2025 Festival About

thread Lightly

Thread Lightly started out as a theme in 2025 Street Works Earth inviting us to wonder together about how we adorn our bodies, as an expression of identity, memory, and care. Through activities like sneaker customization, fabric painting, upcycling, and community beading, we celebrated the personal, cultural, and political power of what we wear or carry. 2025 Street Works Earth activities were co-designed by Kaleidospace, Street Works, MJN, and We Act for Environmental Justice.

Today, Thread Lightly is becoming an ongoing program for Street Works. Use the form below if you have thoughts for how we integrate it into activities in 2026 and beyond,

2025 Street Works Earth Activities

Check here for activities designed for Thread Lightly. And click here to see how all activities weaved together. If you have experience in New York City leading on the topic or know somebody that does, we'd love to hear from you. See a contact form below.

Why

The fashion industry exploits people and the planet. It has organized crime through modern slavery and is responsible for around 10% of global emissions, a cause of climate change. At the same time, it uses up a huge amount of water, in an era of worsening water scarcity because of climate change.

But responsibility for this crisis shouldn’t fall on individuals. Alternatives are expensive, and it isn't our fault that we’re raised from babyhood in a system that tells us we're not enough — not beautiful enough, not wealthy enough, not popular enough — as we are. These messages are even worse for people of color.

We need policy makers to disrupt it, and artists who can shift our relationships to adornment. One way to do that is by making it joyful to build new practices. Through reuse, repair, and repurposing, we hope to create spaces to share the stories behind what we wear and build new habits of self-care in a culture of collective care that centers dignity, creativity, and justice.

  • "The fashion industry is the second-largest consumer industry of water, requiring about 700 gallons to produce one cotton shirt and 2,000 gallons of water to produce a pair of jeans."

    Rashmila Maiti, Earth.org

  • "The number of people living in modern slavery has risen by 10 million since 2018, according to the latest findings from Walk Free’s Global Slavery Index, bringing the count to an estimated 50 million people globally. One thing that hasn’t changed? 'Fashion’s role in that number,' says founding director Grace Forrest."

    Madeleine Schulz, Vogue Business