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When we started Christy Dawn, we just wanted to make beauty. We used deadstock because it was better for the Earth (and the most affordable).
As we grew, we realized:
Sustainability Is Not Enough.
We can’t just sustain.
So we asked ourselves:
How can we honor Mother Earth as we’ve promised to do?
How can we work together?
The answer, of course, is soil.
We stand on soil.
Replenishing the soil through regenerative practices is proven to reverse climate change.
Slide for before and after
In a giant leap of faith, Christy Dawn paid for the regeneration of 25 acres of depleted land in Erode, India. Working directly with the farmers and artisans at Oshadi Collective, we’ve been working to replenish the soil through ancient practices of regeneration and traditional wisdom.
Over the past two years,
the Christy Dawn x Oshadi Farm has:
Nourished over 25 acres of land where our cotton is farmed, ginned, woven, vegetable-dyed, and block-printed using centuries-old methods in harmony with Nature.
Directly addressed climate change, successfully drawing down more than 310 tons of carbon from the atmosphere.
Increased biodiversity in the soil, meaning organisms, insects and animals have returned to what was once chemically-treated, barren land.
Farmers have gained financial independence. Everyone from Farm-to-Closet was paid a living wage.
Implemented indigenous practices of regenerative agriculture and traditional artistry.
Yielded beautiful, healthy, regenerative cotton for Christy Dawn’s Farm-to-Closet Collection.
Regenerative
Cotton Fabric
The Truth Is:
We Can Stop Global Warming.
When you shop Farm-to-Closet, you are actively joining the Regenerative Revolution. Each purchase helps replenish even more soil, sequester even more carbon. Plus, you’re wearing a garment with reciprocity stitched into every seam. If you pay attention, you can feel it.
Where We’re Headed
We envision ourselves as land stewards first and clothing makers second. Our goal is to only make pieces that come from land we steward.
What this looks like: We take care of Mother Earth, and she takes care of us — giving us beautiful, healthy cotton that we spin into dresses. The more dresses we can sell, the more land we can steward, the more healing we can do. The cycle continues, and we’re all in it together.
“Take care of the ones who take care of you and the earth will last forever.”
Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass