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Green Fashion: From the Margins to the Mainstream

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Green Fashion: From the Margins to the Mainstream

Just four years ago, eco designer Samantha Pleet was selling her recently launched clothing line, TG-170, in a small, independent store that sells clothes from lesser-known designers in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Now, anyone anywhere can purchase some of Pleet's earth-friendly styles through Urban Outfitters' online store.

Like Pleet's designs, eco fashion has gone from the margins to the mainstream in the last 10 years. Nowadays, the trend is more than organic T-shirts with a political logo on them, says Sass Brown, an expert on sustainable fashion who came out with the book Eco Fashion in September.

"There's still this stigma about it being, you know, ugly or basic or boring. And that's not the case anymore," says Brown.

Pleet is part of a growing cadre of designers in "ecouture." Her classic silhouettes have a tinge of 1950s style with a modern twist. Old films, books, music, and traveling inspire her, but she stays true to her brand by keeping up with sustainable practices.

From coconut buttons to recycled micro-fiber as faux-suede leather, Pleet tries it all. She also makes it a point to manufacture her clothes in New York City's Garment District, instead of outsourcing production.

"It's really about the clothes first," says Pleet. "And if they're interested in supporting sustainable design, maybe they'll be researching that and find me there."

8 More Lines That Are All About Sustainable Style
Bodkin
Founded by former fashion editor Eviana Hartman, Bodkin offers comfortable yet chic wardrobe staples.
bodkin.us

John Patrick Organic
Wool, vegetable tanned leather, and organic materials are elements in the fall/winter 2010 line at this design company.
johnpatrickorganic.com

Edun
Committed to encouraging trade in Africa, Edun falls under another category of sustainable design — fostering economic growth in developing countries.
edun.com

Noir
This Danish company proves that green can be gorgeous. It's all high-end here.
noir.dk

Linda Loudermilk
Fierce and innovative, this brand isn't afraid to try something new.
lindaloudermilk.com

Ajna
Modern yet traditional, this ethnic-chic line supports artisanal trades and textile development around the world.
ajnacollection.com

Alabama Chanin
Each piece for this line is carefully and slowly crafted to the tune of sustainable standards and the slow pace of life in the South.
alabamachanin.com

Sublet Clothing
Another product of the vibrant green fashion field in New York City, Sublet Clothing prides itself in creating garments that have simple silhouettes and thoughtful details.
subletclothing.com

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Join the Marie Claire team as they jet set around the globe for New York, Milan, and Paris Fashion Weeks, where they'll dish on the latest fashion and beauty news, tips, trends, and dirt straight from the front row.

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elana fishman

Elana

Elana Fishman is Marie Claire's credits editor and fashion news assistant. When she's not hunting down shopping info for bags and baubles, she's scouring flea markets for vintage designer goodies and catching up on the 25+ blogs she reads daily. She loves nothing more than tulip skirts, Arcade Fire, and Momofuku's cornflake-marshmallow cookies.

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Ashley

Ashley Falcon is a fashion stylist and Marie Claire's plus-size columnist. She's proof that fashionistas come in all shapes and sizes as she blogs about her favorite fashion finds, giving advice on dressing for your shape, and answering reader questions.

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Kate

Kate Schweitzer is the senior web editor of Marie Claire. She loves traveling (even back to her hometown of St. Louis, Missouri), eating candy, cheating at Scrabble, and watching TV — so much so that she is a writer for Chaos Theory and Handsome Town, two web comedy series from Emmy-winning PhoebeTV.

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Koryn Kennedy is Marie Claire's associate web editor. She believes in limited use of both personal pronouns and self-tanner, is a coffee snob and a Brooklyn boutique aficionado. Having grown up in Europe, she's never "from around here." Her writing has appeared in the Chicago Tribune, Orlando Sun Sentinel, Esquire.com, Premiere.com, and other movie and culture blogs.

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