PETA’s #WoolFreeWinter campaign hit Chicago and Wichita this weekend.
PETA’s street theater showing humans treated like sheep makes throngs of people in New York City stop in their tracks.
What’s scarier than real-life skeletons? The leather, fur, wool, and down industries.
Cruelty to alligators and crocodiles prompts retailer to adopt policy change.
The iconic men’s magazine “Playboy” is pulling its pin-ups, but have no fear: Here at PETA, we’d still rather bare skin than wear skin.
PETA visited angora farms in China deemed “humane” by third-party auditors and discovered suffering, neglect, and cruelty beyond imagination.
After PETA released its angora wool exposé, Inditex banned angora from all its brands and found a great use for the wool it had in stock.
Robert Redford’s Sundance catalog gets out of the angora business.
What it would take for a company that supplies wool to retailers around the world to cut ties with a farm it had trusted for years?
Melissa McCarthy’s new clothing line is made for women of all pant sizes and just one heart size.
When animals’ body parts are used for mass production, to be turned into wool coats or leather boots, cruelty will always be part of the process.
Sport Chalet agreed to stop selling fur after learning from PETA how animals are electrocuted, bludgeoned, strangled, and skinned alive for their pelts.
Unlike Stella McCartney, who suspended all purchases of wool within minutes of watching PETA’s video, Patagonia has failed to act even remotely responsibly.
Stella McCartney has cut ties with the Argentina-based Ovis XXI, which also supplies Patagonia and other global brands.
Stock purchase will allow PETA to push for an end to exotic-skins sales from inside the corporation.