Reduce-Reuse-Recycle: Seattle Style
Dear Fashionista and DC Goodwill Friends:
I know you think we dress all Grunge-y, like a Michael Lavine photograph — specifically “Benson & Hedges, Seattle 1983.”

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/musicnightlife/2010219547_grunge08.html
And, yes, 25 years later, our street style is as indie as ever. But, maybe, just a tad cleaner. Not quite as worn, ripped and nicotine-stained, as we were back in the days of denim and flannel.
Don’t get me wrong. We still dress like burlesque-anarchists-trekking-across-a-mountain-pass. Think: Betty Page meets Che Guevara meets Himalayan Sherpa. You know, sexy but fierce, and weather appropriate whenever possible.
Yes, here in the Pacific Northwest, we wear our boots tall, our gloves fingerless, our hats warm, and our vintage cocktail dresses to shreds.
And, as you can probably guess, we take our thrift-store shopping seriously. (When the Seattle Goodwill does its annual Glitter Sale in November, squabbles erupt over sequins and catfights go down over beaded gowns. No lie.)
In Seattle, Reduce-Reuse-Recycle is our dedicated mantra, and we are taking it to the next level in the 21st century. The latest fashion trends in our neck of the woods are eco-friendly and eccentric: one-of-a-kind garments made from salvaged fabrics and used clothing.
To give you some examples of clever fashion re-purposing, I spent a recent Sunday afternoon at the 5th annual Urban Craft Uprising in Seattle Center’s exhibition hall.
http://www.urbancraftuprising.com/
One of my favorite vendors of re-vamped vintage, Ms. Kalliber (kalliber.etsy.com) shows how you can push vintage shoes, handbags and other accessories into the realm of wearable art. Her fingerless gloves with badass embroidery across the knuckles speak to my inner juvenile delinquent. [Ed. note: I gotta get me some of these!]

If that’s not naughty enough for you, consider the Technicolor boxers and bikini briefs created by Shesho Designs (www.sheshodesigns.com). According to Shesho’s Seamstress Extraordinaire, Krista Kelly – who by the way has such amazing personal style that I had to take her picture –

the crotches are always made from virgin materials, brand-spanking new. So you can wear those far-out and funky hot pants, without worrying about the funk getting into your junk.
Continuing on with original designs made from new and recycled fabrics, Eon by Selena (http://www.selenaeon.etsy.com/) has streamlined our uncontrollable impulse to wear multiple sweatshirts at the same time. Here is my gal-pal Karra modeling a Eon racing-stripe top –

which was so soft and welcoming that she couldn’t bear to take it off. Yes, she bought it on the spot. Selena also makes fantabulous basket-weave back hoodies and jackets from recycled sweatshirts, as well as new material like organic cotton.
Haberdashers from our little sister city of Portland, OR, Flipside Hats (http://www.flipsidehats.com/) also use salvaged materials and recycled fabrics.
Given that one cannot survive in the Pacific Northwest without a decent hat, Flipside was a popular vendor at the Urban Craft Uprising. (I myself bought two.) Their reversible hats are handmade, each uniquely trimmed with felt flowers, stars, ribbons, fake fur, you name it. Plus they definitely have the Mountain-Guerilla thing going on.
Making new garments from old pieces and reclaimed fabrics is not a trend confined to the Pacific Northwest. No doubt, as the world goes green we will see more repurposed fashion. I don’t know about you, but creative recycling has made me re-think my second-hand store shopping. Why limit the hunt to mint ready-to-wear? With a little ingenuity, something torn, worn, missing all its buttons and full of cigarette holes, might be the perfect raw material to craft something truly unique.
Annie Fanning’s style icon is Bjork and her totem animal is Big Foot. Currently she is obsessing on Visqueen’s new album “Message to Garcia.” You can read her occasionally insightful ramblings on her blog at http://astrafandango.blogspot.com/
The views expressed in this blog are solely those of Annie Fanning and do not necessarily reflect those of Goodwill of Greater Washington or the DCGF.
