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£40
Weary of fashion’s ceaseless carousel of catwalks in an age of climate emergency, Reformation is the label committed to pioneering sustainable practices, sourcing low-impact materials and deadstock fabrics to craft each of its evergreen, curve-caressing collections. The latest piece to leave its LA factory? The Tazz denim maxi dress.
Spun from organic cotton, it's cut to a skin-revealing, square neckline and softly cinches your frame with a fitted bodice, falling to a straight hem sliced with a split.
Long before it became fashionable, Reformation made sustainability cool, with limited collections of dresses, ethically-made in LA with ‘deadstock’ material. They’re still leading change, promising to be climate positive by 2025.
'Made with at least 50% organic cotton and lyocell. Organic cotton is grown without synthetic pesticides and fertilisers, uses less water and emits up to 46% less greenhouse gas than non-organic. Lyocell is made from plant cellulose. While chemicals are used in its production, it is a closed-loop process, meaning that chemicals can be extracted and waste water reused.'