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Janelle Abbott's Labor-Intensive Garments Drip With Layers of Fabric—and Conviction

The Seattle-based artist behind JRAT Zero Waste combats the wastefulness of the fashion industry, one densely constructed T-shirt at a time.

By Megan Gannon
July 13, 2026

Photo by Elisa Clements

During Fashion Revolution Week 2024, textile artist and designer Janelle Abbott sewed for 14 hours a day for 6 days in a row to simulate the experience of textile workers in Bangladesh.

For the clothing Janelle Abbott creates, maximalism is an aesthetic born out of sharp convictions.

From her studio in Seattle, the artist behind the brand JRAT Zero Waste makes intricate garments with dense layering, ruffles, pleats, and other bold, fabric-eating manipulations from textiles that might otherwise be destined for a landfill. “I think so much material exists that the most sustainable action is maximalism,” she says.

Abbott has long been concerned with questions of overconsumption, sustainability, and labor in fashion. She grew up with a unique insight into the industry—her parents owned an independent clothing manufacturing company in Seattle called Amanda Gray. Abbott was homeschooled; she grew up at the factory, watching how the casual womenswear garments were created.

“The things that my parents’ company manufactured were quite simple in shape and construction, but they still took highly skilled sewers, cutters, pattern drafters. I just came to understand fashion from that systemic and process-based perspective,” Abbott says. “A lot of my techniques are very labor-intensive, because I want to exaggerate and highlight how much labor goes into even a seemingly simple garment.”

Photo by Martin Ranger

Abbott is the artist behind the brand JRAT Zero Waste, which aims to combat the wastefulness of the fashion industry.

During a class on zero-waste pattern drafting with Timo Rissanen at Parsons School of Design in New York, Abbott experienced a turning point. “That’s when I learned that particular methodology and found someone I felt really understood what it meant to be driven by ethics above aesthetics,” she says.

While traditional pattern drafting might waste about 15 percent of source textiles, Abbott designs herself into a corner, using every square inch of fabric within a single piece or multiple, intersecting pieces. Any leftovers created in the process will inspire another creative challenge to fulfill the zero-waste objective.

Abbott started working on JRAT Zero Waste full-time six years ago, when the start of the COVID-19 pandemic put an end to her other jobs as a tour guide, yoga instructor, and studio assistant for the artist Del Webber. It helped that she had just gotten an influx of deadstock textiles from a Seattle curtain store that was going out of business.

Photo by Elisa Clements

JRAT Zero Waste collaborates with Seattle-based clothing maker Prairie Underground to create new garments from the company’s deadstock

“I think so much material exists that the most sustainable action is maximalism.”

— Janelle Abbott

Chance inundation with source material is often the starting point for Abbott’s designs. In 2022, she was helping her aunt downsize a massive clothing collection when she decided to warehouse hundreds of T-shirts that didn’t have any resale value—and might not even enjoy a second life as ironic thrift-store finds. From that collection, she developed her 3T method, a chenille-inspired practice in which she deconstructs and reassembles three T-shirts into one three-times-as-thick garment. Abbott intends for the aesthetic of the resulting shirts, with their vertical slices and rough edges, to emphasize the temporal nature of the material: often, the T-shirts in these garments were created for one-off events such as 5K runs or family reunions. 

“For me, it’s really an offer towards individuals, encouraging them to wear more clothing simultaneously, to reduce the landfill, to reduce acts of waste colonialism”—many of these garments end up in secondhand markets in the developing nations, and ultimately, in landfills in those countries—“and to validate the labor of garment workers by keeping their product in circulation for longer, and validating the existence of these pieces,” she says.

The 3T is also a more approachable aesthetic for fans of Abbott’s work who might not be adventurous enough to wear an Edwardian-inspired ruffled jumpsuit. Her designs—from the 3T to her more daring pieces—can be found in boutiques such as Café Forgot in New York and Stand Up Comedy in Portland, Oregon, as well as stockists as far away as Tokyo and Paris.

Photo by Janelle Abbott

An installation shot from a 2025 exhibition at Cannonball Arts in Seattle shows shirts made with Abbott’s 3T method for a piece titled 149,520 Gallons. That number refers to the amount of water it took to manufacture all the shirts used in the installation.

  • Photos by Janelle Abbott

    Abbott made costumes for the Pacific Northwest Ballet's production of AfterTime, 2025.

Currently an artist-in-residence at Recology King County, Abbott is enjoying access to new source materials. Instead of clothing, she’s making artwork out of plastic cutlery, tiny hygiene product containers, and other items that pass through one of Recology’s material-recovery facilities. She sees the residency as an opportunity to diversify her creative output, away from the commercial pressures of fashion. And the residency is a chance to explore how to use plastics in new ways: she has opted to stop using them in her clothing in light of the microplastic pollution created by wearing and washing polyesters, but she wants to find interesting uses for the discarded items that already exist. 

Abbott has been staging shows for the last several iterations of New York Fashion Week, too, and she’s now preparing her next one for this September. Her last fall show, Pretty/Ugly Princess, was conceived as a faux pageant exploring the ugliness of the pursuit of beauty. 

Abbott says she thinks it’s important to keep showing up in New York, insisting to the industry that her approach is legitimate and necessary.

“So much of fashion has been and still is about the spectacle and about glossy magazines and runways and celebrities, but I couldn’t care less about that kind of stuff,” she says. “Sometimes I feel like I’m doing it wrong, but I think I’m doing it authentic to my own convictions and to the reality of clothing itself. It only exists because of labor.”

Photo by Janelle Abbott

While in residence at King County Recology in Seattle, Abbott has been finding novel ways of reusing plastic waste.

  • Photo by Blue T.

    Models wear Abbott's garments for her Pretty/Ugly Princess runway show at New York Fashion Week, 2025.

Megan Gannon is a writer and ceramist based in Seattle. She is a manager at Third Place Pottery, a community clay studio, and her journalism has appeared in National Geographic, High Country News, and Scientific American, among many other publications. 

Check out JRAT Zero Waste online.

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This article was made possible with support from the Windgate Foundation.

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