that fall to the wayside as temporary fashion trends, and then there are products with longevity that acquire more charm and character over time. What is the difference between two products? The answer to this question can be found by looking inside of a product.
Items that are imbued with love throughout the design process, made with natural materials and dyeing techniques, and designed not from the pattern nor from the fabric, but all the way down from the yarn. The hard work put into our products during the development stage will see them age beautifully over time.

Bark Cloth (Kapa)

Bark cloth was widely used in America from the 1930's to the 1960's, primarily as a fabric for interior furnishings and Hawaiian shirts. The name 'bark cloth' is said to have come from the bark-like texture of the fabric, which has an uneven weave pattern and fibers that stand up and do not cling to the skim. Bark cloth is traditionally considered a summer fabric so we thought it would be interesting to use the fabric as one of the symbolic materials in our fall and winter season. The natural color is achieved by using a traditional mud dye technique from Amami-Oshima, an island off the coast of Okinawa, Japan.
Mud dyeing entails using the tannin from the sharinbai tree and mixing it with mud found in Amami-Oshima; the tree tannin and iron from the mud create a chemical reaction that turns the dye into a dark brown color upon oxidization. Although the demand for mud-dyed kimonos has decreased and many artisans have lost work, we have used this technique for a long time and have made many mud-dyed products as a result. The classic cowboy print was screen-printed to the bark cloth using over ten different patters. The inspiration and production of this custom fabric spans the entire globe, and the end result is truly unique.


Melange Wool

We developed an original melange fabric made from rope-dyed wool, silk, cotton, and polyester. The idea behind this blend was to create a dry, rough fabric that stands in contrast to typical silky high-end materials.
The irregularity from the difference in dyes gives the fabric tremendous visual depth. Many of the items in our collection that are made from melange wool also use a variety of randomly arranged custom buttons, further adding to the unique, vintage-like nature of each product.

Visvim

12.01.2014

Product Introspection: Horween Leather II

Clipper Jacket IT *Isetan Shinjuku Exclusive
Horween Horse Hide Leather

Horse Hide Leather

Horse hide, known for its thinness and durability, is legendary as a garment material, particularly for jackets. With the exception of cordovan, horse hide has a lower fiber density than cow hide and is therefore not as durable. The flip side of this is that horse hide is also that much softer than cowhide, making it suitable for use in clothing garments, where softness and pliability are favored over raw durability and tensile strength. Since horses are active animals that are naturally scratched and scarred throughout their lifetimes, high quality hides with few markings are rare and extremely precious.
Brigadier Boots Hi-Folk (Bison)
Horween Bison Leather

Bison Leather

Bison leather, known for its robustness and resistance to scratches, is used in a variety of applications, such as shoes and accessories. The American bison had once inhabited a large area of North America, roaming the plains from Alaska all the way down to northern Mexico. Native Americans depended on the bison for survival, using its meat for food and its hides for warmth, and only hunting what was necessary. At the beginning of the 20th century, however, settler's with rifles almost hunted the buffalo to extinction, leaving only a few hundred left in the wilderness. Thanks to recent conservation efforts, the buffalo population in America is steadily recovering and in no longer in danger of being wiped out.
Visvim