Join PETA’s Feather-Free Pledge

UN INT Intro Text w/ Centered Large Responsive Image - *Important Note* You must UNLINK this shared library component before making page-specific customizations.

Every year, the fashion industry pays workers to violently pluck and kill millions of birds, each one a sensitive individual. Today’s the day to stand with Stella McCartney – the first major luxury fashion house in the world to go feather-free – by signing PETA’s feather-free pledge.

Why the Feather-Free Pledge Matters

Birds are sentient beings who have unique personalities and interests. Ostriches are highly social, and those in nature can live in herds of up to 100 members. Workers in the fashion industry have been videotaped ripping out the birds’ feathers while they’re still conscious, in terrible pain, and struggling to escape. PETA US exposed egregious cruelty at the largest ostrich slaughter companies in the world, revealed that workers forced young ostriches into stun boxes and slit their throats in full view of their flockmates.

Peacocks are intelligent, curious birds who communicate with their family and flock in complex ways. Peacock farms may hold as many as 10,000 birds in crowded conditions, and sickness and injuries are common. Increasing demand from the fashion industry has spawned a black market for peacock feathers.

“Marabou” feathers sometimes seen on catwalks and red carpets are a product of the poultry industry, which confines turkeys and chickens to tiny cages or filthy, crowded sheds for their entire lives and subjects them to great suffering.

PETA entity investigations have exposed that in the down industry, factory farms keep ducks with bloody wounds in dark, dirty sheds; workers herd geese into pens, where they’ve trampled and crushed each other while being sent to slaughter; and workers painfully rip out fistfuls of feathers, causing the birds to shriek in pain. To add insult to injury, some of the feathers obtained under these conditions were marketed as “responsible” or “humane.”

Knowing that ostriches, geese, turkeys, peacocks, and other birds suffer terribly for the fashion industry, innovative designers like Stella McCartney are increasingly choosing animal-free materials to create showstopping looks that replicate the lightness, movement, and warmth of feathers – without cruelty.

We pledge to keep our collections free from all feathers to help inspire a future for fashion without animal abuse.

On behalf of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals we, the undersigned, pledge never to use feathers in our future collections.

Stella McCartney
Adolfo Dominguez
Eirinn Hayhow
Felder Felder
Gymshark
Ibiza Fashion Festival
Joshua James Small
Patrick McDowell
Pīferi
Richard Malone
Sarah Regensburger
SKFK
VIN + OMI
Eleanor Williams

© Mary McCartney

Are You a Designer? Sign Our Feather-Free Pledge

If you’re a designer, please commit to never using feathers in your collections.

Please e-mail PETA if you want to sign the feather-free pledge.

Not a Designer? Promise to Never Buy Feathers

Birds need their feathers – we don’t. Join Stella McCartney and other compassionate designers who are saying “no” to cruelty by pledging to never buy any products, clothing items, or accessories that contain feathers. They belong to birds and shouldn’t be stolen by humans.

 

I Pledge to Be Feather-Free:

Fields with an asterisk(*) are required.​

Staying in Touch
As a PETA supporter, you're already helping to save the lives of animals. To show you how we put our supporters' donations to good use and to provide you with information on ways you can continue to help animals, including how to become a PETA member or make donations to support our work, we may contact you by post using the information you've provided in this form.

Sign up for e-mails from PETA including:

Support our work to save animals. Select YES to receive e-mails, including about other ways to help animals, such as by signing petitions and funding PETA's lifesaving work.