Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Garment quality and sustainability: A user-based approach

Connor-Crabb, Anja; Rigby, Emma Dulcie

Authors

Anja Connor-Crabb

Emma Dulcie Rigby



Abstract

This paper explores the role played by female perceptions of garment quality in relation to how long clothing is kept and how it is used. It considers perceptions of quality in relation to implications for sustainability in fashion. The research involves two phases of empirical data collection conducted in the UK. The first phase draws on a subset of findings from a 12-month laundry study that surveyed the use and laundering of 32 different garments across a group of 16 women. The second phase comprises a semi-structured interview study with 13 women and focuses on exploring factors that influence garment lifetimes. The central contributions of this paper are the distinctions it makes between the immediate concepts of clothing quality that are understood as “pre-use” to those more gradually developed experiences of quality learnt “during use.” In use, garments are tied into user practices and as such become woven into the actions and experiences of everyday life. The length of time garments are worn and kept is more closely connected to how quality is experienced subjectively by the user than understood within objective industry-based definitions of quality. In relation to sustainability, this suggests new directions for understanding quality with emphasis on user behavior.

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Nov 7, 2019
Publication Date Sep 2, 2019
Deposit Date Dec 21, 2023
Journal Fashion Practice: the Journal of Design, Creative Process and the Fashion Industry
Print ISSN 1756-9370
Electronic ISSN 1756-9389
Publisher Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 3
Pages 346-374
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/17569370.2019.1662223
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11533744



You might also like



Downloadable Citations