INSTAGRAM OBSESSED

14:08

What is the first thing you do when you wake up? Check Instagram?
Do you wake up scrolling through countless Instagram posts?
In this current postmodern society, we feel pressure to be socially accepted. In todays media saturated, materialistic and consumer-led society, social media sites such as Instagram, Facebook and Twitter are at the forefront of most peoples lives. Having an Instagram account is a must have. We need to have enough Instagram likes to feel happy. "Can you like my Instagram picture?" is a question I get asked, almost daily. Instagram, unlike Facebook is a purely visual site so it comes with the excessive need to look good, and post good content. For many of us we simply go out for lunch and have a burning desire to post a picture of the really cute cafe we are in or the amazing Starbucks coffee we've just bought. The attachment you have to your phone after you've uploaded that long thought about image is ludicrous. The time you waste thinking of that perfect caption and applying that perfect filter.
Is Instagram really good for us? We waste a crazy amount of time of our lives on these social media sites, when the only content we really learn about is; Who is detoxing this week?, Who's bought those Miss Guided trousers? Who went out this weekend?. I understand Instagram has enabled the younger generation to build a career, and its another platform to communicate on (not that I think we need anymore), but social media sites like Instagram have created a growth of depression and self doubt in young teens, making comparisons between your life and someone else's, between your pictures and their pictures or between how many likes they have and how many likes you have. Nowadays the street's are completely swamped with people attached to their phones, it's hard to go out for a meal without checking your phone at least 10 times. Even the moments we should treasure, like marriage proposals and anniversary's are taken over by trying to capture the moment to show off to Facebook. & not to mention DWI (driving whilst Instagramming). 

Snapchat is another big thing taking over, I'll go out with my friends, and most of the night will be spent rewatching that snap you just posted. Which again, comes back ultimately to looking a certain way, and feeling important and superior if you have a long story, letting the world know you go out on the weekend. Everyone can now see your every meal and your every move. 

For me, this doesn't effect the way I feel about myself, as I'm in a place where I feel pretty happy with where I'm at, however in my opinion, this has a big effect on young teens. My 13 year old sister spends hours and hours on these social media sites, teens now have that added stress of feeling like they have to look a certain way. They are deluded with social media, and it seems to be getting worse and worse. Is this generation going to be able to socialise in the real world?, or is it making them brain washed. Mobile phones are completely taking over. We don't even get that small interaction with the waiter when they come to take our order,  there is now mobile phone apps in place to sort that out for you, are we living in a world that is soon going to be completely taken over by phones, leaving us with no real reason to interact in the real world. 



https://www.instagram.com/hannahcrosskey/?hl=en

ETHICS AND SUSTAINABILITY IN H&M

04:59

The fashion industry is the second biggest industry in the world. I done some research into H&M, the brand I shop at the most to see how they're helping to protect the environment.
H&M probably talks about sustainability more than any other fast-fashion brand. It produces a conscious collection made using sustainable and recycled materials, and encourages garment recycling to all its consumers, they don't test on animals and they have a voucher programme offering discounts to those who donate their old clothes at its stores. The brand states that it wants to only use recycled or other sustainably sourced materials.
On April 18, H&M kicked off a major project, intended to collect 1,000 tons of used clothes, called world cycle week, that its promoting heavily. However, Kristen Brodde, the project leader of Greenspeace Fashion, wrote in a press release "H&M's recycling week is in reality a week of illusions since only one percent of collected clothing can be used a recycled fibres", she suggests that offering garment repair services would have done more good than inviting customers to recycle their old clothes and buy new ones.
They have even made a music video promoting this cause in collaboration with rapper M.I.A. Businesse's can become more sustainable both environmentally and economically by collaborating. Big brand collaborations such as H&M and Alexander Wang, Apple and Burberry have been success's due to the fact they offer a sense of exclusivity to draw the customer in and the fact that each brand sits of opposing ends of the market allows them to tap into each other's audiences. The collaborations create something new and innovative, allowing the success of the brand to be sustained in their own market as well as being generated in a new one.

But is H&M really as ethical as it portrays to be? with the irony that H&M has been given the international ethics award, despite being the biggest buyer of clothes made in Bangladesh manufacturing about 25 percent of its clothing, where the minimum wage is the lowest in the world. Its been named one of the best companies to work for despite 850,000 of its textile workers are not being paid a fair wage, which they cant even live on, only 36 dollars a month!!! Some labor groups have even said that H&M put workers in unsafe conditions, by looking for the cheapest work possible.
Although H&M is one of the biggest buyers of organic cotton, it still only accounts for 13.7 percent of its total garment production. Fabrics like cotton are sustainable and easy to produce however others have a much more damaging effect on the environment. For instance the fur industry is thriving currently and struggling to reach the demand, especially since regulations of what fur is permitted to be used, produced and sold where.
H&M manufactures at least 600 million items each year and operates more than 3,200 stores in 55 countries, and if you include its subsidiary brands, such as COS, that number jumps above 3,500 stores, and the company is expanding its locations by 15 percent each year. To operate those stores, not to mention manufacture and ship the clothes requires hell of a lot of resources including, electricity, oil and water. Even if the brand manages to help the environment slightly from one year to the next, its business continues to grow, which remains enormous and far from sustainable.



http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shannon-whitehead/hms-conscious-collection-_b_7107964.html

http://projectjust.com/brand_hm/
http://about.hm.com/en/sustainability.html

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