/swf/video/player.swf
/swf/video/vimeo.swf
/img/shared/filetto.gif
Eco-Diet Extremes
If you want your share of Fashion Week Goodie bagsjust wait outside of castings or fashion shows and look hungry or too skinny.
Whilst waiting for Milan Fashion Week, we investigated a trend. Watch out for the word trend. Freeganism used to be a highly political and ethical anti-consumerist concept that was born in the 60s. Its practices include dumpster diving, plate scraping, wild foraging, gardening, barter, as alternative to paying for food. Your reasons can be environmental or political. It's a whole way of living, precycling, reusing goods... and so on. Sharing with the community, or using the excess from supermarkets that get thrown away. We know we produce too much in the Western World. We hungry yet always on a diet countries.
In a diet to lose weight point of view it's not really related. In a manage your diet according to what is produced in the world in an ethical way, thumbs up if you can make it work as a community, you can start with your apartment building.
Nouvelle-poverty has striken its toll on us in the past years, so there is nothing wrong with taking a look at our own trash - to start with - and ask this question: how ethical are my eating habits? Did I need to throw away that olive because I feel a little bloated?
Free is the word we need to consider in freeganism: how free are you from your body image and society's production paths?
Meantime get the Milanese Food Bags: might be your first step.
Text by Acelya Yonac
TAGS: dolce&gabbana freegan freeganism dolce & gabbana d&g d & g luxury online magazine diets eco diets trash fashion week milan food is fashion castings fashion shows women's fashion milan milan guide eating trends eating local ethical recycling precycling resources environmental 60s consumerist anti-consumerist body image
