Fashion to Die For: How Feather Accessories Promote Animal Suffering

A stuffed bird of paradise hat, circa 1900.
Credit: Fashioningfeathers
Fashion repeats itself. Today, skinny jeans that made their original splash in the 1960s are sported by the young and hip, replacing yesterday’s flared variety borrowed from the 1970s. But some trends are perhaps better left in history, especially those relying upon non-renewable animal products. Though fur immediately comes to mind, celebrities and models have shifted to a new animal-based fashion accessory: feathers. Using bird feathers in fashion may seem innocent enough, but for the birds involved, this latest statement is anything but fabulous.
Decorative bird feathers—also referred to as plumes—first hit the fashion scene way back in the 1870s and 1880s. One woman’s dress was reportedly adorned with the feather patches of 3,000 Brazilian hummingbirds. Chic ladies topped their hats not only with plumes but with whole stuffed animals, like birds of paradise and woodpeckers.
Bird plumes are beautiful but belong on birds, not people. Credit: Adolphe Millot
As the craze continued, bluebirds, owls, herons, warbler, and other bird populations began to drop. In 1896, Harriet Hemenway and Minna Hall, two native Bostonians, urged the wealthy women of their city to put an end to the trend and join the Massachusetts Audubon Society in protest. Around 1,000 women joined the Audubon Society and, as a result of their activism, the state passed a law outlawing the trade in wild bird feathers the following year. In 1918, the rest of the nation followed Massachusetts’ positive example with the creation of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. This law made it illegal to harm, trap, transport, or collect eggs from native birds without a permit.
Though whole birds no longer crown ladies’ hats, the fashion industry still draws upon the antiquated fad. Last week, Jean Paul Gaultier, a French fashion icon, paraded his models in plumage-decked gowns and extravagant feather headpieces. “Like a fox in the proverbial hen-house, Gaultier served up plumage from every bird he could get his hands on,” wrote one reviewer. Luckily, the designer could only pluck from common species like chickens, ostriches, swans, turkeys, and pheasants, but the message Gaultier sends could be worrying in the wider context of species exploitation in the fashion industry. In the past, Gaultier has been targeted by animal rights activists for his use of fur and even whole fox heads.
While Gaultier’s haute couture is inaccessible for most of us, celebrities like Steven Tyler and Ke$ha have bought into more affordable feather fanaticism with plumage hair extensions. At $40 to $500 a pop, the feather extensions are by no means cheap, but that hasn’t stopped young women around the nation from snatching up copycat versions to stick onto their heads (incidentally, many of these feathers are purchased from fly fishing shops where they are sold as bait).
Girls across the country have jumped onto the hair-feather bandwagon.
Credit: Flickr, Tess Aquarium
And for the roosters whose tail feathers are harvested, the cost is even steeper. The animals, which are specially bred for their feathers, are confined to small, crowded cages for about 30 weeks before being killed and skinned after their plumage matures. One farm in Colorado reportedly kills around 1,500 roosters per week for hairpieces, and the farm says it still can’t keep up with demand. For birds like ostriches and geese, feathers are often taken in a process called “live plucking” which entails simply ripping fistfuls of feathers from the animals’ bodies, according to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).
There’s ways to be trendy without sacrificing chickens. PETA provides instructions for a cruelty free, do-it-yourself ribbon version of the trend. Now, if Ke$ha would just wise up…


I want to mention that this
I want to mention that this post Mercedes-Benz Mobil Mewah Terbaik Indonesia really forced me to do so.
Wayne Mones: I see nothing
Wayne Mones:
I see nothing wrong with using feathers from domesticated birds (like chickens and ostriches) and from legal game species (like ducks and geese). I have been an avid trout fisherman and fly tier for decades and can tell you that my experiences have made me closer to nature and a more ardent conservationist. While I don't like competing with fashionistas for feathers, I see nothing wrong with their use as decoration. Feathers are, after all, beautiful. Comparing today's use with the wanton destruction of entire breeding colonies in earlier times seems to me like the urban conceit of one who doesn't spend much time in nature. Domestic chickens are a renewable resource.
The folks at PETA would do well to devote their energies to conservation rather than militantly promoting their disneyesque ideas about animals.
Well Wayne a big part of the
Well Wayne a big part of the issue is that because of the sudden popularity these birds are being bred at a new record pace to keep up with the sudden demand only for their feathers. Brought into existence purely for your decorative 'needs'. They are being treated as things, mere fashion accessories, rather than the sentient creatures that they are.
The way we interact with most of the creatures we share the planet with is rather irresponsible and disrespectful. Most people do not interact with our fellow inhabitants in their natural settings letting them enjoy their lives in peace. Rather most people's interaction is through the plastic packaging which allows a state of ignorance as to what they were in their natural setting.
I think 'wanton destruction' is a perfectly apt phase to describe what is going on here. Feathers belong on those who grew them.
this kind of fashion is not
this kind of fashion is not my favorite.
http://www.chinasunstore.com
Old fashions are still
Old fashions are still unbeatable. Seem incredible even now. jamaica montego bay vacations
Yeah am agreed "Fashion
Yeah am agreed "Fashion repeats itself" and i like this kind of fashion and i think with the help of these kind of fashion we can save the birds you will ask how, decorative and artificial feathers can help in this matter and in this way we can raise people interest regarding nature.
logo design services
Ah, the old times... I love
Ah, the old times... I love it... now it's fashion to have "tapes"... that's how you get famous and be respected... lol...
Daisy
handmade jewelry designer
Animal suffering has to be
Animal suffering has to be stopped we should boycott the use of these kind of fashion products.
Feline Acne
Some material from animal do
Some material from animal do have a good texture ,but for the sake of envirnoment ,we can seek other material to replace them.
the women are beautiful when
the women are beautiful when they wear this kind of thing, but that is not a good news for our birds, we should change our beautiful attitude.