Just as the beautiful Julia Garner actress wins from her show Ozark. OMG I watch it on Netflix with my wife. Sick show!
So she’s the dark blonde.
The guy in middle is her fiance). His name is fiance Mark.
As in is Mark Foster of the band Foster The People.
Yet Gwen, wearing the ECO green dress next to them made history.
As repurposing or recycling goes:
“One person’s trash is another person’s treasure”. This proverb best describes designer Rose Orelup. Designer of sustainable dresses. I mean all made from recycled vinyl window blinds! It was worn by Environmental Scientist, Gwen Lynn. Yes folks! At the recent Emmy Awards.

Eco friendly living typically includes methods of reduce, reuse, and recycle of any and all nonbiogradeable. Fashion as we know it has been identified. Especially as an industry with high waste. Zero waste and sustainable fashion is the future. Moreover as seen in this ingenious and gorgeous dress design.
Eco-friendly living typically includes methods of reduce, reuse, and recycle. Especially of any and all nonbiogradeable. Fashion as we know it has been identified. Consequently as an industry with high waste. Zero waste and sustainable fashion is the future, as seen in this ingenious and gorgeous dress design.
Previously, eco-friendly (the eco is short for “environmentally conscious”) meant rough hemp ponchos. You know and I know. Common those in earth tones or high-priced clothing items.
Now people can find a variety clothing made from materials like organic cotton. As well as recycled fibers and bamboo. All that are not much different from their conventionally made counterparts.
“In the past organic cotton garments were less colorful. Now more neutral and the feel was different from traditional cotton clothing,” Sandberg said. “Now, fabric production for organic cotton is much more sophisticated.”
In fact and most noteworthy, designers are creatively repurposing existing materials. Besides making dresses. So there are purses out of candy wrappers. Also as we see totally new clothes out of discarded fabric and garments.
Why?
Finally and according to the Council for Textile Recycling. It says the industry keeps 2.5 billion pounds of post-consumer textile product waste from entering landfills every year.
Let’s give love to the green dress fonight