Women artisans laughing together at the arched entrance of the Daughters of India workshop in Jaipur

SLOW FASHION

SLOW VS fast FASHION
~ THE REAL DIFFERENCE

Two approaches to clothing. One values speed and volume. The other values people and craft. The differences run deeper than you might expect.

FUNDAMENTALLY different SYSTEMS

On the surface, the difference between slow fashion and fast fashion might seem straightforward ~ one is quick, the other is not. But speed is only the most visible symptom of a much deeper divergence.

Fast fashion emerged in its modern form in the 1990s and early 2000s, driven by brands that discovered they could replicate runway trends at a fraction of the cost, deliver them to stores within weeks, and rotate their stock so frequently that customers felt compelled to return constantly. The model depends on volume, speed, and disposability. It works because clothing has become so cheap that discarding it feels costless.

Slow fashion, by contrast, begins with a different set of assumptions entirely. It assumes that making a garment well takes time. That the people who make it deserve to be paid fairly. That the materials should be chosen for quality and environmental responsibility rather than for cost alone. And that a garment should be designed and constructed to be worn for years, not weeks.

What follows is a detailed comparison across the dimensions that matter most.


Artisan hand block printing fabric with a carved wooden block in black and white
Artisan pouring dark blue indigo dye into a vat during the tie-dye process
Woman artisan at the sewing workshop carefully stitching a garment by hand

10%

Of global carbon emissions from fashion

92M

Tonnes of textile waste per year

2,700L

Water to produce one cotton t-shirt

30%

Of garments produced never sold


THE comparison

Production Speed

Fast: A trend can move from runway to shelf in two to three weeks. The system is engineered for speed ~ digital design, pre-negotiated factory contracts, air freight. Slow: A single garment may take weeks or months. At Daughters of India, there are no production deadlines. The pace is dictated by the craft, not the calendar.

Labour & Workforce

Fast: An estimated 75 million garment workers, predominantly women, many earning below a living wage. The Rana Plaza disaster (2013, 1,134 dead) remains the most visible consequence. Slow: Workers treated as skilled artisans. DOI's ~100 staff manage their own hours, receive continuous employment, and the facility is SEDEX certified.

Materials & Quality

Fast: 69% of fibres are synthetic, derived from fossil fuels. Quality calibrated for ~7 wears. Blended fabrics make recycling impossible. Slow: Natural fibres chosen for breathability and longevity. DOI uses highest-grade cotton, LENZING ECOVERO viscose (EU Ecolabel), and expanding organic cotton.

Quantity & Scale

Fast: 100 billion garments per year globally. Major retailers introduce 10,000+ new styles annually. 30% of garments are never sold. Slow: DOI released just 21 products across all of 2025. No warehouse clearances, no overproduction. Each piece made because it is wanted.


THE COMPARISON continued

Price & True Cost

Fast: Prices artificially low because costs are externalised ~ borne by underpaid workers, polluted waterways, depleted soil. A $5 t-shirt is not cheap; its cost was paid by someone else. Slow: A $180 DOI dress is priced to ensure fair compensation, genuine quality materials, and sustainable operations. Our True Cost of Handmade page breaks it down.

Environmental Impact

Fast: ~10% of global carbon emissions. 92M tonnes of textile waste yearly. 20% of industrial water pollution from textile dyeing. Microplastic shedding with every wash. Slow: Hand block printing requires no electricity. AZO-free dyes reduce pollution. DOI practises water recycling, nearly zero plastic, and designs for years of wear.

Longevity & Wear

Fast: Average garment worn just 7 times. Weak seams, thin fabrics, fading colours. Designed for replacement, not repair. Slow: Quality stitching, durable fabrics, timeless design. DOI's Kyra moves from day to night; Ria separates mix and match. When cared for, these are garments you keep.

Cultural Impact

Fast: Mass-producing cheap imitations erodes artisan traditions. Cultural designs appropriated without credit. Generations of knowledge rendered commercially irrelevant. Slow: Paying fair prices ensures artisan skills remain viable. DOI exists because of block printing ~ the craft is the foundation, not an aesthetic add-on.


Elderly artisan seated at a table surrounded by carved wooden printing blocks at the block printing workshop
Artisan dipping fabric into a deep indigo dye vat during the natural dyeing process
Artisans preparing dye baths at long tables in the workshop, mixing colours for textile dyeing

“The most sustainable garment is the one already in your wardrobe. The second most sustainable is the one made to last.

Daughters of India


THE NUMBERS in context

Statistics can feel abstract, so it helps to ground them. Consider the following:

The amount of clothing produced globally has approximately doubled in the past 15 years. In that same period, the average number of times a garment is worn before disposal has decreased by roughly 36%. We are buying more and wearing less. The result is a system that consumes vast resources to produce things that are used briefly and then discarded.

The fashion industry uses an estimated 93 billion cubic metres of water per year ~ enough to meet the consumption needs of five million people. Cotton farming alone, when done conventionally, is one of the most water-intensive agricultural activities on Earth. A single cotton t-shirt can require 2,700 litres of water to produce. This is why the shift toward organic cotton, responsible water management, and recycling matters so much.

An estimated 500,000 tonnes of microfibres enter the ocean every year from washing synthetic textiles ~ the equivalent of 50 billion plastic bottles. Every synthetic garment sheds these fibres with every wash, and they are now found in the deepest ocean trenches, in Arctic ice, in the rain that falls on remote mountains, and in human blood.

These are not problems that can be solved by producing fast fashion slightly more efficiently. They are problems of scale and speed. The slow fashion response is not to find a less damaging way to produce 100 billion garments a year, but to question whether 100 billion garments a year is something we should be producing at all.


HOW TO transition

01

Wear What You Own

The most sustainable garment is the one already in your wardrobe. Before buying anything new, rediscover what you have. Style it differently. Repair it. Wear it longer.

02

Buy Less, Choose Well

When you do buy, choose one thoughtfully made garment instead of three disposable ones. Consider cost per wear, not just the price tag. A $180 dress worn for years is cheaper than a $30 dress worn seven times.

03

Choose Natural Fibres

Whenever possible, choose cotton, linen, silk, or wool over synthetic fabrics. Natural fibres breathe, biodegrade, and do not shed microplastics into the ocean with every wash.

04

Ask Questions

Where was this made? By whom? From what materials? Is the price I see the whole cost, or has someone else already paid the rest? This is not about judgement. It is about seeing clearly.

05

Support Artisan Craft

Every purchase is a vote for the kind of world you want to live in. Supporting slow fashion brands means supporting fair wages, traditional skills, and a fashion system that values people over profit.


BEYOND THE binary

Artisans sharing tea during a break at the Daughters of India workshop

It would be dishonest to present slow fashion and fast fashion as a simple binary of good and evil. The reality is more nuanced. Not everyone can afford to buy handmade garments. Not every fast fashion purchase is irresponsible. People have different budgets, different bodies, different access to alternatives.

The value of this comparison is not to induce guilt, but to illuminate choices. When we understand what fast fashion actually costs ~ in human labour, in environmental damage, in cultural erosion ~ we can make more informed decisions about where to spend what we have. Even small shifts matter. Buying one thoughtfully made garment instead of three disposable ones. Choosing natural fibres when possible. Wearing what you own for longer. Asking brands where and how their clothing is made.

Slow fashion is not a destination. It is a direction. And every step in that direction ~ however small ~ is a step worth taking.


Shipping & Returns

All import duties are included in our prices — no surprise fees at delivery. Applicable state sales tax is calculated at checkout. Our slow fashion garments are handcrafted in India and shipped directly to you.

We are a small team however we endeavour to process your order within 1-3 business days. Orders are shipped via Australia Post. You'll receive a tracking number by email once your order ships.

Delivery Cost
Standard · 5–8 business days $12 USD
Express · 3–5 business days $22 USD
Orders over $380 USD Free


All import duties are included in our prices — we handle customs clearance — no surprise fees at your door. Applicable state sales tax will be calculated at checkout.

You can find our full shipping policy here.

We want you to love your Daughters of India piece. If it's not quite right, we're happy to help — simply return within 30 days and we'll issue a Daughters of India Gift Card for the full value. Your credit never expires and can be used on any piece, including new collections.

  • Items must be returned in original condition — unworn, unwashed with tags attached, folded neatly in the Daughters of India tote bag provided.
  • A prepaid return shipping label is included with your order. To lodge a return, visit our Returns Portal.
  • Refunds are processed within 5–7 business days of receiving the return.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or store credit.

You can find our full returns policy here.

Shipping & Returns

All import duties are included in our prices — no surprise fees at delivery. Applicable state sales tax is calculated at checkout. Our slow fashion garments are handcrafted in India and shipped directly to you.

We are a small team however we endeavour to process your order within 1-3 business days. Orders are shipped via Australia Post. You'll receive a tracking number by email once your order ships.

Delivery Cost
Standard · 5–8 business days $12 USD
Express · 3–5 business days $22 USD
Orders over $380 USD Free


All import duties are included in our prices — we handle customs clearance — no surprise fees at your door. Applicable state sales tax will be calculated at checkout.

You can find our full shipping policy here.

We want you to love your Daughters of India piece. If it's not quite right, we're happy to help — simply return within 30 days and we'll issue a Daughters of India Gift Card for the full value. Your credit never expires and can be used on any piece, including new collections.

  • Items must be returned in original condition — unworn, unwashed with tags attached, folded neatly in the Daughters of India tote bag provided.
  • A prepaid return shipping label is included with your order. To lodge a return, visit our Returns Portal.
  • Refunds are processed within 5–7 business days of receiving the return.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or store credit.

You can find our full returns policy here.

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