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Looking at the prices of eco-minded and ethical fashion brands, you might be wondering: where can I find affordable sustainable clothing?

The first thing to consider is that the most sustainable garments are the ones already hanging in your closet! Wearing what you already have more is the best way to reduce your clothing footprint.

Slow fashion is a mindset and there are so many ways to practice slow fashion without spending money or buying new garments.

And when you do want a new-to-you piece, check out your local thrift store or one of these online secondhand shops first! Shopping pre-loved is a great way to find affordable sustainable clothes.

That said, shopping secondhand is not always accessible or doesn’t always offer what you need, so there may be times that you want to buy a new piece — but without breaking the bank.

While responsible fashion brands will never hit the questionably low prices of fast fashion brands (there’s no way a brand is paying living wages when they charge $5 for a t-shirt), these conscious brands certainly have fair prices for what they are offering.

The reality is that it does typically cost more to source materials in an ecologically responsible way and it will be more expensive to pay garment workers living wages. Consciously-made garments don’t have to cost a fortune, but they will cost more than a latte.

Affordability also depends on how many garments we are buying and how often. For example, while a single garment from a fast fashion brand may be cheaper than one from a slow fashion brand, if you are constantly doing fast fashion hauls the price tags add up.

Slowing down consumption habits will most likely save money in the long run. While garments from slow fashion brands won’t be considered cheap in comparison to fast fashion, practicing the ethos of fewer, better things, and considering cost-per-wear, will make them more affordable.

To learn more about the relationship between price and sustainability, and the realities of affordable ethical clothing, listen to Is sustainable fashion always more expensive? on the Conscious Style Podcast.

Affordable Sustainable Clothing & Accessories Brands

This article features affiliates and partners. As always, we only feature brands that meet high standards for sustainability that we love — and that we think you’ll love too!

1. Best variety: Made Trade

This ethical online curated site has an incredible collection of affordable ethical fashion. From dresses and blouses to jewelry and scarves, Made Trade has it all — with a range of price points too. Not only can you filter by price, but you can sort by value, too: Fair Trade, Heritage, Sustainable, Vegan, USA Made, POC-Owned, and/or Women-Owned.

Size Range: XS-6XL

Price range: $- $$$

Sustainable beige jumpsuit from Madetrade

2. Best off-price retailer: Oneoff

Oneoff is a sustainable off-price retailer with pieces from some of the most covetable conscious fashion brands, including For Days, Whimsy + Row, and Siizu.

By partnering with these independent labels to source excess or out-of-season product, Oneoff helps slow fashion brands minimize waste while sustaining their business too. The retailer is mindful about working with brands that have intentional production practices to ensure the pieces they sell are truly “leftovers” and are not just from reckless overproduction.

Size Range: XS – XXL

Price Range: $

two girls reading wearing affordable sustainable fashion from Oneoff

3. Best for outdoor essentials: tentree

For adventure enthusiasts whose vacation plans rarely involve jet-setting off to a tropical destination for a leisurely getaway, tentree has a range of essentials for all sorts of thrill seekers who live to explore.

From biodegradable jackets to moisture-wicking hoodies, and functional backpacks, nothing feels better than wearing outdoor gear from a brand that cares about the earth. Not only does tentree plant 10 trees for every product sold, but customers also get to track these trees and see where they will be planted through the unique tag present on the item they purchase.

Size Range: XS–XL

Price: $$-$$$

Sustainable brown and military green jacket

4. Best for basics: Kotn

Kotn has elegant minimalist pieces — from tees to knitwear — made ethically and sustainably. The conscious label works directly with farms to source their cotton, which ensures higher (and more reliable) wages for farmers while keeping prices low for shoppers.

Size Range: XS-XXL

Price Range: $ – $$

Basic brown top from Kotn

5. Best for loungewear: Pact

Pact offers GOTS-certified organic cotton underwear, pajamas, loungewear, and casual apparel for everyone in the family. Their selection of loungewear includes sweatshirts, sweatpants, tees & tanks, and shorts. All of the brand’s pieces are made in Fair Trade Certified factories.

Size Range: XS-XXL

Price range: $

Use code CONSCIOUSSTYLE20 for 20% off

brown-gray organic sweatshirt and sweatpants from affordable sustainable fashion brand Pact

6. Best for undergarments: Organic Basics

Organic Basics is a go-to for finding versatile wardrobe staples — or well, basics. The brand continues to expand beyond underwear and t-shirts though, now carrying a variety of affordable sustainable clothing — from pajamas to denim. All of their pieces are made transparently in factories with third-party certifications using eco fabrics like Tencel and recycled wool.

Size Range: XS-XXL

Price Range: $$

Sustainable beige underwear from Organic Basics

7. Best for swimwear: Londre

If you’re looking for affordable, size-inclusive swimwear that doesn’t pollute the oceans that you plan to swim in, Londre has got you covered. With a wide range of different styles and colors to choose from, Londre creates low-impact, high-quality swimwear in small batches using recycled waste plastic bottles collected from beaches and streets.

Each swimsuit, made in an OEKO-TEX 100 certified factory that pays living wages, contains a minimum of six recycled plastic bottles.

Size range: XS – 4XL

Price: $$

Sustainable green swimsuit from Londre

8. Best for jewelry: ABLE

Fair trade fashion brand ABLE began with selling scarves and is now a full-fledged apparel and accessories brand with ethically-made clothing, bags, shoes, and jewelry. In an unprecedented move towards transparency, the brand publishes the lowest wages in their supply chain.

Size Range: XS-XL

Price Range: $$

Ethical golden ring from Able

9. Best for activewear: Girlfriend

Girlfriend is a sustainable activewear brand best known for their sports bras and leggings made from recycled plastic bottles. The brand also has super comfy sweats and unisex outerwear, all made from organic and recycled fibers. Once you’ve worn out your Girlfriend pieces, you can send them back to the brand to be recycled into new garments through their “reGirlfriend” program.

Size Range: XXS-6XL

Price Range: $$

Sustainable maternity activewear from Girlfriend

10. Best for sneakers: Thousand Fell

Thousand Fell is a sneaker brand making strides in circular fashion and helping you put your most stylish foot forward at the same time. Combining circularity, style, comfort, and performance, they create recyclable sneakers that never have to end up in a landfill. They turn coconut husk, sugar cane, and recycled plastic bottles into sneakers. And they have a program that will take back your old, well-worn Thousand Fell sneakers, recycle them within the US, and put them into future Thousand Fell Sneakers — plus you’ll get $20 to put towards a fresh pair.

Size range: 5 – 10 (Women’s) and 8 – 13 (Men’s)

Price: $$

Sustainable white sneakers from Thousand Fell

11. Best for menswear: No Nasties

No Nasties creates vegan affordable ethical clothing with the intention of not only minimizing their impact, but choosing to actively make a positive impact. They do this by saving water, planting trees, and offsetting their carbon emissions — and sharing this data with their community so that they’re not just empty promises. No nasties keep no secrets about where their clothing is made (fair factories), what it is made from (100% organic cotton), and how it is packaged (recyclable packaging) so that you know exactly how your clothes were made.

Plus, they offer a three-part Circular System that allows you to either resell, repair, or reincarnate your No Nasties garments into a new garment.

Size range: XS – XXL

Price: $

Sustainable mens outfit from No Nasties

12. Best for men’s accessories: Nisolo

Committed to paying fair, living wages, Nisolo has joined fellow ethical fashion band ABLE in publishing the lowest wages in their supply chain. Beyond wages, the B-Corp also ensures makers work in safe conditions and receive benefits. While Nisolo does not use only eco materials, their jewelry is made from upcycled brass.

Price Range: $ – $$$

Ethical mens belt from Nisolo

13. Best for fine jewelry: Mejuri

Commanding and refined, Mejuri’s range of fine jewelry exudes a striking sense of confidence through its dainty and modern masterpieces.

Crafted using recycled precious metals and consciously considered diamonds, this woman-owned brand has earned the Positive Luxury’s Butterfly Mark certification, which is awarded to brands that demonstrate increasingly high standards in social impact and environmental sustainability. 

From everyday earrings to necklaces, rings, and bracelets that emanate an understated charm, you’ll surely find an investment-worthy heirloom here.

Size Range: 4-10 for rings; 6-8 inches for bracelets; N/A for earrings and necklaces

Price Range: $$+

eco-friendly jewelry under $150 from Mejuri

14. Best for outerwear: Patagonia

While largely known for sustainable activewear and jackets, Patagonia actually has quite a selection of clothing as well! The earth-minded brand uses sustainable materials throughout their collections, such as hemp, TENCEL, and organic cotton. Plus, the majority of their products are sewn in Fair Trade Certified factories.

Size Range: XS-XL

Price Range: $$ – $$$

Ethical red jacket from Patagonia

15. Best for denim: Warp + Weft

A traditional pair of jeans takes 1,500 gallons of water to make, but a pair of Warps requires less than 10. Warp + Weft is a family-owned company that has been in the denim business for three decades, using an eco-friendly mill to make each pair. They design their denim for all bodies and offer a range of styles — from skinny to wide leg.

This affordable ethical clothing brand treats and recycles 98% of the water used in production and opt for Dry Ozone technology instead of harmful bleaching practices.

Size range: XXS – XXL

Price: $$

Ethical denim jeans from Warp + Weft

16. Best for button-up shirts: Armedangels

A well-tailored, button-up shirt is one of the most versatile pieces in any trans-seasonal wardrobe and Armedangels has a whole range of affordable sustainable clothing options for you to choose from. For each shirt, you can browse the material breakdown, care instructions, and certifications. They use fabrics made from organic cotton and recycled materials. Plus through their Living Wage Project, they are taking steps to ensure that all workers at the Mergü factory that they use are compensated fairly.

To help make your loved clothes last, they provide detailed care guides and repair tutorials.

Size range: XS – XL

Price: $$

Ethical pink button-up shirt from Armendangels

You May Also Want to Check Out:

Organic Cotton Clothing Brands

Hemp: Behind this Sustainable Fiber + Stylish Hemp Brands

Eco-Friendly Dresses for Any Occasion

The post 16 Affordable Sustainable Clothing & Accessories Brands for Accessible Conscious Style appeared first on Conscious Life & Style.

16 Affordable Sustainable Clothing & Accessories Brands for Accessible Conscious Style

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Classic Sustainability In Your Ear: Coastal Flooding in 2050 With Climate Scientist James Renwick

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Listen to “Earth911 Interview: Coastal Flooding In 2050 With Climate Scientist James Renwick” on Spreaker.

Turn back the clock to hear an early warning from James Renwick, co-author of the upcoming 2021 United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UNIPCC) report and head of the School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences at Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand, joins Earth911 to discuss the prospects for coastal flooding due to climate change. He shares troubling but important insights into how much seas have already risen since the 1800s — about one foot — and the potential for up to two feet more flooding in the coming century. He also reports the UNIPCC will acknowledge that the critical 1.5C warming threshold is locked in unless the world takes radical action to reduce emissions immediately. Humanity has already committed future generations to potentially disastrous climate impacts, he says.

James Renwick, a lead author of the 2021 United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report and head of the School of Geography, Environment, and Earth Sciences at Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand.

Renwick explains how much water is stored in Antarctica and the projections for economic and housing losses along the U.S. East Coast, which is particularly prone to flooding because of the configuration of ocean currents. He also discusses the growing accuracy of climate models and how accelerated warming seen in recent years appears poised to continue speeding ice loss at the poles. But, Renwick argues, the international climate dialogue has shifted from resistance to acknowledgment of climate impacts and growing national and local action, which gives him hope. “Things are moving in the right direction,” he told Earth911’s Mitch Ratcliffe. “But we’ve got a lot of work to do.”

The upcoming COP26 meeting of global leaders, which was postponed to the fall of 2021 due to the pandemic, will feature many nations’ increased commitments to reduce emissions. In the meantime, he urges individual citizens to speak out and choose sustainably produced products, as well as support effective local remediation projects, such as tree-planting programs. Each of us can make a difference. Start your journey with this conversation with Professor James Renwick.

Editor’s Note: This podcast originally aired on January 1, 2021.

The post Classic Sustainability In Your Ear: Coastal Flooding in 2050 With Climate Scientist James Renwick appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/earth911-interview-coastal-flooding-in-2050-with-climate-scientist-james-renwick/

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7 DIY Recycled Bird Feeders

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Before you throw away that empty soda bottle, wine bottle, or milk carton, think about turning it into a bird feeder.

These seven DIY projects show how to reuse common household items to make useful backyard wildlife stations. There’s something for everyone, whether you’re crafting with kids or have experience with tools. Whenever possible, choose glass instead of plastic. Experts say glass bottles last longer in the sun and are easier to clean than plastic.

This article contains affiliate links that help fund our work.

1. Soda Bottle Bird Feeder

Bird feeder #1: You can make a simple, quick DIY bird feeder out of a soda bottle and two wooden spoons or dowels. Photo: Flickr/DENISE CRYER

The soda bottle bird feeder is a classic project that’s easy for anyone to make. Start by saving a 1- or 2-liter soda bottle from the recycling bin. Then, find two wooden spoons, dowels, or sturdy twigs from around your home or yard. These will serve as perches for the birds.

To make one, follow the instructions from Gardening Know How: mark two sets of holes at right angles, insert the spoons or dowels, fill the bottle with birdseed, put the cap back on, and hang it up with string or fishing line. If you’re working with young kids, adults should handle the cutting.

If you prefer not to do DIY from scratch, you can buy soda bottle bird feeder kits. Just attach the tray and wire to your own bottle.

2. Milk Carton Bird Feeder

Making a bird feeder from a milk or juice carton is just as easy as using a soda bottle. The Audubon Society even has a version that’s great for kids. Cut a large opening a few inches from the bottom on one side, add a stick underneath for a perch, make two small holes at the top for hanging, decorate it, and fill with birdseed.

Keep in mind that milk cartons don’t last as long as plastic or glass feeders. Watch for signs of wear and replace your feeder when needed. Remember to recycle the old carton.

3. Tray Bird Feeder

Upcycle old window frames, picture frames, or other wood scraps into a tray bird feeder. Photo: Flickr/ben.thomasson

If you have leftover wood from a home project, you can make a simple tray feeder using Birds & Blooms’ instructions. You’ll need cedar or pine scraps, an aluminum screen for drainage, panel nails, eye screws, and some chain for hanging. You should also be comfortable using a drill and hammer.

You can also reuse old windows, picture frames, or other wooden items from around the house to make a tray feeder. One Instructables tutorial shows how someone built a feeder from the wooden backing of an old bronze award.

Tray feeders bring in many types of birds, like cardinals, chickadees, woodpeckers, and mourning doves. However, they don’t keep out squirrels.

4. Floppy Disk Bird Feeder

If you have some old floppy disks lying around, you can turn them into a retro bird feeder using an Instructables guide.

You’ll need to take apart three disks, remove the magnetic film, cut a window for the seeds, put the pieces together to form a cube, and attach a string for hanging. Use tape or a hot glue gun to hold it together, then add birdseed inside.

5. Self-Refilling Glass Bottle Bird Feeder

This gravity-fed feeder is a smart upgrade from basic designs. Remodelaholic’s wine bottle bird feeder tutorial explains how to build a simple wooden platform with a notched holder that keeps an upside-down glass bottle just above the seed tray. As birds eat, gravity refills the tray with more seed.

You need only a recycled wine bottle (or any narrow-neck glass bottle) and some wood for this project. The screw-based mount makes it easy to remove the bottle for refilling. Use a low- or no-VOC wood sealer to protect the frame.

6. Plastic Bottle Hummingbird Feeder

Want to bring hummingbirds to your yard? Try this Instructables guide for making a hummingbird feeder from recycled plastic containers. It uses a pop bottle and a deli container lid, like the ones from grocery store takeout, with milk bottle caps glued on as feeding ports.

Fill the bottle with hummingbird nectar. The International Hummingbird Society suggests mixing one part white sugar with four parts water. Don’t use food coloring, honey, or artificial sweeteners. The red parts of the feeder attract the birds, not the nectar itself.

If you want something sturdier and easier to clean, Birds & Blooms offers instructions for a glass bottle hummingbird feeder that uses copper wire and a commercial feeding tube. This version takes more effort to make but lasts much longer.

7. Glass Soda Bottle Bird Feeder 

Source: Birds and Blooms

This is a step up in craft and durability, and a good reason to save that glass Jarritos or Mexican Coke bottle. Birds & Blooms’ glass soda bottle feeder tutorial pairs a recycled glass bottle with a chicken feeder base for a sturdy feeder that holds plenty of seed and will last for years.

The most involved step is drilling a hole in the bottle’s bottom using a diamond drill bit under running water to keep the bit cool so the glass doesn’t crack. A steel rod threads through the bottle and into the chicken feeder base, locked in place with a washer and wing nut; a G-hook at the top completes the hanger. To refill, simply unscrew the base, add seed, and reattach.

This DIY project requires comfort with a drill and patience with glass, but the result looks intentional and well-made, not like a weekend craft project. For the nectar-recipe and feeder-cleaning guidance that applies to all glass bottle builds, the International Hummingbird Society’s feeding page and Birds & Blooms’ black oil sunflower seed guide are solid references depending on what you’re trying to attract.

To find out where to recycle glass bottles in your area, check the Earth911 Recycling Directory. Most curbside programs don’t accept them, but many drop-off sites do.

Tips for Bird Feeders

  • Clean your feeders every one or two weeks to stop mold and bacteria from harming birds.
  • Hang feeders at least five feet above the ground and away from bushes where cats might hide.
  • Black oil sunflower seeds attract the most types of birds.
  • For hummingbird feeders, change the nectar every two or three days. In hot weather, change it even more often.
  • Plastic feeders break down faster than glass ones in sunlight. Check them regularly and replace when needed.

Related on Earth911

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published in 2014, and was most recently updated in March 2026.

The post 7 DIY Recycled Bird Feeders appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/home-garden/7-diy-recycled-bird-feeders/

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Sustainability In Your Ear: Schneider Electric’s Steve Wilhite Maps the Renewable Energy Transition

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The global energy system is changing in two big ways: it is moving from centralized fossil-fuel generation to distributed renewables, and it is becoming more digital in how energy is measured, traded, and optimized. Steve Wilhite, Executive Vice President of Advisory Services at Schneider Electric, works at the intersection of these complementary yet challenging transitions. Schneider supports more than 40% of the Fortune 500 with energy procurement and sustainability strategies, managing over $50 billion in annual energy spending. His experience shows something that pledges and press releases often miss: the biggest challenge for corporate sustainability is not money, technology, or political will. The real issue is the gap between ambition and the ability to deliver. Companies are making Science-Based Targets commitments faster than they are building the infrastructure to meet them. Scope one and two emissions are being managed better, but scope three emissions, which come from a company’s supply chain, still present a systems problem that no single company can solve alone. Schneider’s zero-carbon supplier program suggests what it takes to close this gap. When the company started its own effort to cut emissions from its top 1,000 suppliers by 50% in five years, all 1,000 signed up within two weeks. However, about 84% of them did not fully understand what they had agreed to. Achieving success meant creating measurement tools, education programs, and action plans to help the whole ecosystem, not just individual companies.

Executive Vice President of Advisory Services at Schneider Electric, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.

This critical conversation explores how renewable energy is bought, including the difference between physical and virtual power purchase agreements. Steve also explains why the Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) market became more complex as it grew, and why 10% fewer renewable deals closed in 2025 compared to 2024, as tech companies used up available clean energy. He also addresses a key question in clean energy: is AI helping the environment overall, or do its energy needs still outweigh its efficiency benefits? Schneider processes over a million energy invoices each month, and about 50,000 of them had issues that took 10 to 15 business days to resolve. Now, a team of AI systems can handle these in seconds. Accurate energy consumption and billing data directly affect emissions reporting, energy efficiency, and money-saving market decisions. He describes Schnieder’s approach as “frugal AI”: using the right-sized models for each task, running them on clean energy, and choosing simple solutions over complex ones. Looking ahead, electrification is building a global digital energy network in which every meter and adjustment contributes to a new system independent of central plants. As intelligence spreads, power can shift to consumers, communities, and businesses. Schneider is enabling this shift by building a mesh grid in which each point both produces and consumes energy, coordinated by AI. These changes fundamentally reshape the global energy landscape. The central question: will we intentionally build this new, distributed system, or will we repeat centralized patterns digitally?

To learn more about Schneider Electric’s sustainability efforts, visit se.com.

Interview Transcript

The post Sustainability In Your Ear: Schneider Electric’s Steve Wilhite Maps the Renewable Energy Transition appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/sustainability-in-your-ear-schneider-electrics-steve-wilhite-maps-the-renewable-energy-transition/

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