"H&M, one of the biggest driving factors in fast fashion and cheap clothing does the absolute bare minimum to look good and placate the masses." There, I fixed the title for you.
Reused fibres are shorter, shorter fibers make for less qualitativ fabric. Because longer fibres can be woven tighter and with a smother finish, the fabric will be longer lasting.
@@pattycarljacksonbut there is no good solution here. If there would be only very expensive clothing on the market than people who are poor or not as rich would not be able to buy any clothing whatsoever.
Yes yes please do this ! Or teach me il do it with just what i got 😢 No seriouely over having whole wardrobe thst falls apart i thrown so much its so evil
@@stayotter I'm pretty sure there's enough clothes in the world as is. The problem is that companies like H & M and Zara make clothes you wear once and throw in the bin. Or ship to a much poorer countries and have them deal with them.
50,000 years for just one week’s worth of clothing from the textile market. There’s no way we can solve this issue if fast fashion brands continue to create clothing of low quality that is discarded every year because it’s out of fashion. What if these companies were to take back last year’s clothing and refashion and overdue it to create some to big new? Would that help?
I'd be a huge fan of this , but I'd like to see them made (or I'll do it) into insulation mats , as easier method to insulate a elevated cabin , for instance.
@@brynda2150 well the general public might not need it though . Even if the few huge companies could afford the loop,it still would help at a large scale.
Don’t believe these lies. They’re not doing anything to help clean up fast fashion. Stop buying from these companies. Buy secondhand. There’s enough out there already.
Well if women would stop spending 90% of their income on clothes they might wear twice there probably wouldn't be so much fabric rotting in landfills, hmm 🤨
"H&M, one of the biggest driving factors in fast fashion and cheap clothing does the absolute bare minimum to look good and placate the masses." There, I fixed the title for you.
Thank you for commenting that. This vid is literally propaganda. H&M continues to be one of the worst offenders when it comes to fast fashion.
@@sierramay5934 Yeah, as soon as I saw this I was like "Not today, Satan." 😂😂
I feel like fast fashion is more of the user than a producer. I have h&m shirts too and they last really long.
@@sierramay5934 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
A colong would bring your comment to a whole new level
At least they’re doing something. I just hope they don’t abandon this project before it can even make a dent in the issue.
Reused fibres are shorter, shorter fibers make for less qualitativ fabric. Because longer fibres can be woven tighter and with a smother finish, the fabric will be longer lasting.
Create the problem and sell the solution
Selling clothes isn’t the problem though, it’s cheap fast fashion clothes.
@@pattycarljacksonbut there is no good solution here. If there would be only very expensive clothing on the market than people who are poor or not as rich would not be able to buy any clothing whatsoever.
Inventing fast fashion and green washing since 2000
They aren’t even recycling 1% of all the clothes they make.
Im grateful to see any attempts to recycle, but also it needs to go in hand with tackling the cause of the issue!
I’m wearing Steve and Barry’s right now. God I miss them
We are recycling clothes since 2000 in Panipat, h&m just started
Yes yes please do this ! Or teach me il do it with just what i got 😢
No seriouely over having whole wardrobe thst falls apart i thrown so much its so evil
Or you know.. just quit the whole fast fashion thing.
Dw it will only take 50000 years to deal with it. . . Kind of
I mean, you can't just not make clothes.
@@stayotter They can still make clothes, they just have to make them better quality. Their clothes don't last very long 😬
@@stayotter I'm pretty sure there's enough clothes in the world as is. The problem is that companies like H & M and Zara make clothes you wear once and throw in the bin. Or ship to a much poorer countries and have them deal with them.
@@Tamperkele ur last sentence is quite a good idea!
How innovative, create a problem and then a solution to the problem..that still has a problem...
Well done h and m.. you didn't bluff me.
Try to stop waterfall by standing in there with stove that can evaporate the water like when boiling it for tea
and make statments it'll help
50,000 years for just one week’s worth of clothing from the textile market. There’s no way we can solve this issue if fast fashion brands continue to create clothing of low quality that is discarded every year because it’s out of fashion. What if these companies were to take back last year’s clothing and refashion and overdue it to create some to big new? Would that help?
Marketing stun lmao
Amazing work. Thank you for the update, Insider..!!
I'd be a huge fan of this , but I'd like to see them made (or I'll do it) into insulation mats , as easier method to insulate a elevated cabin , for instance.
I buy fast fashion but then I wear it for decades.
In other words, "I'm shirtless for decades"
Yeah that’s how most people do it. Most can’t afford luxury brands or sustainable brands.
Some of crumbles within 2-3 washes, the fabric is like napkins.
In Denmark they usually just throw out of season clothes in the trash
Good job sir
What is the name of the machine
We love this, and we want more of this!
Great idea
How much does the loop cost?
too much unfortunately
Well they certainly make enough to fund it so don't see the point of your question
@@revv2490 My point was that the general public can't afford one. So they're not really helpful to saving the planet from waste.
@@brynda2150 well the general public might not need it though . Even if the few huge companies could afford the loop,it still would help at a large scale.
I thought that was a snake
And that’s how mcnuggets are made!
Anyone knows abt a longer video of this
Greenwashing as f
How to make someone throw up number 1😂
This might be a great approach for the mess that was created in Chile!
Pointless. Just buy less clothes. It’s not the fault of corporations. It’s the fault of the people buying first hand clothes. Vinted exists.
Cigarette company selling nicotine
Eu com uma máquina dessa resolveria um grande descarte de roupas que vão pro lixo diariamente, poderia ter uma dessa em cada cidade ou estado.
Don’t believe these lies. They’re not doing anything to help clean up fast fashion. Stop buying from these companies. Buy secondhand. There’s enough out there already.
You cant mix certain fibers- tensile strength must be very close etcetera-- maybe tou could make paper?? Insulation?? House wrap??
So you’ll be wearing murder clothes that didn’t make it to evidence🤦🏾♂️
I was thinking this! I don’t wanna wear dead people’s clothes 😫
📈
Nah the loop does not create stuff fast enough tp be more than just a message of hope
Here’s an idea H&M stop making your ugly, cheap clothes then it wouldn’t take 50,000 years to undo a weeks worth of stupid fashion.
Liars
Well if women would stop spending 90% of their income on clothes they might wear twice there probably wouldn't be so much fabric rotting in landfills, hmm 🤨
so men dont wear clothes?? 😱😱
@@mfairyx 🤣
H&m makes the worst quality clothing ever pure garbage clothes dont even last 1 time wearing