• @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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    243 months ago

    I don’t eat meat but do wear leather. I figure enough people will eat the beef anyways. I also try to buy my leather secondhand and take good care of it. If you treat it right it’ll outlast you.

    • @nomous@lemmy.world
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      103 months ago

      Leather still can’t be beat for footwear, a good shoe/boot will break-in to your foot, it’s literally thick skin.

      Leather jackets are basically windproof too.

          • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.world
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            33 months ago

            I used to commute on bike every day, regardless of weather in rain or harsh northern winter conditions. Waxed fabric is an interesting idea, and I might try soy wax on my shoes come to think of it. However in the past I had tried to use a rain poncho while biking and found that the flappiness rendered it completely useless in the rain.

            Technically it’s not gore-tex exactly, but I got a Columbia brand rain jacket that uses an equivalent technology. It is probably the best coat I’ve ever had for both rain and winter conditions (as long as I dress in layers), and even 6+ years later it is still entirely rainproof.

            • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              Just a heads up: Wax isn’t wax, if it has the wrong properties you could get anything from sub-par results to a complete mess. Most commercial waxes are a paraffin and bees wax mixture, vegan discussions about honey aside if you’re really up for it you can try and find an abandoned hive in the forest. Another, not exactly inexpensive but very good alternative is microcrystalline wax. Not that beeswax is inexpensive either, though.

              I happen to live in an area where it rains a lot, but most of it isn’t drenching, plain moleskin (that’s cotton, not mole leather) is sufficient 99.9% of the time and the rest, well, I get drenched. I’m not hiking out in the wilderness so it’s not exactly a survival issue. Though the only reason that moleskin is sufficient is because it’s multi-layered in the areas that count, especially shoulders and upper back: The upper layer can get drenched while the lower layer stays dry enough. Also moleskin is so dense it needs flaps for comfort: The lower layer has slits for that reason, covered by the upper layer which is open at the bottom.

    • @alekwithak@lemmy.world
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      63 months ago

      I believed the same thing, but most leather doesn’t actually come from beef cows. There is some by-product of the meat industry but the bulk comes from cows raised specifically for their hide.