While fast fashion and the frantic pace of consumption it induces terribly pollute the planet, Oxfam is launching a challenge to fashionistas on social networks with the #secondhandseptember. Head to the thrift stores!
On a T-shirt sold at €29 and made in Bangladesh, only €0.18 goes to the person who made it, i.e. 0.6% of the selling price according to theOxfam association. In question, the pressure of the fast fashionwho is increasingly strong on the working conditions of subcontractors, but also on the environment. This is why Oxfam decided to react by launching the challenge #secondhandseptember. The principle ? Dress only in second hand this month and share our looks on the networks. And to show that, yes, it is possible, several influencers participate in the challenge. Among them: Victoria from Mango & Salt, Alias Louise, Lucy from We Glow Green, Margaux from Transition Green, Sarah Sorgel, Céline d’Iznowgood and Nawal Bonnefoy. First launched by Oxfam in England, the challenge quickly went viral, with more than 150,000 hits on Instagram since its launch. So get involved and get your #s out to make this French edition a success!
On the program for this edition, a live every Monday with special guestspartners and influencers, a literary evening in the Mezzanine XVIIIth Parisian arrondissement on September 15, at the Mezzanine, a festival in Lille and a evening in Paris at the end of September; a capsule collection of the brand Resapcreated from clothes collected from Oxfam thrift stores and quizzes with luxury second-hand prizes to be won.
The Oxfam association is all year round
Almost 75 years ago, the first Oxfam store opened in Oxford. Its objective: to act against global inequalities and poverty. Since then, the association has opened numerous bookstores or second-hand clothes the sale of which finances solidarity actions. Oxfam has also been denouncing since 2017 the practices of brands that keep women employees in the textile industry in situations of poverty. And participates in particular in the Fashion Revolution Week, a movement launched in 2013 after the collapse of the Rana Plaza textile factory in Bangladesh. To support the association, go to their solidarity shops for a shopping session or to drop off your clothes or books in good condition.
Addresses of Oxfam solidarity stores in Lille, Paris and Strasbourg:
- Bouquinerie de Lille – 19 ter, rue de l’Hôpital militaire, 59000 Lille
- Thrift store and sale of decorative items in Lille – 19, rue de l’Hôpital Militaire
- The Oxfam Dressing Room – 62 bis, avenue Parmentier, 75011 Paris
- Bookstore of the XIth – 8, rue Saint-Ambroise, 75011 Paris
- Books XIVth – 61, rue Daguerre, 75014 Paris
- Strasbourg bookstore and thrift store – 5-7, rue de la Division Leclerc, 67000 Strasbourg