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Sustainable Fashion: How to Trade & Sell Your Clothes

Only 15% of consumer-used clothing is recycled. However, with a lack of outlets promoted, and sometimes the fees that come along with selling clothes, it is understandable why the average consumer would throw away their clothes instead of re-using, selling or trading them. To tackle this issue during a difficult time, we have compiled a list of ways to sell or trade your unused or old clothes, so you can save some money and also help the environment by giving your clothes a longer lifetime.

Selling Your Old Clothes via Depop or Vinted

Many outlets let you sell your old clothes, but the most popular ones people use are Depop and Vinted. Both of these platforms can be great for making some extra money without having to throw away your clothes, wastefully.

In terms of fees, Depop will automatically charge the 10% fee on the total transaction amount. So for example, if you sell something that totals £20, Depop will receive £2. On the other hand, Vinted is free to list on. However, some variable and fixed fees apply to buyers.

If you are looking to sell on Depop, you will need their Depop app, which is available on the Apple App Store and Google Play. Vinted also has an app which you can download on the Apple App Store and Google Play.

Selling via Facebook Marketplace/Gumtree

If you want to cut down on posting fees and help the environment, selling locally is the way. Using places such as Facebook Marketplace or Gumtree is a great way to find local buyers. You can make these sales in cash which is great if you want to use that money for something else without paying processing fees.

Trading via Social Media

A powerful method of trading clothes has grown in sustainable fashion communities across social media, more specifically through platforms such as Instagram and Twitter. For this method, I would recommend making a seperate account for trading clothes, and presenting them well — to inspire someone to trade their clothes with yours.

Trading Clothes with Friends

Another way of getting rid of your old clothes and replacing them with new ones without spending anything is by trading them with your friends. From swap parties to a simple friend to friend trade, trading with friends is one of the best ways to make sure your clothes find an extended life with a new owner. The method of trading clothes will not just revamp your wardrobe but will also help the environment by extending the lifetime the clothes.

One of the easiest ways to trade clothes is by finding a friend or a person who has a similar or same sized clothing as you. To start, give a friend a shout via social media or text, and see if they are interested. If they need persuading, bring them some facts about sustainable fashion, fast fashion and how trading clothes doesn’t just help both of you, but also the broader system.

Moreover, swap parties are becoming more popular. To host one, all you need is some space, and a few people that are looking to trade clothes. You can make this as straightforward or as complex as you want. From formal invitations to rules, the world is your oyster when it comes to hosting these parties. Make sure to keep things as positive as possible by not spending much money organising it and by being clear on the terms and conditions of the swap party.

Unable to Sell or Trade

If you’re finding it hard to sell or trade and you are thinking of just throwing away your clothes. Do not. There are many other ways you can use your clothes by merely revamping them or re-using them for other purposes. If you have a ripped up t-shirt, think about turning it into a bandana or a piece of cloth which you can use around the house. Have some ripped jeans? Try turning them into a pair of shorts. Your best friend will be YouTube and sustainable fashion blogs that create excellent tutorials on revamping clothes. If these options do not work, and your garments are in good condition, you can donate them to charity. Lastly, make sure to find out how charities treat the clothes if they are not sold or listed in their stores, as burning good quality garments is just as wasteful.

Album Review: Lady Gaga, ‘Chromatica’

“I’ll be your enigma,” Lady Gaga belts out on the chorus of ‘Enigma’, a highlight off her sixth studio album, Chromatica. As a chameleonic pop star whose image was built on artifice, Gaga seems to not only be reclaiming that narrative as her own rather than one forced upon her, but also suggesting that she will continue to embrace it in the future. She knows she can be anything she wants, even as her last studio albums suggested that she might be finally tearing away those layers to reveal who the real Stefani Germanotta is – first, with 2013’s bold, left-field Artpop, in which she simultaneously presented her most unfiltered and most outlandish self, and then with 2016’s stripped-back, rootsy Joanne, which turned out to be little more than another well-orchestrated performance.

Chromatica might not be the natural evolution some might have expected from Gaga following her Oscar-nominated turn in A Star is Born, but it’s also not just another mask for her to hide behind. Instead, the album finds her revamping not her own style but that of her environment by traveling to the universe of Chromatica, a loosely developed concept that mostly boils down to Gaga’s drive to create an alternative space – and soundtrack – for those keen to abandon planet Earth. Musically, it harkens back to her electropop heyday, and though it lacks the kind of stratospheric hooks that propelled her to stardom, it mostly makes up for it with a sense of blissful defiance that gives Chromatica its unique colour. And though the album may initially come off as oddly monotonous and indistinctive for Gaga, its ideas never fully run dry, with more than enough deliriously enjoyable dance-pop moments to keep you engaged.

In fact, the album’s thin sonic palette almost serves to amplify Gaga’s voice and vision, allowing space for some of her most revealing and personal songwriting. “Turnin’ up emotional faders/ Keep repeating self-hating phrases,” she sings on the throbbing ‘911’, before opening up about ingesting anti-psychotic drugs, while ‘Rain on Me’ deals with alcohol abuse. Of the tracks where Gaga reflects on her own image, ‘Replay’ is the most lyrically interesting, as it finds her exploring the conflict between the artist and the person (“The monster is hiding me”), while the self-explanatory ‘Plastic Doll’ has one of the album’s most euphoric hooks that’s reminiscent of a Charli XCX banger. By far the least successful, though, is ‘Alice’, a 90s-inspired house throwback that seeks to jumpstart the record but whose metaphor falls flat as it attempts to paint some sort of parallel between Wonderland and Chromatica.

But it’s those moments of self-reflection that allow Gaga to let herself go on tracks like the propulsive ‘Stupid Love’ or the empowering ‘Free Woman’, in which she flaunts her powerful voice against a disappointingly dry beat. While Chromatica is undoubtedly Gaga’s game, it’s partly thanks to the guest collaborators that are sprinkled throughout that the album doesn’t feel entirely one-note. Gaga and Ariana Grande play off each other’s strengths perfectly on the disco-inspired ‘Rain On Me’, while the unexpected contribution from K-pop group BLACKPINK on ‘Sour Candy’ sounds slick and infectious, if not entirely memorable. Gaga and Elton John teaming up on ‘Sine from Above’ sounds like a match made in heaven (and it is), but it’s the song’s absurd concept and oddly transcendent late-track breakdown that steals the show. With these tracks, Gaga is embracing the idea that a collaborator can offer so much more to a song than just a marketable guest verse – and in album about “all the colours”, bringing those worlds together makes it feel all the more vibrant.

There’s no denying that Mother Monster can carry a tune on her own, though, and ‘Enigma’, a pop anthem of epic proportions if there ever was one, might be the best example of that. Still, the album is bogged down by its lesser moments, like the vapid ‘Fun Tonight’ or the derivative closer ‘Babylon’, in which the absurdity of the track’s concept is pushed a bit too far – even for Gaga. Chromatica might not be the fully-realized world that its instrumental interludes try to hint at, but it certainly succeeds in delivering more than a few fabulously larger-than-life, nostalgic dance bops. This might not be Gaga shedding the artifice, but it feels like a liberating affirmation that she can paint the world without being anything less than herself.

Bandcamp to Donate Profits to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund

Bandcamp has announced it will be donating 100% of its profits for 24 hours to the NAACP Legal Defense on June 19. The music platform’s decision is in direct response to the ongoing protests over the killing of George Floyd and other instances of racial injustice, while also marking Juneteenth, the anniversary of enslaved African Americans being informed of their liberation in the former Confederate States of America in 1865.

“The recent killings of George Floyd, Tony McDade, Sean Reed, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery and the ongoing state-sanctioned violence against black people in the US and around the world are horrific tragedies,” Bandcamp co-founder Ethan Diamond wrote in a post on the platform’s website. “We stand with those rightfully demanding justice, equality, and change, and people of color everywhere who live with racism every single day, including many of our fellow employees and artists and fans in the Bandcamp community.”

The platform also commited to waiving its revenue shares for “every Juneteenth hereafter”, as well as “allocating an additional $30,000 per year to partner with organizations that fight for racial justice and create opportunities for people of color.”

Diamond added: “The current moment is part of a long-standing, widespread, and entrenched system of structural oppression of people of color, and real progress requires a sustained and sincere commitment to political, social, and economic racial justice and change. We’ll continue to promote diversity and opportunity through our mission to support artists, the products we build to empower them, who we promote through the Bandcamp Daily, our relationships with local artists and organizations through our Oakland space, how we operate as a team, and who and how we hire.”

Read the full statement here.

This Friday, June 5th, Bandcamp will waive its revenue shares for the fourth time to support musicians impacted by the coronavirus pandemic.

 

YG Shares New Protest Track ‘FTP’

As nationwide protests over the killing of George Floyd continue to grow, YG has released a new protest track titled ‘FTP (F-ck the Police)’. Listen to it below.

The California rapper announced the song on Instagram, adding that he had to cancel his previously planned Hollywood and Vine demonstration in Los Angeles for safety reasons. “I was told today that my protest is not safe, and people could get hurt or shot,” he explained. “I’m not trying to get none of my people hurt or shot so I’mma cancel the date.”

“It’s f—ed up but I’m gonna come back bigger and better,” the rapper continued. “I’m partnering with Black Lives Matter and we gonna do this s— the right way. For the people, for the city, and for all the artists that wanna pop out and participate.”

The rapper also revealed that he released the song on YouTube without the help of his label. “They kant (sic) censor me,” he wrote.

Produced by Swish and Larry J, ‘FTP’ follows YG’s previous protest song with the late Nipsey Hussle, ‘FDT (Fuck Donald Trump)’, which dropped during the 2016 US election.

Terrace Martin, Denzel Curry, Kamasi Washington, G Perico, and Daylyt Share Protest Song ‘PIG FEET’

Terrace Martin has shared a new track featuring Denzel Curry, Kamasi Washington, G Perico, and Daylyt. Titled ‘PIG FEET’, the track arrives amidst a national uprising against systemic racism and police brutality following the death of George Floyd. Check out the song, alongside a music video showing images from protests as well as the names of black people who have been killed by police officers, below.

The video opens with sounds of gunshots accompanied by the statement: “This video is happening right outside your window.”

Backed by Washington’s tenor saxophone, Curry delivers his verse: “Helicopters over my balcony/ If the police can’t harass/ They wanna smoke every ounce of me.” He continues: “Murder was the case they gave us/ Manipulate the system so the prison could save us/ Nothin’ can save us.”

Terrace Martin, who co-produced six tracks on Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly, wrote: “Someone asked, how do I feel? I told them hurt, fearless, angry, aware and fully ready to protect me, my family & my people at all cost. I get together with my Black men that felt the same way and created a work of truth. PIG FEET.”

Caucasus University by Vlad Feoktistov

Vlad Feoktistov, a Russian photographer, presented a beautiful, heavenly photography series on the Caucasus University which is based in Tbilisi, Georgia. The photography series was created for an architecture company KOMHive.

Find more work by KOMHive here.

Find more photography by Vlad Feoktistov here and here.

Record Store Day 2020 Reveals Breakdown of Releases: David Bowie, The Cure, Billie Eilish, and More

Earlier this year, it was announced that Record Store Day would make adjustments to its schedule due to the coronavirus pandemic. Now, the list of releases has been unveiled for three new release dates: August 29, September 26, and October 24. Check out the full list on the Record Store Day website.

The first instalment includes: a live album by David Bowie from the 1974 Soul Tour; pressings of Charli XCX’s Vroom Vroom EP and Robyn’s self-titled 2005 album (both on vinyl for the first time); reissues of The Cure’s Seventeen Seconds and Bloodflowers (celebrating their 40th and 20th anniversaries, respectively); a live album by Billie Eilish titled Live at Third Man Records; a live EP by Brittany Howard; Tyler, the Creator’s Cherry Bomb (along with an instrumental version); a box set of John Prine’s first four albums; a five-LP Philip Glass set called The Essential; a two 7″ vinyl by Christine and the Queens titled La vita nuova: sequences 2 et 3, featuring two new songs; a previously unreleased soundtrack for the film Rams by Brian Eno; a new collection of demos by Mac Demarco titled Other Here Comes The Cowboy Demos; a 3 x LP of Gorillaz’ D-Sides; a live album by Kevin Morby; and many more.

Out on September 26th are reissues of Roger Waters’ concert album The Wall, Natalie Prass’ self-titled debut, Destiny Child’s ‘Say My Name’, the Doors’ The Soft Parade, Lil Kim’s 9, Fleetwood Mac’s The Alternate Rumours (on vinyl for the first time), as well as a live album by Tegan and Sara titled Tonight In The Dark We’re Seeing Colors and one by Dinosaur Jr. titled Swedish Fist (Live In Stockholm); a double LP of Bill Evans’ Some Other Time: The Lost Session From The Black Forest and Nas’ God’s Son; a 12″ vinyl of Britney Spears’ Oops!…I Did It Again (Remixes and B-Sides); a reissue of Mikis Theodorakis’ Serpico, and more.

The final batch of releases, out on October 24, includes Beck’s ‘No Distraction / Uneventful Days’ 7″ (featuring a St. Vincent remix); a double LP of Miles Davis’ Double Image: Rare Miles From the Complete Bitches Brew Sessions; a reissue of Freddie Gibbs and Madlib’s Piñata; a 2xLP of Phillip Glass’ Koyaanisqatsi; Ryuichi Sakamoto’s soundtrack for Black Mirror: Smithereens, Jon Brion’s soundtrack for Synecdoche, New York, Randy Newman’s soundtrack for Avalon; and more.

Music Industry Plans ‘Blackout Tuesday’ Following George Floyd’s Death

A number of record labels and other music industry figures have called for a social media blackout on Tuesday, June 2, in response to the death of George Floyd, who was suffocated by a Minneapolis police officer kneeling on his neck during an arrest.

Messages circulated social media on Friday, May 29, calling for a day to “disconnect from work and reconnect with our community”, held as “an urgent step of action to provoke accountability and change.” Warner, Universal, Columbia, Dirty Hit, Empire, Republic, and Caroline were among the companies spreading the message of solidarity.

Using the hashtag #THESHOWMUSTBEPAUSED, the posts urged music industry figures to take a stance as “gatekeepers of culture” to “not only come together to celebrate the wins, but also hold each other up during loss.”

Columbia Records chairman Ron Perry was one of the first to make a statement, writing late on Thursday night: “We stand together with the Black community against all forms of racism, bigotry, and violence. Now, more than ever we must use our voices to speak up and challenge the injustices all around us.”

Universal Music Group quoted Martin Luther King Jr. in their Instagram post, writing that “there comes a time when silence is betrayal”.

On Saturday, May 30, more companies including Sony, Atlantic, and Epic, joined the effort and committed to a ‘Blackout Tuesday’.

A number of musicians including Beyoncé, Killer Mike, Rihanna, and Lady Gaga have also spoken out to express solidarity with the black community and demand justice for George Floyd.

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#theshowmustbepaused #blacklivesmatter

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THIS IS NOT OK.

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Say my name.

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Olkhon Island by Eveline Iagofarova

Eveline Iagofarova, a well-talented photographer out of Russia, has presented an adventurous series in which she visited the Olkhon Island in Lake Baikal, the third-largest lake island in the world.

Writing about the series Iagofarova said: Right before this whole quarantine thing started around the world, I got a chance to make one of my dreams to come true. The dream was to visit Lake Baikal in winter (and I definitely want to see it in summer too).”

Find more brilliant work by Eveline Iagofarova here.

10 Classics to Read in Isolation

Isolation has forced many of us to find new hobbies, including reading. If you are not much of a reader, now is the perfect time to pick up a book—and what better place to start than with some of literature’s most excellent? If you are a reader, here are ten classics you may have been putting off reading.

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

This Russian novel may seem formidable at first, but its length is justified by the vibrancy between its pages—864, to be exact. The book was published in 1877 and follows the journey of its titular character as she abandons her husband for a younger man, less esteemed man. Framing the main plot is the arc of Anna Karenina’s brother, who has also been unfaithful to his spouse. The only difference is that as a man, he is not publicly shamed for his infidelity, while Anna must give up everything, including her beloved young son.

The plot is layered enough to explore the main characters’ inner turmoil as well as side characters’ bitter heartbreaks and bittersweet hopes. Reading the story of this socially outcast woman from a twenty-first-century perspective offers a unique insight into the unjust world Anna lived in. Yet, despite the condemnation she faces for what her society believes to be her crimes, we never judge her. We’re only accompanying her for the ride as observers. By the end of the book, you may feel like you’ve read a story about everything.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

Published in 1960, this is a modern classic told from the point of view of a six-year-old girl named Jean—who insists on being called “Scout”—living in Alabama during the Great Depression. Her father Atticus is a lawyer trying to defend a black man named Tom Robinson from a crime he never committed. The townsfolk disapprove of Atticus’ decision to help Tom. At school, the children make fun of Scout.

The heavy subject matter is balanced out by the adventures of the main character, her older brother Jeremy—whom everyone calls “Jem”—and their friend Dill who visits their town every summer. The trio is simultaneously fascinated by and terrified of the mysterious recluse Arthur “Boo” Radley who lives nearby. This character becomes a centrepiece to the book’s plot and in the end offers a unique perspective on the inequalities that define the town.

Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery

This series consists of eight books that follow Anne Shirley’s life on Prince Edward Island, Canada. Published between 1908 and 1921, the events of the first book take place between 1876 and 1881, and the last book concludes in 1918 along with World War One. The heartwarming, imaginative, and inspiring story rejects contemporary ideas surrounding the role of women in society and the household.

Anne begins as an eleven-year-old orphan, until the elderly Cuthbert siblings adopt and love her. She dreams of becoming a renowned author and experiencing a “tragical romance”, all while adventuring and exploring with her friends. The message of the story is to hold onto one’s imagination and look out for friendship in the unlikeliest of places.

East of Eden by John Steinbeck

East of Eden is considered by many to be Steinbeck’s most ambitious novel and his magnum opus, and rightly so because it seems to encompass everything. The story explores the intricacies of two families—the Trasks and Hamiltons—living in the Salinas Valley, California between 1900 and 1945. Steinbeck takes great care to detail the setting and the two families’ histories. For the reader, this book is a swan dive through history that holds a microscope up to the characters’ internal struggles, their desire for greatness, and their struggles to be accepted. Many of the novel’s themes compare to those of the Book of Genesis.

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

Published in 1813, this feminist piece of literature was released ahead of its time. The main character is a young woman named Elizabeth. She is the second eldest of five sisters born to Mr and Mrs Bennet, who live comfortably on a slightly above-average income. Mrs Bennet is obsessed with finding husbands for her daughters until her youngest, Lydia, stumbles into an unwanted elopement. Mrs Bennet becomes indisposed, and Lydia realises that her husband has no interest in her. Meanwhile, Elizabeth tries to ignore her mother’s wishes and follow her dreams to be a woman in society rather than somebody’s wife.

Her older sister Jane finds a loving husband in a wealthy man from a town whose best friend is Mr Darcy, a man Elizabeth judges to be rude and haughty. She immediately despises him but becomes confused by his taciturn advances at public events. She is further confused and angered when he proposes to her out of the blue. However, Mr Darcy is more than meets the eye.

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

Alcott originally wrote this iconic story in two instalments, which were published in 1868 and 1869. The book explores the lives of five young women of the March family living in nineteenth-century America. Each sister is unique in their personalities, ambitions, and desires. Jo, the narrator, dreams to be an author. She behaves in what some of her peers deem to be an unwomanly manner, but she only wants to hold onto the freedom of her childhood—so much so that she doesn’t want to marry. She believes that she wants to be an independent woman who can make a living writing, but the truth is that she does not want to be alone, either. This internal struggle is the backdrop to her story and the other March sisters’ fates.

Animal Farm by George Orwell

As an allegorical novella, this is one of Orwell’s most famous works and one of the most well-known modern classics. The story is told from the perspective of a group of farm animals who try to rebel against their human farmer. One of their leaders is named Napoleon, and he tries to establish an equal society in which each animal can be free. Since the book was published in 1945, the war is a ubiquitous presence in the backs of readers’ minds. This book is the perfect classic to choose if you’re looking for a quick read.

Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs

Tarzan of the Apes (1912) is the first of a twenty-four-book series about Tarzan, a boy who grows up in a jungle among apes. His parents arrived on what they thought was an uninhabited island but died when Tarzan was a baby. The boy is taken in by the local population of apes, and he grows into a strong, courageous man who behaves more like an animal. However, Tarzan realises that he is different from the other apes. As a boy, he finds the cabin where his human parents lived and using his father’s books, teaches himself to read English, but he can’t speak it.

When a group of humans become stranded on the shores where he lives, Tarzan becomes infatuated by the young woman with them. The book explores the struggles Tarzan deals with as an outsider in both ape and human society. It’s full of adventure and unexpected relationships, which makes this book the perfect choice for those of us experiencing cabin fever.

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

Most of us will never know what it feels like to be a Jew in hiding, but isolation might be the closest we ever come to empathising with Anne Frank even in the slightest. Anne kept this diary from 1942 to 1944 while in hiding during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. It recounts her and her family’s experiences during this time, but also offers many unique and insightful reflections on the state of the world and society. Her voice is innocent, but her words are timeless. Originally written in Dutch, her diary has since been translated to over sixty languages and published around the world.

Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare

Twelfth Night is a romantic comedy that is perfect for those of you looking for something to lift your spirits. It is believed to have been written between 1601 and 1602 for the Christmas season. The story is centred around the twins Viola and Sebastian after they’re separated during a shipwreck.

Viola disguises herself as a man and finds a place to live and work on the shore she washes upon. The house belongs to Duke Orsino with whom Viola falls in love. However, he is already in love with someone else. If the plot sounds familiar, that is because the 2006 film She’s the Man is a very loose adaptation of this play.