Tag: charity clothing

 

bluejacket Fashion and fund raising

A 26 year old photographer in Aberdeen is using her talents as both a model and a photographer to help her local Cancer Research UK shops to sell their donated fashion items.

Ali Smith has been fundraising for cancer charities since her mother died of ovarian cancer when Ali was seventeen. Now she’s been able to help the shops promote their clothing rails by working with model Rebecca Tulloch to take pictures of both fashion items and vintage clothing that have been displayed in the shops in the Aberdeen area. The photographs are both studio shots of Rebecca and self-portraits of Ali, in donated clothing such as evening wear, sportswear and casual T-shirts and jeans. Cancer Research UK regional manager Ken Donaldson said, ‘Ali’s shots look fantastic and show there are some really classy items available at bargain prices from [our] shops.’

And Prince Harry’s African children’s charity Sentebale is undergoing a major shake-up.

It was set up to assist 400,000 orphans of HIV-Aids in Lesotho. Now a new Chief Executive is moving the organisation forward after rumoured financial problems led to intense public scrutiny of the charity’s performance.  The aim of Sentebale, which means Forget-Me-Not in Sotho language of Lesotho, is to assist the many destitute children who live in the country.

It is estimated that 15,000 children have the disease, though no one knows for sure and less than 3,000 are being treated with anti-retroviral drugs. Because of the one-in-three adults who have HIV-Aids in Lesotho, boys as young as five may be sent to the mountains to herd sheep alone – they have no access to education and lack blankets and warm clothing. In addition to education about HIV-Aids, the charity provides teachers and books, family planning for adults, and weatherproof jackets and boots and bedding for migrant sheep-herding boys.

UC203 300x300 Clothing for good causesJust as containerloads of overstock clothing and donated garments are making their way to Haiti to aid the victims of the earthquake there, British people are also benefitting from free clothes, but they aren’t exactly donations.

Trading standards officers in East Yorkshire have found a novel way of disposing of counterfeit clothing that they’ve seized in raids on shops and fake auctions. Warehouses full of knock-off T-shirts, belts and trainers are being stripped of their fake logos by a local charity and then given to the homeless.

A spokesman for the trading standards organisation said, ‘Disposing of counterfeit goods, seized by trading standards officers during their normal day-to-day operations, has always been difficult … Many of the items seized are of good quality but frequently end up in landfill as brand owners were unwilling to let counterfeit goods be reused, even to benefit charities … The cost of sending these items to landfill in the past has been substantial and meant that was less money was available to spend on frontline trading standards work’

It’s a great step forward when the proceeds of criminal activity can be used to help less fortunate members of society, but that’s not the only way that excess or waste clothing can benefit good causes. Many charities from Emmaus through to the YMCA and charities helping rough sleepers like the Salvation Army are happy to receive bulk donations of clothing. Particularly popular are coveralls that can be worn when clearing areas used by homeless people,  waterproof jackets which are stockpiled and then handed out in bad weather and clothing that can be provided to refugees who often arrive without suitable winter sweatshirts or jumpers for the British climate.

Many businesses have wholesale clothing stocks left over at the end of a promotion or when uniform patterns change, and these can be donated to help needy people just contact the local council and large local charities to discuss what needs they have and how garments can be used.