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Can a person build a lasting identity out of a wardrobe that is only ever borrowed?

Published last week, this piece considers the gray mailing bags appearing in apartment lobbies—the calling cards of the clothing rental boom. It looks past the convenience of a revolving closet to ask what is lost when personal style becomes a subscription. The piece suggests that in an era of temporary jobs and rented homes, even a wardrobe can feel like a fleeting commitment. It is a quiet meditation on whether identity can truly be formed when the clothes on one's back are always on their way to someone else.

The rise of clothing-rental services has led many young women to trade garment ownership for subscription-based wardrobes. Interviews with subscribers and industry experts detail the economic and psychological drivers of the rental economy alongside its environmental costs. The report considers how the move away from permanent collections affects the development of personal identity and the long-term sustainability of the fashion industry.

Read at source: The Atlantic