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NEWS: Uncruel Beauty - NYT 01/11/07

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This piece on non-leather fashions from the Styles section of the New

York Times shows how young buyers are increasingly trying to avoid

wearing clothes that depend on the slaughter industry. Just wondering -

does anyone know of any devotee entrepreneurs who specialize in

non-leather fashions - especially shoes, handbags, belts, etc.?

 

 

 

Your servant,

 

 

 

Hare Krsna dasi

 

 

 

*******************************************************

 

 

 

New York Times Jan 11, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

Uncruel Beauty

 

By Ruth la Ferla

 

 

 

HADASS KANTOROWICZ is on the fence. ''I eat less meat than I used to,''

said Ms. Kantorowicz, a self-described tantric healer who stopped in

last week at Organic Avenue, a vegan general store in downtown

Manhattan. ''I'm definitely a lot more conscious than I used to be.''

While she appreciates the virtues of a meat-free diet, she stops short

of embracing a vegan way of life, one that would ask her to forsake a

croc-embossed bag or patent leather pumps. ''And I'm not ready to wear

hemp,'' she confided.

 

But a proliferation of vegan-friendly fashions and stores that ban

animal products outright from their shelves may tempt her to change her

tune. If she has yet to adopt the zero-tolerance approach advocated by

the most militant vegetarians, she typifies the customer that many vegan

marketers are now courting.

 

National chains like Whole Foods; boutiques like MooShoes, a New York

outlet for imitation-leather wallets, belts and bags; online stores like

Pangea; and eco-minded labels like Moral Fiber, Real Fake, Novacas (no

cows) and Matt & Nat are encouraging shoppers, even those merely

flirting with a ''cruelty free'' diet, to embrace its precepts not just

in the kitchen but in their wardrobes. To their minds, vegan chic, once

an oxymoron, is a glossy new marketing handle. Clothes and accessories

once shunned for their aura of hair-shirt deprivation have acquired a

hint of luxury.

 

Vegans, who may be thought of as extreme vegetarians, strive for a diet

and way of life that is noninjurious to both animals and the

environment, directly or through the processing of materials like

leather, wool or silk. From motives of conscience or health, most reject

shoes and clothing made from hides, even those made with animal-based

glues and dyes.

 

''People are more conscious today of what they're wearing, why they're

wearing it and how it affects the environment,'' said Robert Burke, a

fashion retail consultant in New York. To ignore such issues ''is not

sexy today,'' he said.

 

Six months ago Denise Mari opened Organic Avenue on the Lower East Side.

''At one time being vegan meant focusing on what you had to give up,''

she said. ''Today we're stepping beyond the mundane

what-you-need-to-survive approach'' and concentrating instead on ''how

to make this a fun lifestyle that other people can relate to.''

 

''We'd like people to say, 'Wow, look how fashionable this is! I want it

for its style.' ''

 

At her shop Ms. Mari sells hemp and bamboo tanks and shirtdresses, and

even men's suits made from ahimsa silk, a fiber processed without

injuring silkworms ($700).

 

Certainly Ms. Mari and other merchants are beneficiaries of a spike in

the vegetarian population. As of last year, there were an estimated 4.8

million vegetarians in the United States, one-third to one-half of them

vegan, according to the Vegetarian Resource Group, a nonprofit

educational organization. That number has nearly doubled since 1997.

 

But today retailers and designers are aiming at potential customers

identified in a survey last year by Mintel International, a consumer

research company, as ''occasional vegetarians.'' They shop vegan

selectively, as the Mintel study pointed out, but their ''purchasing

power is paramount.''

 

This health- and eco-conscious population has contributed most visibly

to the growth of a $1.2 billion market for vegetarian goods (primarily

dairy, egg, cheese, meat and poultry substitutes and tofu), according to

Mintel, one that jumped 63.5 percent between 2000 and 2005.

 

Just a half-dozen years ago, shoppers searching for cow-friendly wares

had to resort to shoes from Payless, ''vegan'' by virtue of their

synthetic materials, or to utility plastic or canvas boots, wallets and

backpacks sold through Vegan Essentials, one of a handful of online

stores. Now even a few mass marketers are incorporating stylish vegan

products into their lines. Vans promotes its Geoff Rowley vegan

skateboarding shoes, made from synthetic nubuck and rubber. Rampage, a

mall brand, is advertising ''cruelty free'' imitation leather styles.

 

In New York an outcropping of eco-conscious boutiques carries goods that

would pass muster with even the strictest vegetarians. Kaight, a

five-month-old store on the Lower East Side, offers hand-stitched

dresses of recycled cashmere and wool; organic denim jeans; and Linda

Loudermilk dresses made from Lyocell, a biodegradable wood pulp fiber

($275). NY Artificial, in the meatpacking district of all places, sells

one-of-a-kind synthetic suede and leather bags ($275 to $475) and

corset-wide belts made from vegetal, a canvas coated with tree sap.

 

''There is a market for these designs,'' said Alex Guzman, an owner.

''People want to do something about protecting animal and human rights

and the environment. But they don't want to be carrying a canvas tote,

the kind you buy in bookstores.''

 

On the luxury level, Stella McCartney, long an activist for animal

rights, sells canvas, linen, Lucite and imitation leather shoes and

handbags, which, despite prices in the $800 range, have an avid

following.

 

Some of the new customers are picky, cooling their cowhide heels as they

hold out for quality wares. Judith Green, a education consultant, was

happy to try on a wrap dress made of recycled cashmere at Kaight, but

balked at the selection of synthetic shoes. ''I haven't found the wear

and the comfort of a hand-stitched Italian leather shoe,'' she said.

''If I did, I would trade in my own.''

 

There is a strong incentive to offer vegan versions of products seen in

more conventional stores, said Deborah Wasserman, a director of the

Vegetarian Resource Group. It is not uncommon, she noted, to find sexy,

form-fitting PVC biker jackets, plastic iPod cases and stilettos. Such

styles appeal to environmentalists and dedicated vegans alike, she said,

contributing to a measurable growth in the vegan fashion resources.

 

To find them, ''you don't have to go to the hemp store,'' said Marcia

Mogelonsky, a research analyst at Mintel. Whole Foods and health food

co-ops are becoming general stores, selling hemp shower curtains, bamboo

flooring and organic cotton T-shirts along with flaxseed and tofu

turkey.

 

Last year the vegan movement spawned the Vegan Fashion Blog, which

trumpets the aesthetic virtues of Rampage cotton canvas totes, Chinese

Laundry gold-tone plastic sandals, Baby Phat boots with ankle charms and

Lands' End ''toasty'' faux-suede gloves.

 

Such items have particular appeal to fashion indies, whose numbers

proliferate on college campuses, where vegan dining rooms are no longer

uncommon. ''College students are much more invested in a lifestyle that

allows them to think nothing of wearing pleather,'' Ms. Mogelonsky said.

''They have grown up on the three R's: reduce, recycle, reuse.''

 

''They are more likely to adopt vegan fashion,'' she added, ''because

unlike the baby boomers, to them it isn't 'weird.' ''

 

Indeed, there are hints that some young would-be hipsters are feeling

the pressure to conform. ''Here all my friends think eating and shopping

vegan is the cool thing to do,'' said Ms. Kantorowicz, the healer, who

recently moved to New York from Seattle. The movement has derived

impetus from fashion celebrities like Ms. McCartney and from the

entertainment world as well.

 

''Certainly Hollywood has been a big promoter,'' Ms. Wasserman said,

citing the powers of professed vegans like Natalie Portman, Alicia

Silverstone, Woody Harrelson and Joaquin Phoenix.

 

Their vehemence has prompted some trend-conscious shoppers to embrace

vegan wares, if not vegan values. At Stella McCartney, they buy the

shoes and bags favored by Ms. Portman and her peers. ''Most of these

people don't care whether the shoes are leather or not,'' said Tiziana

Lanza, the brand's retail manager in the United States. ''They buy for

the cachet and the design.''

 

Jack McKeever, a singer, musician and sometime vegetarian, stopped by

Organic Avenue last week partly because he was hoping to buy an ahimsa

silk suit that had earlier caught his eye. He admired the fabric and the

look, he said. ''If these people can compete aesthetically, I say, 'Rock

on!' ''

 

PHOTOGRAPHS

 

NO ANIMALS WERE HARMED -- From left: ahimsa silk scarves and a hemp

shirtdress at Organic Avenue, 101 Stanton Street (near Orchard);

croc-embossed imitation leather bag by Danielle Nicole at NY Artificial,

Eighth Avenue at West 12th Street; MooShoes, 152 Allen Street (at

Rivington);

 

a microfiber wedge by Charmone, at Kaight, 83 Orchard Street, near

Broome; and a dress of recycled cashmere by Eko Logic, also at Kaight.

(Photographs by Hiroko Masuike for The New York Times);

 

VIRTUOUS -- Right, cotton Stella McCartney sweater, Ecoganik pants, tank

made of corn fiber by Moral Fervor, Stella McCartney cotton purse,

natural stone pendant by Cole Lopez. Above, a denim dress made of hemp

and recycled polyester by NaturevsFuture and a woven cotton and wood bag

by Stella McCartney. (Photographs by Tony Cenicola/The New York

Times)(pg. G5);

 

CLOTHES WITH A CONSCIENCE -- A cotton sweater coat by Stella McCartney,

with Ecoganik organic cotton pants that are available at Organic Avenue.

(Photo by Tony Cenicola/The New York Times)(pg. G1)

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