Article Tag:

Out of Context

Eco Opportunities For the House Brand

Recently I was asked to outline the textile sustainability landscape for an outdoor retailer that specs and sells apparel under its own brand name. This is an overview of that report.

Sewing Isn’t Rocket Science

A new program in ‘soft goods manufacturing' introduces students to sewing through an emphasis on the wear-repair-reuse skill set needed by the local private sector.

Second Hand Stoke

Last spring’s thredUP report* describes a used apparel market tsunami. Second hand garment sales are increasing significantly around the world and growing exponentially in the United States. Tucked into those numbers is the outdoor industry with its unique combination of fashion and functionality.

It’s a Bag World

We are a bag culture. Shopping bags, cross body bags, duffel bags, day packs, and totes. Bags for fishing poles, tools, and computers, the list goes on. In today’s go-go lifestyle, bags are what keep us and all our stuff together and functioning. We love bags because they are useful.

Digitizing Human Perception

Our senses are closely intertwined with textiles. Color, sound, touch, feel, and in some cases, smell, are all part of the judgments we make about fabrics. It is ingrained in us, from home quilter to big time production manager, to see and touch the fabrics we buy.

Digital Landscape

Recently I’ve been in touch with a couple of groups that are interested in supporting small batch sewing. One group is academically oriented and the other economically inclined, but they both have the same line of questioning, “Are there any jobs to be had?” I answer as I always do...

Picking Teams

Remember in high school gym class going through the ritual of choosing sides to play some semi-violent sport? We all lined up and the teams were picked by captains who usually called out the biggest, fastest and most athletically gifted kids first, leaving the rest of us to essentially act as...

Sustainability = Usefulness

I once sold a tent to a middle-age woman. After careful consideration and obvious consternation, she arrived at an expensive and extremely well made choice. With the high-tech shelter rolled up snug in its stuff sack on the counter between us, she sighed and said something...

The End of Seasons

It is a misconception that not shipping goods to a retailer results in a net zero for both sides. “We don’t ship and they don’t pay” was the mantra when I worked at one lowbrow outdoor company. However, the economic truth is a much different story.

Reshoring the Sewn Goods Industry

A Colorado internet business magazine recently featured an editorial about the need to bring American sewing jobs back, no matter how difficult the task. In response to the article, I emailed the editor, a friendly colleague, outlining my view from the trenches. Here’s what I wrote...

Sewing as Performance Art

This past summer I made little bags under a tent on a breezy street in Telluride, Colorado. Now, I’m sewing miniature bags under a tent on the central plaza in downtown Montrose. It is our local Farmers’ Holiday Market with our small spot nestled between a family selling Angus beef and...

The New Wave

Gather around old timers. Remember the backpacking boom of the early 1980s? Those exciting days when the intersection of army surplus DEET, Chinese made sleeping bags and freeze-dried food allowed a diaspora of young people to go off into the wilderness and wander about for days at a time.

Outdoor Bubble

Jon is the manager of a famous mountain shop in southwest Colorado. He explained to me that with newly reduced hours and a limited number of customers allowed inside his shop at one time, the store was crushing previous sales records.

Textiles on the Trail

I don’t know what your trailhead parking lots look like, but here in Colorado ours are packed full, like Fourth of July full, every day of the week. In this state if you’re not at work or drinking expensive craft beer, you go outside. The pandemic favored the latter and combined with...

Post Lockdown Vagabonds

Recently I penned this letter to my governor; the textile industry might find it of interest as well: Dear State of Colorado,Without being histrionic, I think we should consider that this coming summer could be the biggest Colorado tourist travel season in history, by far...

Insulated Reality

Insulation in the classic sense is the sum of two parts: dead air space and some kind of substance that creates little voids where motionless air rests.

Online Opens the Door for Trusted Textiles

It comes as no surprise that the list of recent store closures is populated with apparel retailers. These stalwart merchants have satisfied thousands of customers who throughout the year perused their racks, used their dressing rooms, and showed up at their sales events.

Old Carbon

I follow an outdoor journalist whom I admire. The writing is personal, fluid and often deals with the emerging dilemmas facing a climate conscious outdoorsperson and adventurer. Chronicled are changes in diet, personal consumption and professional travel.

Out of Sync

They moved the trade show again. Pushed back another month, the Outdoor Industry’s big powwow now asks buyers to purchase a summer season’s worth of product without any idea of what worked for them the summer before.