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Startup Lingerie Company Wants to Help the Homeless

April 10, 2016 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

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What do lingerie and homelessness have in common?

If you’re scratching your head, meet Drift Light. It’s a startup that’s using a portion of its proceeds to donate underwear and socks to selected homeless shelters across the United States.

Drift Light, which launched five days ago on Indiegogo, is the brainchild of Willa Townsend.

Townsend, 22, told ABC News that the project started last year while she was in her final year at Duke University, studying economics and neuroscience.

“I didn’t want to go into consulting or finance like the rest of my friends. I wanted to do something that had an impact,” she recalled.

After a professor told her that a local homeless shelter in Durham, North Carolina — where the school is based — was in need of underwear, she discovered that it’s a prevalent need in homeless shelters, and similar U.S. facilities benefiting the homeless.

“Underwear and socks are most needed because they are the clothing items that everyone wears, every day,” Tracy Jefferson, associate director of development of So Others Might Eat, told ABC News.

The Washington, D.C.-based organization provides emergency housing for the homeless and distributes food and clothing.

“Also, if you don’t have a place to do laundry, they need to be replaced frequently to protect hygiene and personal dignity,” Jefferson said.

Townsend, who had previously volunteered at homeless shelters, sought to figure out “the easiest and most sustainable way to solve this problem” and created Drift Light.

PHOTO: Willa Townsend (left), creator of Drift Light, with friend Lauren Reid at Drift Light pop-up shop. Drift Light
Willa Townsend (left), creator of Drift Light, with friend Lauren Reid at Drift Light pop-up shop.

The company sells fashionable bralettes, underwear, boxers and boxer briefs for men and women. The lingerie, made in Los Angeles, is created out of eco-friendly materials, Townsend said.

“One of our most popular materials is the super soft bamboo cotton, which is a renewable resource,” she explained.

The items range from $25 to $50. Townsend said the price point was strategic.

“I wanted to make sure college students like myself, all the way up to everybody could afford at least a piece,” she explained.

After she uses a portion of Drift Light’s profits to buy “basic, really great underwear” for the homeless, Townsend said she will also deliver them to three homeless shelters: one in Los Angeles, where she lives; one in Durham, where she went to school; and one in Minneapolis, where she was born and raised.

“Not only are we getting the product for the shelters, but we’re also going there and delivering them and making sure that everyone gets the right size,” she explained.

Townsend, who employs two people, said she also has a long-term goal to benefit the homeless with her company.

“I want to start hiring people, who are transitioning out of homelessness to work as part of my company,” she said.

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This 56-Year-Old Model First Donned A Bikini In Sports Illustrated — Now, She’s In A Lingerie Shoot

April 10, 2016 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

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In February, 56-year-old model Nicola Griffin made a splash as the oldest woman to ever appear in Sports Illustrated’s famed Swimsuit Issue (albeit in an ad for Swimsuitsforall, not in the issue’s editorial pages). We were hoping we’d see more of Griffin and her self-proclaimed “quite sexy, rounded tummy” — and we didn’t have to wait too long. Griffin is starring in a lingerie shoot for SLiNK, a British curve magazine.

Yes, we saw mature models in major ad campaigns in 2015, like Joan Didion for Céline, Joni Mitchell for Saint Laurent, and Cher for Marc Jacobs. And some labels, like Rachel Comey in New York and Undercover in Paris, have included older models in recent show castings. But an older model not just appearing in fashion content (whether IRL or in the pages of glossies), but doing so in a bathing suit or lingerie, is far from what we’re accustomed to seeing.

“It’s crazy to think that fashion models, aside from generally all being one size, are all in one age bracket, too,” Rivkie Baum, editor-in-chief of SliNK, told Refinery29. “There seems to be a consensus, especially in media, that women start to become invisible not just above a size 10, but above age 50, too,” Baum says. “Nicky is defying all those odds, and her passion to represent made her a perfect choice for this issue.”

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