America Wore This: 250 Years of Style, Labor, Waste, and Repair
What if the story of America could be read through what we wore?
In this special July 4th episode of The Ethical Stitch, Michelle Alleyne reflects on America’s 250th birthday by looking at fashion not just as style, but as history, memory, labor, resistance, survival, and responsibility.
This episode asks a deeper question:
What has America been wearing for the last 250 years?
From homespun cloth and cotton to slops, disguise, feed sack dresses, wartime restrictions, denim, department stores, fast fashion, textile waste, repair, and reinvention, Michelle unpacks the beautiful and complicated story of American fashion.
This is not an episode about shaming anyone for what they buy or wear.
It is a conversation about awareness, context, and learning how to look at clothing with more honesty. Because every garment carries more than fabric. It can hold labor. It can hold memory. It can hold survival. It can hold identity. And sometimes, it can hold the systems we would rather not see.
Michelle explores how American fashion has always been shaped by contradiction: creativity and extraction, resourcefulness and waste, access and excess, beauty and harm. She traces the story from Revolutionary-era homespun cloth to cotton’s painful history, from clothing used as strategy by freedom seekers to feed sack dresses born from necessity, from wartime restrictions to denim’s transformation from durable workwear into global style.
This is not an episode about one perfect version of American fashion.
It is a conversation about telling the fuller story, honoring what was made by hand, acknowledging what was built through harm, and asking what kind of fashion future we want to carry forward.
In this episode, we explore:
✨ What America’s clothing reveals about identity, labor, and culture
✨ Why homespun cloth became a political statement
✨ How cotton sits at the center of one of American fashion’s biggest contradictions
✨ What “slops” reveal about clothing, labor, hierarchy, and control
✨ How clothing could become strategy, camouflage, and survival on the path to freedom
✨ Why feed sack dresses represent circular thinking before sustainability had a name
✨ How wartime restrictions changed fashion, materials, and creativity
✨ Why denim’s original message was durability, not disposability
✨ What fast fashion reveals about speed, access, waste, and constant newness
✨ Why the future of American fashion must include repair, intention, labor, and care
As America marks 250 years, this episode invites us to look inside the real closet: the jeans we always reach for, the dress we still keep, the jacket waiting to be repaired, the shirt we wore when we needed to feel stronger, and the pieces that still carry some version of who we were, who we are, and who we are becoming.
Because ethical fashion was never about taking the beauty out of fashion.
It was about putting the humanity back in.
🌿 The Ethical Stitch
Hosted by Michelle Alleyne
Follow us for more threads of truth:
📱 Instagram: @theethicalstitch | @michellealleyneofficial
🌍 Website: michellealleyne.com
🎙️ New episodes drop weekly.
Stay curious. Stay conscious. Stay ethical. Stay stitched in.
🌿 The Ethical Stitch
Hosted by Michelle Alleyne
Follow us for more threads of truth:
📱 Instagram: @theethicalstitch | @michellealleyneofficial
🌍 Website: michellealleyne.com [http://michellealleyne.com/]
🎙️ New episodes drop weekly.
Stay smart. Stay stylish. Stay stitched in.
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