Take 3 For The Sea: Protecting What Is Precious

Take 3 For The Sea: Protecting What Is Precious

The ocean remains a defining influence on SARAH & SEBASTIAN’s design ethos. Its movement, depth and raw beauty continue to inspire our work while reinforcing our responsibility to protect it.

In 2022, we launched our philanthropic initiative, The Xanthe Project™, a long term commitment to safeguarding the marine environments that shape our designs. Through partnerships, education and direct action, the initiative supports organisations working to protect the future of our oceans.

Yet the scale of the challenge continues to grow.

Each year, millions of tonnes of plastic enter the ocean, travelling through streets, drains and waterways before reaching the sea. What disappears from view rarely disappears at all. Over time, plastic breaks down into microplastics that spread through ecosystems and threaten marine life.

The SARAH & SEBASTIAN team gathered at Coogee Beach alongside our partner Take 3 For The Sea. More than 40 volunteers came together for a morning of education and collective action.

At first glance, the coastline appeared pristine. But the closer we looked, the more we found.

Fragments of plastic caught between rocks. Cigarette butts pressed into the sand. Foam packaging scattered through the grass along the foreshore.

In just over an hour, our team removed 5,486 pieces of waste, totalling 17.5 kilograms of debris.

Among them were 2,379 cigarette butts, alongside hundreds of plastic fragments and pieces of foam insulation. Unexpected finds included an air mattress, nicotine pouches and SIM cards, fragments of everyday life that had washed ashore.

Beaches like Coogee are cleaned regularly by local councils, yet much of this debris remains hidden in plain sight.

Many pieces were partially buried in the sand or tangled within coastal vegetation. Others had already broken down into smaller fragments, almost invisible at first glance.

Plastic rarely disappears. Instead, it breaks apart, becoming smaller and more widespread over time. These particles are often mistaken for food by marine animals, causing lasting harm within marine ecosystems.

Moments like this reveal how easily everyday waste finds its way to the ocean.

Through The Xanthe Project™, SARAH & SEBASTIAN continues to support initiatives that protect and restore marine environments. The same ocean that inspires our work is the one we must continue to safeguard.

Discover more about the Xanthe Project here.

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Crayweed might not be well known, but its impact is profound. Much like forests on land, these underwater habitats support hundreds of marine species, stabilise coastal environments and absorb carbon from the atmosphere. Without them, marine biodiversity suffers and so does the broader health of our ocean. Once abundant along Sydney’s coastline, the native seaweed Phyllospora comosa disappeared in the 1980s due to pollution. For decades, the underwater landscape has remained bare where vibrant forests once flourished. This loss isn’t just ecological. It’s deeply felt by anyone who fishes, dives or enjoys seafood. Without seaweed forests, the species they shelter—such as crayfish, abalone, and countless others—vanish too. "This loss isn’t just ecological. It’s deeply felt by anyone who fishes, dives or enjoys seafood." Operation Crayweed is working to bring these forests back. Led by Professor Adriana Vergés and a team of marine scientists, it’s a hands-on effort to replant lost crayweed by hand, with the goal of restoring 70 kilometres of Sydney’s coastline. In September, the SARAH & SEBASTIAN team joined Operation Crayweed at Wylies Baths in Coogee to help restore this vital ecosystem. Working alongside the team on site, we helped prepare live crayweed to be planted in the shallows, replanting over 100 crayweeds across the day. [featured_images1] As a brand deeply connected to the ocean, we feel a responsibility to help protect its future. Kelp forests are intrinsic to the Great Southern Reef that lies at our doorstep and have long inspired our work, not only for their beauty but for their role in sustaining marine life. Seeing these ecosystems under threat only deepens our commitment. "As a brand deeply connected to the ocean, we feel a responsibility to help protect its future." Through The Xanthe Project™, we’re proud to support initiatives like Operation Crayweed, focused on tangible, long-term ecological impact.

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Behind the Scenes: Filming Ningaloo’s Nursery

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NOW YOU SEE ME, Ningaloo's Nursery—A SARAH & SEBASTIAN SHORT FILM

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