Jessica Alba will let daughters dress her for eco-challenge

Advertisement

Posted: 03/21/2013

Actress JESSICA ALBA has agreed to let her young daughters choose her work clothes for one day if she can convince 10,000 fans to join her in a challenge to save the environment.

The Sin City star has signed up as a global ambassador for Earth Hour 2013, which encourages the public to turn off their lights for 60 minutes on 23 March (12) to conserve energy and encourage sustainability.

Alba is hoping to convince 10,000 people to pledge their support to the campaign by switching to using non-toxic eco-friendly products at home.

If she reaches her target, she will allow her daughters Honor and Haven to dress her for one day, while the co-founders of her eco-friendly family brand The Honest Company will do the same.

She says, "Christopher, Sean, Brian and I, founders of The Honest Company, will let our kids dress the whole Honest team, including us, for work for one day if 10,000 people commit to switch to using non-toxic products in their home."

Alba adds, "The choices we all make in our daily lives can have a massive difference, not only to our children, but also to the very planet on which we live. I hope you'll accept the Honest challenge and help us take the mission of Earth Hour, beyond the hour."

Copyright WENN.com - World Entertainment News Network

  • Comments
advertisement

Did You Hear?


  1. Singer: McDonald's ruined my voice

    Singer: McDonald's ruined my voice

    Jacqueline Simpson, 52, is suing the restaurant chain over a piece of glass she bit into while eating a chicken sandwich.

    • VIDEO: Wife dumps beer on husband

      VIDEO: Wife dumps beer on husband

      A man who was trying to protect his wife from a home run ball got a face full of beer for his effort.

      • Happy 140th Birthday, blue jeans

        Happy 140th Birthday, blue jeans

        Jim Heston, an American guesthouse operator in Cambodia, has lived a life in denim and has the photos to prove it. There were the dungarees he wore as a little boy, the dark bell-bottoms he had on for a hike up Japan's Mount Fuji, and the Levis straight-leg 501 jeans he's stayed with for the past 36 years.

        More Entertainment


        • Stay Connected