I'm fed up with being stuck between paying medium amounts for unethical, fast-fashion clothing that falls apart quickly, or paying a lot for perhaps ethical clothing that falls apart almost as quickly. Usually you also can't pick-and-mix - companies that treat their employees fairly also seem to invest in reforestation or social schemes, which I'd rather consider separately.
For example, I used to buy some things from Patagonia, but even they seem to have gone downhill. I bought a shirt about 5 years ago, which I still have, and last year I bought the very same "model". The newer one is failing, the old one is going strong.
Can any HN folks, better than average at finding signals among the noise, recommend brands that make quality clothing that lasts, presumably above Fast Fashion prices in $/item, but better in $/month of use? Many thanks in advance.
REI’s onetime $30 membership fee is worthwhile on its own. However, since it’s a member-owned co-op, you also receive 5% of your purchases as a rebate (https://www.rei.com/membership). REI is usually competitive for pricing - not the cheapest, not the most expensive.
However, even if that 5% was explicitly added to the price, I’d pay it. For those of us who think in terms of value for the money, paying 5% more to ensure that I’m going to be satisfied (with the whole product, not just durability) is an amazing value.
That said, I have to ask: are you laundering your clothes in a way that makes them more prone to falling apart? (Not a dig at you; most people do, because most laundering methods aren't conducive to long-lasting clothes.) Almost any piece of clothing will hold up if you wash it in warm/ or cold water and dry it on the least-hot setting possible.
It takes a bit more effort, but all of my "nice" clothing (jackets, shirts that don't have logos on them, anything 100% cotton) gets washed in a cold water cycle and hung dry. Stuff keeps it shape longer, doesn't shrink, and doesn't erode in the dryer—the lint you pull out of your dryer's filter is proof that your clothes are slowly losing mass every time you dry them!
Find the places that do uniform leasing. They'll have heavy grade stuff they might sell.