Here are the best sustainable lingerie brands to shop now and add to your underwear drawer to create a more eco-friendly wardrobe.
The Hollywood stylist Karla Welch has found a new calling in an up-and-coming menstrual product.
It’s a well-known parenting hack to put baby socks in a zippered mesh lingerie bag before tossing them into the washing machine and dryer. This prevents them from getting lost or—gasp—eaten. But I never thought about using the bags in the dishwasher, too. Commenter BigPharmaSkeptic shared this tip on our post about dishwasher tricks.
In this How To: I show you how I hand dye my vintage style lingerie to create this vibrant custom emerald green to match my What Katie Did seams stockings. I...
From corn shoes manufactured by Reebok to lingerie fabric Naia made by Eastman to all sorts of packaging and electronics, bio-based, compostable products are reaching market.
Minneapolis-based Cake Plus-Size Resale leads the way locally in a nationwide movement
This new It-girl brand combines a Parisian point of view with California ease.
Brands are looking for ways to make hosiery and lingerie sustainable, but technical challenges stand in the way
The age of bras that thrust and pinch is over: Today’s lingerie brands don’t only fit better—they feel better, too.
Today’s guest post is by longtime TLA reader C.L. Bigelow, a sculptor who works in mixed media. Her materials of choice are primarily cast-off materials and what is considered detritus. She calls her approach “making one new whole from many disparate parts.” You can see her work at clbigelow-studios.com. Today’s lingerie marketers are getting smarter about including models with a wider range of body sizes, genders, sexual orientations, skin colors, …