But now things have gotten even messier as social media takes up an increasingly large part of young people’s daily lives. Ultra-fast fashion companies such as Fashion Nova, Boohoo, and PrettyLittleThing rapidly churn out the latest influencer-approved looks for even lower prices than traditional fast fashion.
These brands exist mostly online and have few, if any, brick-and-mortar stores. They can sell more product rapidly since they don’t ship items to shops or wait for clothes to get displayed on racks. Fashion Nova, for example, produces more than a thousand new styles every week. And many celebrities, including Kylie Jenner and Kourtney Kardashian, have contributed to the craze by posting photos of themselves wearing ultra-fast fashion online.
“Social media has accelerated the speed at which trends change,” Cline says. “Things go in and out of fashion in a blink of an eye.”
When the Covid-19 pandemic hit, many traditional clothing stores were forced to shut down. But ultra-fast fashion brands were already making most sales online, and they quickly pivoted to pushing comfortable loungewear for those who wanted to stay fashionable while stuck at home. And it worked: Boohoo sales, for example, grew 45 percent in the period of March 2020 through May 2020, according to the company.
To make and ship clothing so quickly, ultra-fast fashion retailers often have their products made locally (in the U.S., that often means Los Angeles), rather than overseas. But that doesn’t necessarily mean the workers are treated better. A recent investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor found that many Fashion Nova garments are stitched together in the U.S. by a workforce that’s paid as little as $2.77 an hour, far below the federal minimum wage of $7.25. Los Angeles is filled with factories that pay workers off the books, and many of the people behind the sewing machines are undocumented immigrants, so they’re unlikely to challenge their bosses, experts say.