Certifications are comforting — but comfort isn't the same as truth. The fashion industry loves badges: organic, sustainable, fair, 'clean,' 'non-toxic.' But most certifications focus on narrow parts of the process, not the full picture. A fabric may pass a test while the dyeing stage used hundreds of chemicals nobody screened. A garment may be certified 'organic' based on a material or a sample, not the entire run or their entire collection.
Even Bluesign, one of the most stringent systems today, doesn't cover the tens of thousands of chemicals used in modern textile production. Not because they don't want to — but because it's scientifically impossible to track everything the industry keeps inventing. Some dyeing units are still using chemicals that were banned years ago and they were found in kids clothing.
So instead of clinging to labels, we cling to process.

