Loud Men: Interview with Luxury-Eco Visionary Linda Loudermilk

by Joshua Katcher

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

Linda Loudermilk is making waves that are hitting the coasts of Europe, Asia, and both sides of North America. She is also turning the seaweed in those waves into textiles. With almost a decade of experience in eco fashion, Linda is finally being ecstatically celebrated for her investments and achievements. Everyone is talking about her – and getting a seat at her runway show is a coveted pilgrimage.

After abandoning the Haute Couture runways in Paris to feed her soul by conducting research with environmentalists, scientists, and textile innovators – she is responsible for many of the eco fabrics that are gaining ground (and body coverage) and being recognized as both necessary and desirable. Her cri de coeur is both aesthetic and holistic – citing the healing power of nature that saved her very life – and the overlooked health and environmental devastation from conventional garment production. Linda Loudermilk design is for rock stars and creative professionals alike – and she has a loyal and growing clientele including discriminating celebrities and eco warriors. Like any visionary, she admits she is perpetually learning – lamenting about her use of leather in the past, but looking forward to creating an entirely vegan shoe line for men and women in the near future.

Beyond her personal collection is the LUXURY ECO™ Stamp, which is part of her vision for how the very best products can be identified based on everything from labor practices and environmental impact, to design and aesthetic.

I had a few moments on the phone with Linda recently. Here is our interview:

DB: When did you start making menswear and what kind of man wants to wear Linda Loudermilk?

LL: A man that wants something different! I have preppy men, creative men, and stars all as fans of my menswear. I’ve got it all. Adrian Grenier, Leonardo DiCaprio, producers – even computer geeks, and they all just wanna wear it because it feels good. Its for the 20 to 50 year-old that wants a nice cut and that are professionals, but still creative.

I stared making menswear about 2 years ago – but I started very slowly with simple Tshirts. Within the last year the quality of woven fabrics I was looking for finally enabled me to get the shirting and suiting fabric I needed to do the collection in the way I wanted it. I noticed that men really felt the difference in the fabric. The men that wear the seaweed shirts – I can’t even explain the look on their face! They have a look like “I’ve never felt something like this before in my life!”. With men its always been about comfort – at least in the last 50 years. They really can feel the fabric feeding their skin -the seaweed with the sea salt. Same with bamboo – its much better for your skin because it wicks away moisture and has antibacterial properties. Seacell is seaweed bonded to wood pulp – they bond it naturally on a molecular level. Its not forced with chemicals – and when your skin warms up the fabric, the benefits of the seaweed nourishes the skin. I’ve been working with the textile company to design these fabrics – that’s why I’m a leader in the industry – because I hook up the scientists with the fabric manufacturers.

I used to do couture in Paris, but I realized no matter how honored I was to be there, it didn’t have any meaning to me. So I had to reinvent my profession. 8 years ago I came back to states and worked on sustainable fabrics. The quality of the mens fabrics is amazing right now. We have suits & tuxedos made out of sasawashi – its a leaf from japan that is anti-bacterial and anti deodorant. They first used it to make sushi (it regulated small) and it also was used as insulation in homes. So I made fabric out of it and now its a fabric in line! We don’t have to use synthetics to create what we need a fabric to do.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: Is ‘Eco’ finally becoming sexy? Do you see yourself playing a role in this?
LL: Yes! and yes!

DB: What kind of materials and processes do you use, and why?
LL: One process I’m a huge fan of is ozone wash. It doesn’t break the fiber down – it’s a molecular process, and thats how I treat my jeans. Its entirely environmentally friendly. Health-wise too. Time, energy, water usage, and the water is actually returned cleaner than when it came out! I don’t know why everyone doesn’t do it. Actually I do know why – because people get partnerships with wash houses that don’t want to change. Its so much cheaper to do once you do it, but switching over seems overwhelming. Money-making industry doesn’t like change.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: How did you become an environmentalist? Do you have role models?
LL: I was cured through nature of a debilitating disease, and through that experience I realized that I experience my spirituality through nature. It’s all about respect of nature and animals. I found out who I was. I set forth to do everything I could to spread that message because it was and is so monumental. When I started – no one else in fashion was doing this. I created ‘lux eco fashion’ – the high fashion aspect. But I had to! I had to feed my soul.

I just watched a documentary on Frank Lloyd Wright – his god is the one that starts with an “n” – nature. He was a rebel. He was a maverick and I really respect him and his way of thinking. It was all about his truth. If we keep to our truth and the greater truth we would all be doing great things.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: What other areas of your life are affected by your eco-ethics? Is ‘fair-trade’ important to you? Why?
LL: Everything! Its been a slow process, but when I first got into this I didn’t trust labels, and I still wanted my life to be stylish and sexy. So I started the ‘lux eco’ stamp of approval so people can know that something’s been well designed, its not gonna fall apart, and it’s environmentally benign. But most importantly, it’s something with a design you can respect. A lot of people subscribe to labels in order to showcase a certain taste level. That’s what high fashion and labels are all about! So instead of wearing Fendi or Gucci to represent the qualities we want to espouse – it would be great if we could go look for the ‘lux- eco’ stamp of approval and be able to support a more evolved set of aesthetics and values. It applies to anything! Restaurants, gloves, garbage cans – anything can be stamped. Every area of my life has been affected by this.

As far as sweatshops and fair-trade, it’s a hugely important issue. I think we are 80% perfect – we make sure to check people out, but when you turn your back you never know. It becomes a complex question.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: How has mainstream fashion and media’s response to your work changed over the last few seasons?
LL: Well, I’ve gotten a lot more press attention lately – all these green TV shows are coming and shooting in my salon. Finally people are paying attention! It’s putting ‘eco’ in a new light and convincing people that there is a new light – proving it by putting a product out there and investing everything in creating a news platform. People are finally understanding my knowledge base. They can come to me to find out certain things. They are valuing the research I’ve done for over 8 years.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: If you could put an end to any element of the fashion industry you see as destructive, what would it be and why?
LL: Water usage. Access to clean water is the biggest problem we have right now globally. Also the dye process, because there’s a lot of chemical dyes we’re exposed to, not knowing that our bodies are trying to fight it off. As a result people get sick and doctors don’t know what it is. It’s really the wash process and they way the fabric is treated. Thats why ozone is a great solution.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: If fashion is a form of visual communication, what is someone who wears Linda Loudermilk saying about themselves to other?
LL: I hope they are expressing truly who they are. That’s why I make such a diverse line. there is something for everyone. People who wear my garments are also saying “I am is someone who likes quality. someone who likes personal expression – no matter what it is.” Be who you are! If its yucky express it. If its rock, express it. My clothes are more sculptural and rock oriented. I have no problem with Gucci or Fendi, but if you’re wearing it just for the label you’ve lost your own identity. I never buy big logos.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: What is your opinion on the fur and skins trade?
LL: Don’t support it! The thing is, we need to keep innovating products that mimic what hides and fur can do. There are certain properties that come out of nature that are pure – so there is nothing exactly like shearling – you can’t duplicate it – but if we’re going to try to lessen the fur and leather trades, we need innovation because those trades have been around for eons and won’t go away without a fight. I often subscribe to the Native American philosophy of only taking what you need and being grateful for it. Unfortunately, Thats not how the industry or this culture is set up – and even if they say they are, they’re not. So I avoid it. I am ashamed to say I used to use leather a lot – because it is so sculptural. It’s so easy to make something look expensive with leather. There is some rubber and some organic cotton dyed with mud and it looks like leather- but it doesn’t sculpt. We really need more innovation.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: What is your understanding of the environmental crises we are immersed in? Is looking fashionable important to having the environmental message heard?

There is simply a loss of respect. That’s it. You can go on and on about every issue. But if you look at the core – it’s lack of respect for the earth and people and animals. If we really respected ourselves we wouldn’t be in this crisis at all. Being fashionable is very important because we (environmentalists) exist in the ‘hippie granola scientist’ realms and it needs to grow and needs to be fashionable – its a hook.

Linda Loudermilk Menswear

DB: Anything else?

LL: People should apply for the stamp of approval because its gonna make a big difference! Visit my website. We can have a stamp of approval on almost anything . I am looking for high-end, well made cool fashionable items of any kind – or people who do services! Anything! Tell me how are you eco, where do you stand and why.

Also – big news, I am coming out with vegan shoes for men and women!

http://www.wmagazine.com/images/fashion/2007/10/faar_ilist_linda_loudermilk_h.jpg

Linda appears in W Magazine

Savory Summer

I am in heaven. The farmers’ markets in New York are starting to offer some of the northeast’s most amazing harvests. I picked up some local, naturally grown strawberries. I had no idea that ‘organic’ labeling was so prohibitive and damaging to small farmers (even if their products are considered ‘organic’). I spoke with some of the farmers whose produce I purchased and was appalled (but not surprised) to find out why USDA hates small farmers. Click here!

New York State Strawberries

VEGAN CHEESE PLATE

Just Like Honey Gluten-Free Rice NectarBelow, I made lunch for a few friends. The starter was a Cheese Plate featuring Dr. Cows raw, vegan, crystal manna blue cheese, toasted local sourdough bread, local strawberries, walnuts, and a Sweet & Sarah vegan coconut-crusted marshmallow. I drizzled some ‘Just Like Honey‘ which is an indistinguishable alternative to real bee vomit! Cheese plates are finally doable with Dr.Cow – for your own spin on this, try doing cheese & chocolate, cheese & veggies, or cheese & fruit! There usually is no way to go wrong with good cheese.

Cheeseplate

CHIVE BLOSSOM SALAD

chive blossom salad

Joshua\'s salad

I had no idea that a) chives even blossomed or b) you can eat the flowers that c) taste like spicy chives! Yum! Not only is this salad visually delicious, but the hearty mixed greens, NYS apples, powerful sliced radishes and hearty radish greens made an amazingly filling and tongue-invigorating dish. As for dressing, I made a simply apple-cider vinegar with coconut oil and black sesame dressing.

PICKLED RADISH & STEAMED VITAMIN GREENS

In this dish, I sliced some local radish and put them in my pickle jar along side Rick’s Picks ‘bee ‘n’ bees‘ pickles overnight. I steamed some local ‘vitamin greens’ and kale, drizzled a touch of sesame oil on top, and was good to go. Lesson here? Never throw out old pickle juice!

radish and vitamin greens

Men Like Sports II

After I posted the previous entry, I got so many letters asking about vegetarian and vegan men in sports. Do they exist? Are they strong? Can they build muscles? These aren’t silly questions. We live in a meat obsessed culture with it’s masculinity largely defined by meat-eating. It’s no surprise that we’ve been taught to believe we need animal products to be healthy. However, we can be healhty and strong on a plant-based diet as well. For example, Vegan Bodybuilder Alexander Dargatz is featured on veganbodybuilding.com.

http://www.veganbodybuilding.com/imgs/albums/Alex1/side41.jpg

You can get beefy without eating beefy. I’ve been vegan for over a decade and I am able to build muscle, too. There are also scores of veg ladies who are packing heat – like Six-time Ironwoman Ruth Heidrich, Tennis champ Martina Navratilova, and bodybuilder Kailla Edger.

This week ESPN asks Who says you have to eat meat to be a successful athlete?” Profiling Milwaukee Brewers slugger Prince Fielder, Kansas City Chiefs star Tony Gonzalez, UFC Fighter Mac Danzig, Minnesota Twins Baseballer Pat Neshek, and ultramarathoner Scott Jurek, this article shows men in some of the most physically demanding sports who are shattering the illusion that you have to eat milk and meat to be strong (thanks to Karen of Dawnwatch).

Also this week, Mens’ Fittness Magazine chose the vegan, mixed martial arts, UFC champion Mac Danzig for their cover story entitled “Fittest Guys in America”. His interview starts right off about his veganism. read the full interview here. To learn more about Mac, read my original article about him here.

For other resources on being veg in sports, check these links:

Vegan Bodybuilding

Vegan/Vegetarian Athlete Articles & Links:

Seattle PI on Scott Jurek: Seattle man amazes everyone in 135-mile marathon–including himself

Vegetarian Sports Nutrition (summary at right)

Vegetarian Diet for Exercise and Athletic Training and Performing – Andrews University Nutrition Department

Vegan Cycling

Vegan Adventure.com

Carl Lewis on Being Vegan

Vegan Triathlete – no age barrier

Veg Athlete a discussion forum at VegSource.com

Vegetarian Action

Vegan MD.com by Dr. Michael Greger

Information on Vegan Diet by Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM).

Vegetarian Nutrition Articles by Vegetarian Resource Group (VRG)

Vegan Society.com

Partial list of vegan/vegetarian athletes

Men Like Sports

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I tried so hard to enjoy watching sports when I was a kid. I even went as far as collecting sports cards. I remember saying to myself, “Ok Joshua, you have to pick a team that you like and then get to know everything about them“. I randomly picked the Phoenix Suns (it was probably the purple). I went through my basketball cards and tried to memorize each of the players’ names – but it was useless, I was bored out of my mind and confused about the religious-like zeal that sports fans had. Especially men. What a strange cult! Looking back, I think it was simply an attempt to fit in and make my dad think that his arts & crafts making, comic book collecting, electric guitar playing son with blue hair had hope of being a ‘real man’.

My sister recently sent me an article about a hockey tradition in Detroit where squids are tossed around on the ice. Where drunken men insanely twirl and fling these creatures above their heads and across the ice. Apparently this thing dates back to the early ‘50s and has something to do with casting a magical spell to win. Read the article and watch the video here.

http://www.yardbarker.com/m/13937/xl/Al_Sobotka_with_octopus.jpg

So what is it about men, sports, and cruelty to animals? Cockfighting, Michael Vic, elephant polo, bullfighting, horse racing, horse fighting, dog racing, trophy hunting, rodeo – what cultural significance do these all have? What do they say about us? What do they say about men specifically?

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Are men inherently brutal? Are sports one big cock-fight (not the bird kind)? Do guys get together and say “Let’s go kill stuff, it’ll be fun!”? Do boys truly enjoy these things, or do they break under the pressure of tradition – not unlike the wild horse who is broken – and simply fall into line acting out these dramas in an attempt to prove their manhood?

What I do know is that I don’t enjoy watching sports. I enjoy physical activity – I run, I bike, I hike, I play tennis, I swim – but I simply do not identify with the male prototype who acts like he is part of the team he watches on TV and gathers in groups to get wasted, get loud, and have an incredibly complicated, testosterone-laden excuse to act out his desires to be close with other men (look at pro wresting! Men in speedos pretending to fight). Nor do I identify with the man that kills or sends animals to kill each other in name of entertainment. Does our homophobic culture push men to do these things as an only option for male intimacy? Maybe, but consider the Romans – homosexuality was encouraged and they had cruel sports, too.

Grrrreen is the New Riot Grrrl

ViroPOP, a rad, green, video network with an adorable Aussie host – has posted a video with the best in greewashing! Stick around till the end for GE’s SEXY COAL greenwashing ad. Check it out below:
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUjxdDQixQ8]

Best of Girly Girl Army!:

If you haven’t signed up for the GGA newsletter, here’s some of what your missing from Chloe Jo’s weekly newsletter today:

  • Bill O’Reilly thinks that if he says “these people are unstable, loons” – everyone will just take his word for it.
    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENBwJqzdajc]
  • Yet another reason to name your firstborn after Dennis Kucinich.
  • How to Recycle Your Old CFL Light Bulbs: CFLs use less electricity, last longer, and look cool in your shopping cart. But as their critics are quick to point out, they do contain a small amount of mercury. That means they need to be properly recycled, unlike old incandescent bulbs.
  • Animal advocates; Taking Action for Animals is a legendary conference where you can network with national leaders and hundreds of grassroots advocates in July in Washington, DC.

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  • NYC: Garden Party & Vegan BBQ in Honor of Council Member Jimmy Vacca
    When: Saturday, June 21, 4pm to 6pm
    Where: Green Oasis Garden (East 8th Street between Avenues C and D in Manhattan)
    Suggested Donation: $75 (Your donation will be matched by the City 6-to-1!)
    RSVP: john@humanenyc.org / 917-450-3176
    Food: Veggie burgers, veggie dogs & corn on the cob!
    Jimmy was elected to the City Council in 2005 and has since become one of the most outspoken members when it comes to animal protection issues. Come celebrate him, and meet some compassionate cuties at this fun BBQ!

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  • A HUNTER MOVES IN WITH AN ANIMAL LOVER – WATCH WHAT HAPPENS!!
    From compassionate cutie Melissa Karpel; “As one of PETA’s campaign coordinators, I get to travel the nation, leading campaigns to help educate people on animal rights issues. I recently had the opportunity to take part in a reality TV show called 30 Days, the brainchild of filmmaker Morgan Spurlock (of Supersize Me fame). On each episode of 30 Days, a person or group of people must live for one month with someone who has drastically different beliefs and a different lifestyle. In my episode, George, a hunter, had to live with my family and me—who are all animal rights activists and vegans—for 30 days. George had a busy month! He took part in PETA protests—including one against KFC, for which he wore a chicken suit, and another against Burberry’s use of fur—gathered signatures for a California bill that would eliminate the worst abuses in factory farming, and got to know animals on a very personal level. Please tune in on June 17 at 10 p.m. on the FX network to see for yourself how George handles animal rights activism while living as a vegan for 30 days. In Morgan Spurlock’s words, it will be the “best hour of television that you’re ever going to see in your life.” Check out PETA.org during the next week for updates on where George is now and behind-the-scenes bonus features. Please also forward this message to your friends and family!” Check out a clip from it here.