Podcasts reward length. A forty-minute conversation can open a subject that a thirty-second reel cannot, and the best sustainability podcasts have used that time to slow down arguments the rest of the industry rushes past. The three hosts below are among the ones I most trust with that time.
Clare Press
Clare Press's Wardrobe Crisis has been running since 2017 and now has over two million downloads. She was Vogue's first-ever sustainability editor, which gave her access to the industry's inside, but the podcast has consistently taken its questions outside. She asks the slow, uncomfortable ones. And she listens — really listens — in a way that gets her guests to say truer things than they would elsewhere. The archive of the show is one of the best resources on the topic.
Venetia La Manna
Venetia La Manna's All The Small Things is a weekly interview podcast that takes its name seriously. The small things add up. Her #OOOTD idea — old outfit of the day — started as a simple hashtag and became a small cultural shift in how people photograph their wardrobes. She co-founded Remember Who Made Them. Her work has insisted, over and over, on the humanity behind a seam, and I am grateful for every time she has said it out loud.
Emily Stochl
Emily Stochl's Pre-Loved Podcast has been profiling vintage sellers, slow-fashion designers and small makers every week for years. She does the long-tail work — the interviews with people who do not get booked on bigger shows — and the result is a deep, searchable archive of the people actually making this shift real. If you want to find a small brand doing something quietly extraordinary, Emily has probably already interviewed them.
The linen pieces we make are the kind of thing made for the long conversation, not the clip. Wear them, wash them, listen to an hour-long podcast in them. They will be fine. So will you.