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For the sustainably curious men who’d like to shop better but don’t know where to start, consider this your beginner’s guide to brands who are committed to making their menswear mindfully.

When it comes to shopping, consciously adding pieces to your closet is not only the better approach, but also a great way to make more carefully considered clothing choices. Choices that you’ll keep coming back to, the kinds that never seem to go out of style, are high-quality — and ideally — have a lower impact on the environment. If that sounds about right, then look no further, we’ve put together a curation of the best sustainable clothing brands for men that tick most of the eco-friendly boxes and help you elevate your style for the long haul.

From organic loungewear to business casuals that’ll have you rethinking the assumption that anything eco-friendly is frumpy, discover 20 ethical men’s clothing brands that will make you feel good about where you’re spending your hard-earned money.

Where to Find Men’s Sustainable Clothing Brands:

Transparency note: this guide contains affiliate links, meaning we earn a small commission if you choose to shop through these links which helps us continue this site. As always we only feature brands that meet strict criteria for sustainability that we love — and that we think you’ll love too!

1. Harvest & Mill

If you ask us, sustainability starts with everyday essentials. Right from the pajamas you wear, to the tees you have on rotation, knowing that your day-to-day basics were made responsibly, locally, and can be composted at the end of their life will bring you a level of eco-ease. That’s the sort of confidence you can have in the organic cotton essentials from Harvest & Mill.

All of their pieces are crafted from natural, dye-free organic cotton, some of which are made from heirloom variety cotton that naturally grows in shades of brown, green, and red.

What you’ll find: everyday casual wear and loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

2. Patagonia

Your next outdoor adventure will feel all the more relaxing when you know your clothes and gear were made with the pristine nature around you in mind.

A company that recently made headlines after founder Yvon Chouinard gave the business away to fight the climate crisis, sporting Patagonia gear is also about standing for a better way to do business.

Expect to find high-performance gear and clothing made from the most mindful materials and recycled fibers that are making a difference. For used Patagonia apparel and gear, check out their Worn Wear site.

What you’ll find: outdoor clothing, casual wear, loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

3. Asket

Curating a lasting wardrobe is not too dissimilar to building a retirement portfolio. Just like valuable assets, your clothes should be in it for the long haul and offer a higher return on investment. But every portfolio needs an advisor, and there’s no brand that offers high-quality wardrobe perennials like Asket.

Their permanent collection is chock full of everyday essentials that’ll outlive passing trends and seamlessly transition from season to season and is crafted from materials like organic cotton, TENCEL™ Lyocell, reclaimed wool, and recycled cashmere.

What you’ll find: business casuals, casual wear, intimates, and other everyday essentials

Price: $$-$$$

4. Toad&Co

A mission-driven brand that started out by offering outdoor gear, Toad&Co now creates ethically made men’s clothing items that work for everyday adventures like comfortable activewear, cozy loungewear, smart casuals, and snuggle-worthy outerwear crafted in the best eco-friendly materials.

The brand also partners with a warehouse that employs and trains individuals for disabilities, while facilitating outdoor adventures for them, for some of whom, these trips have been the first adventures they’ve ever had.

What you’ll find: casuals, activewear, outdoor clothing, and loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

trousers from sustainable men's clothing brand Toad&Co

5. Grailed

A secondhand online marketplace with no shortage of menswear, Grailed is a great place to explore the coolest streetwear finds, along with designer pieces from the likes of Balenciaga, Dior, Gucci, and many more in near-mint condition if you’re in the market for a budgeted luxury buy.

All of their big-ticket designer items have been authenticated using a combination of human and machine moderation to help ensure everything you buy is legit.

What you’ll find: casual wear, loungewear, and business casuals

Price: $$-$$$$

6. No Nasties

No Nasties is an Indian sustainable clothing brand that creates everyday essentials for men in organic materials using no nasty processes, just as its namesake so aptly suggests.

With “emit less, balance the rest” as its mantra, the brand offsets the carbon footprint of every product they make, while also eliminating waste, and upcycling its overstock fabrics into new styles.

What you’ll find: casual wear, loungewear

Price: $$

7. unspun

Ever dreamed of owning a pair of well-fitted denim jeans that don’t require a belt to stay in place? The denim makers at unspun are here to make those dreams come true.

Unspun creates customized jeans on a made-to-order basis using a 3D scan of your body to offer you the best fit ever. Their denim is crafted from organic cotton material and processed with low-impact dyes using water that’s recycled and fed back into the system.

The bonus: If you’re dissatisfied with the fit, they’ll alter it for you free of charge!

Intrigued to know more? We broke down the steps on how you can get a custom-made pair from them online in this guide.

Price: $$$

8. Story mfg.

For the men who enjoy sporting a great print on their clothing, appreciate art, and sartorially enjoy channeling their hippie side, Story mfg. has everything you need. With a high focus on craft and non-toxic clothing processes, the brand even states that they carry out the natural dyeing in a re-planted forest where all of their waste is used to fertilize the gardens right after.

Consider this your one-stop shop for print-happy graphic t-shirts, patchwork jackets, and hand-knitted sweatshirts.

What you’ll find: casual wear and loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

9. Outerknown

Move over coastal grandma, Outerknown has been mastering the laid-back coastal lifestyle look since 2014. Co-founded by surfing legend, Kelly Slater, the brand is known for its après surf style offerings that include cozy blanket shirts to layer up in, crew neck sweaters, relaxed fit denim, and a lot more that are made from conscious materials like organic cotton, hemp blends, along with recycled polyester and nylon for its performance wear, like the high-performance swim trunks that were developed and tested by the pro-surfer himself.

What you’ll find: casuals, activewear, loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

10. Kotn

If you’re searching for timeless pieces that don’t adhere to ever-changing trends and were made to last in a sea of throwaway clothing, then look no further. Kotn’s range of elevated everyday basics comes in minimalist neutrals that can easily work with your existing wardrobe and help you level up your style quotient.

Made from low-impact fibers like linen, lyocell, organic cotton, and other cotton varieties, the brand uses its profits to help fund the education of children in rural Egypt, where some of its cotton is grown.

What you’ll find: casual wear, loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

11. Armedangels

Armedangels is a German brand that’s creating sustainably-minded everyday basics. Think t-shirts, shirts, polos, knitwear, outerwear, and denim, everything that lays the very foundation of your wardrobe, but made better.

With a special focus on creating low-impact denim, their DetoxDenim range is free from the slew of toxic dyes and chemicals that are usually found in the production process of conventional jeans. While their Circular denim is mechanically recycled and consists of 20% recycled organic cotton residues and waste from their own production.

What you’ll find: casual wear, loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

12. De Bonne Facture

Derived from the French expression that describes “a way of doing things well”, De Bonne Facture marries Parisian style with skilled craftsmanship to bring you sophisticated separates made from the finest eco-conscious materials.

With high importance on provenance, each piece comes with a hangtag detailing the name, locality, and history of the atelier that made it, just like fine French wine.

What you’ll find: casual wear, business casuals, loungewear

Price: $$$

13. Ecoalf

Born out of the vision to stop carelessly using natural resources, Ecoalf creates most of its clothing using recycled materials, predominantly ocean plastic. Since 2015, the brand has been collecting plastic waste with help from the fishing industry and transforming it into yarn and fabrics to produce high-quality sustainable clothing for men and women.

From slick streetwear casuals to loungewear essentials and weather-resistant clothing, Ecoalf has everything you need to hit the slopes or streets in style.

What you’ll find: streetwear, activewear, outdoor clothing, and loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

14. Opera Campi

Opera Campi is an Italian made-to-order men’s slow fashion brand that uses hemp as its hero fabric. Full of enduring everyday styles that speak to the minimalist aesthetic, their hemp fabric comes in all-natural and woolen blends to suit your seasonal needs.

We love the fact that they’ve invented a “moon button” from a sustainable metal that gets its namesake from the patinated look it achieves after being buried in microorganism-rich soil for three days.

What you’ll find: casual wear, loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

15. Nudie Jeans Co.

If you’re in the market for a fresh pair of lifetime-quality jeans, then look no further. Nudie Jeans Co. creates its denim material from 100% organic cotton in a wide variety of washes and styles. The brand also repurposes and recycles its used jeans to resell them as secondhand styles.

We love the fact that each one of their fit styles has a quirky name to it instead of the run-of-the-mill straight, slim, or wide leg. Whether you’re leaning towards a Lean Dean, Rad Rufus, Thin Finn, or Gritty Jackson, there’s a fit style to suit every taste.

What you’ll find: denim jeans, along with casual wear and loungewear pieces

Price: $$-$$$

16. Olderbrother

Featuring cool casuals in a color palette defined by nature, Olderbother is a men’s sustainable fashion brand that treats its clothing using nature-derived hues from oak tree barks, gooseberries, turmeric, and other plant sources. The resulting colors feature intentional imperfections and unevenness that will become darker when exposed to the sun and over time.

Primarily crafted from organic cotton, their range of elevated casual wear also features unique blends of wool, woven rice paper, and linen.

What you’ll find: casual wear and loungewear

Price: $$$

17. JCRT

JCRT is a zero waste men’s slow fashion brand that creates all things plaid in polished styles on a made-to-order basis. But, don’t let their love of plaid intimidate you, these tartans come in cool color combinations, while some pieces are remixed with elements like skulls, journal notes, shapes, and symbols to create a unique print that’s processed using low-impact dyes and less water, compared with traditional garment production.

What you’ll find: casual wear and loungewear

Price: $$-$$$

Read More About Conscious Fashion:

What is Sustainable Fashion?

What is Slow Fashion?

What is Ethical Fashion?

About The Author:

Jharna Pariani is a fashion writer and creative strategist whose work is rooted in honesty and deep observation of the world around her. When she isn’t busy penning down her thoughts, she moonlights as a video editor creating fashion and food reels on Instagram for several brands and influencers

The post 17 Men’s Sustainable Clothing Brands You Should Have on Your Radar appeared first on Conscious Life & Style.

17 Men’s Sustainable Clothing Brands You Should Have on Your Radar

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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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