In The Salvation Army's new campaign, the language of luxury fashion has been turned inside out to expose the exploitation it so often conceals. The campaign confronts the public with one devastating truth: 160 million children are trapped in child labour globally, many of them working in the fast fashion supply chain, says The Salvation Army.

Last week, top South African influencers received what appeared to be exclusive fashion drops. Labels like MÆ SOT and DHAKA arrived in premium packaging, complete with embossed logos and tissue wrap. But inside the boxes, instead of trend-setting pieces, each parcel contained boutique-style garments in children's sizes, says the organisation.

According to the organisation, accompanying each garment is a letter that says, "You were expecting fashion. You got something smaller. And heavier."

Each brand in the campaign draws from real-world geographies where child labour is rampant. MÆ SOT, for example, mirrors the aesthetic of high fashion but references Mae Sot, a Thai border town known for exploitative garment manufacturing. Its logo conceals hand-drawn illustrations of children at work, hidden in the editorial lettering — a design paradox that forces viewers to look closer, says the organisation.

Similarly, DHAKA, referencing Bangladesh's capital, integrates national symbols with haunting metaphors: scissors as birds, buttons as currency and children rowing through threads. Every element in the design asks us to consider what beauty costs when childhood is the price, adds the organisation.

"The Salvation Army gives clothes a second life," says Major Thataetsile Semeno of The Salvation Army. "But lately, what we're finding in our collection boxes isn't just fast fashion. It's a trail of discarded stories. Clothes that were cheap to buy, barely worn and casually donated, often because they were never made right to begin with."

The Salvation Army says that '#BehindTheLabel' doesn't just aim to drive donations this winter, it aims to start a conversation: Are we giving clothes away because we no longer need them or because they were never meant to last?

The campaign urges South Africans to think about the people behind their clothing, and it calls on fashion consumers to shift from convenience to consciousness. The Salvation Army is asking the public to think about where their clothing came from, concludes the organisation.

For more information, visit www.salvationarmy.org.za. You can also follow The Salvation Army on Facebook, X, or on Instagram.

*Image courtesy of contributor