I work in sustainability. I spend my days advising organisations on their environmental and social impact, which means I think about supply chains, labour standards, and material sourcing more than most people do. It also means I am acutely aware of the gap between what I know and what I actually buy — the uncomfortable space between professional conviction and personal habit.
For years, my wardrobe did not reflect my values. I bought fast fashion because it was convenient and cheap, and I told myself I would do better when I had more time or more money. I had more time and more money for several years before I actually did better. The honest reason I did not change sooner was that I had not found ethical basics that I genuinely wanted to wear rather than wore out of principle.
The Fairtrade Organic Loose Fit T-shirt changed that.
What I Was Actually Looking For
My requirements were specific. Fairtrade certified — not just a brand claim, but a verified standard that covers both fair wages and safe working conditions throughout the supply chain. Organic cotton — grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilisers, which matters both for the environment and for the skin, since conventional cotton is one of the most chemically intensive crops in the world. And a fit that I actually wanted to wear: not a fitted tee that requires a specific body confidence I do not always have, but a relaxed, loose silhouette that works with everything and feels genuinely comfortable rather than merely acceptable.
Most ethical basics I had tried were either too fitted, too boxy, or made from organic cotton that felt rough and stiff rather than soft. The loose fit T-shirt solved all three problems simultaneously.
Why This T-Shirt
The Fairtrade Organic Loose Fit Women's T-shirt met every criterion. Fairtrade certified, which means the cotton farmers and garment workers involved in its production have been paid fairly and work in safe conditions — a standard that is independently verified rather than self-reported. Organic cotton, which means no synthetic pesticides, no chemical fertilisers, and a significantly lower environmental impact than conventional cotton production.
The loose fit is the design decision that makes it genuinely wearable rather than merely ethical. The dropped shoulders and relaxed silhouette create a shape that is flattering without being fitted — it works tucked into high-waisted trousers, worn loose over jeans, layered under an open shirt, or on its own on a warm day. The organic cotton has a softness that improves with washing, which is the opposite of the stiffness I had experienced with some other organic cotton basics.
I found it through ALTOE's Clothing collection, and it also sits within the Apparel & Accessories section if you want to browse the wider range.
The First Wear
I wore it for the first time on a Monday — a full working day of client calls and a late afternoon meeting. The organic cotton was immediately softer than I had expected. The loose fit moved with me rather than restricting me. By the end of the day I had not thought about the T-shirt once, which is exactly what a good basic should achieve: it should disappear into the background and let you get on with your day.
I washed it that week and noticed the first improvement that organic cotton delivers over time: the fabric softened slightly with washing rather than stiffening. After three washes it was noticeably softer than on day one. After ten washes it was the softest T-shirt I own.
Six Months of Daily Rotation
I now own four of these T-shirts in different colours. They are in my regular rotation and have been washed more times than I can count. The fabric has retained its shape and softness. The seams have held. The colour has not faded significantly despite frequent washing.
More significantly, I have not bought a fast fashion T-shirt since. Not because I have imposed a rule on myself, but because I do not need to. The loose fit organic tees cover everything I need from a basic T-shirt, they last longer than fast fashion equivalents, and I feel better wearing them — not in a performative way, but in the specific way that comes from knowing the thing you are wearing was made by someone who was paid fairly for making it.
That last point is the one I had been waiting to feel for years. I had known intellectually that ethical fashion mattered. I had not found the product that made it feel easy rather than effortful. This T-shirt is that product.
If you have been meaning to make the switch to ethical basics and have not found the right product to make it feel worth doing, the Fairtrade Organic Loose Fit Women's T-shirt is where I would start. Browse the Clothing collection at ALTOE. Buy one. Wash it three times. Then decide.
Nadia Kowalski is a sustainability consultant based in London. She writes about ethical fashion, the gap between values and habits, and the products that have finally made conscious consumption feel easy rather than effortful.
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