Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Thanks, Jesus 2025

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migratory agricultural workers--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Image by snoid

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Thanks, Jesus 2024

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migratory agricultural workers--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Thanks, Jesus 2023

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migratory agricultural workers--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 24, 2022

Thanks, Jesus 2022!

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migrant workers and immigrants legal or undocumented--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Thanks, Jesus 2021!

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migrant workers and immigrants legal or undocumented--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Monday, June 14, 2021

"Fibreshed: Reconnecting Fashion to Farming"

This video is not from a specific designer or about a collection, but it is about a very special, important topic: sustainable clothing. Presented as part of Digital London Fashion Week, this mini-documentary raises awareness of where clothing can come from, a connection to the earth, and a sustainable way forward in terms of the industry.

South West England Fibreshed is part of a global movement of local initiatives reimagining the way that we make and wear our clothing.

By reconnecting ‘fashion’ with farming, we are building bioregional systems for clothing production that can nourish, rather than exhaust, our communities and biosphere.

Between January and March 2021 Fibreshed director Emma Hague and filmmaker Hatty Bell went on the road to meet some of our local fibre farmers and processors in the South West of England, and better understand the natural fibre industry that lies on our own doorstep.

“Your clothes are an agricultural act – by purchasing and wearing you are voting for the agriculture you do or don’t want to see in the world, and depending on how your clothes break down, you’re either feeding microbes, or you’re leaving a world of plastic pollution.

Rebecca Burgess - Fibershed Founder


Thursday, November 26, 2020

Thanks, Jesus 2020!

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migrant workers and immigrants legal or undocumented--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 28, 2019

Thanks, Jesus 2019

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migrant workers and immigrants legal or undocumented--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 22, 2018

Thanks, Jesus 2018

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible--migrant workers and immigrants legal or undocumented--for helping to bring our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Thanks, Jesus 2017

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible for bringing our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Thanks, Jesus 2016

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible for bringing our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Thanks, Jesus...2015

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible for bringing our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Thanks, Jesus...2013

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible for bringing our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Thanks, Jesús

As we eat our Thanksgiving meal, let us thank not an imaginary figure in the sky but those who are TRULY responsible for bringing our food to our tables, through their numbingly long days of low-wage, backbreaking work.