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Jonathan Cohen founded his fashion line in 2011 out of his Brooklyn living room. Yet, even while
launching a company, he says, âI didnât spend as much time in it as I do now.â
The designer isnât exaggerating. A few of the select yet activities he does in his Williamsburg living room during this pandemic age: make coffee, answer emails, work out, sketch, drape, cook, and take âzoom after zoom call.â
Jamie Grill/Getty Images
The $30 billion secondhand market is expected to grow 18% annually through 2024, per Jefferies.
Buying used clothes helps Gen Z avoid repeating outfits, practice sustainability, and make money.
The future of fashion looks a lot like used clothes. Fueling the movement? Gen Z, of course.
The secondhand clothing market is a growing one. It s currently worth $30 billion, according to a recent Jefferies note, and is estimated to grow annually by 18% through 2024. About a quarter of the secondhand market is resale clothing, which Jefferies estimates to grow by 39% annually in the same time frame to eventually comprise over half of the market.
Moving From Sustainable To Regenerative Fashion fibre2fashion.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fibre2fashion.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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One of the most exciting aspects of the spring 2021 collections (which we saw virtually last winter) was the glimmer of hope
these were the clothes we could be wearing for our long-awaited reemergence. But at the moment, we find ourselves still months away from life as we knew it. Until then, the season’s assortment of standout knits works wonderfully for our indoor lives. And pandemic or not, the winter-to-spring transition is always an exciting one. We can finally put the frigid and short days of winter behind us, with sunnier days ahead.