The Sustainable Closet Audit

In many ways, the most sustainable textiles are the ones we already have. Join Bobbie as she begins working through The Sustainable Closet Audit guidebook from Fibershed.org, re-examining the clothing she owns, and planning for future purchases or projects to make.

by Bobbie Williams

Sometimes things just come together.  Sarah Thornton recently gave a presentation to the Victoria Handweavers & Spinners Guild about the Fibreshed goals, and Carly Stephanowich from Lorelei Textile Design did another presentation on upcycling and eco-dyeing. I have been thinking about redoing my wardrobe, using natural and local fibres, dyes, and fabric.  However, I already have what seems like a large collection of clothing, much of which no longer either (a) fits or (b) matches what I want to be wearing.  Luckily, the Fibershed “mother ship” recently published an official guidebook for redefining “your wardrobe, one conscious choice at a time.”  You can access and download the guidebook with this link:  https://mailchi.mp/395ed0254780/sustainable-closet-audit .  The Guidebook will walk you through the steps necessary for evaluating what you have and planning for the future.

I printed off the guidebook and decided to take the plunge.  My clothes are in two locations — I have an attic full of garments from my “professional workdays” and a closet with post-retirement clothes that are more in keeping with a casual lifestyle.  It has been an eye-opener going through the Audit, reviewing my collection through the perspective of a “Soil-to-Soil Framework”.

One of the first steps to The Sustainable Closet Audit is to look at what one wishes to achieve – reduce environmental impact, support ethical labor, or “simply understanding my purchasing habits better.”  I will be honest – my professional clothes were picked with the concept of “look good”, cost and “easy to travel with and maintain in a hotel room while providing itinerant pediatric-focused services”.  Little thought was given to sustainability, factory work conditions, etc.  

I tackled the attic collection first and decided that despite emotional attachment to some of the items, I really did not need or had much opportunity to wear much of what was there.  Good quality items that could be used by someone else went into a bag to be donated to local agencies.  A few items that were in bad shape went into a “let’s try to mend or repurpose” bin in my sewing room.   I kept some natural fibre items and moved them into the closet with the rest of the “post-retirement clothes.”  

The Audit recommends organizing clothing by categories and working through them that way.  I have a few “night on the town” items and put them aside – they are so few I don’t feel a need to weed them out.  Instead, I will focus on the rest and evaluate them in terms of the steps recommended by the Closet Audit.  Eventually I hope to weed my existing items down to a capsule wardrobe that fits my lifestyle and my new textile ethics: natural fibres, locally sourced as much as possible, traceability, etc.  This will also apply to any new purchases or sewing projects that I hope to make for myself out of handwoven fabric.  It is a goal for the upcoming year and, frankly, I feel quite brave for taking the plunge!