Gap, Thousand Fell and MycoWorks are three companies working on new
ways to design out waste and build greater durability into what we wear, especially when it
comes to jeans and footwear. They came together last week to share some of their
insights via a Zoom
conference
about the potential for circular principles for the fashion industry, hosted by
the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF).
Gap is one of the core partners of EMF’s Make Fashion Circular
initiative,
which seeks to radically redesign the fashion industry. The Jeans
Redesign
is one of the projects taking flight under this initiative, as it looks to
develop and share new guidelines to tackle the waste and pollution associated
with jeans
production.
Image credit: Gap
Rebecca Golden, Gap’s director of denim R&D, said that her company uses over
110 million yards of denim each year and is looking to scale up the amount of
post-consumer recycled
cotton
it uses across its denim lines.
“For our holiday 2019 assortments, we made a commitment to use at least 5
percent recycled cotton from old jeans,” she says.
Golden added that the percentage figure, which equates to more than 91,000
pounds of recycled cotton in weight, is very much the “starting point” for Gap.
“5 percent was cost-neutral for us and enabled us to maintain our quality
standards … but we’re working on developing products that have a higher
percentage of recycled cotton in them.”
The challenge of maintaining fibre quality and performance as more post-consumer
cotton waste is added into denim designs is an ongoing one, but Golden says that
new technologies and treatments continue to emerge and with that, greater
options for sourcing recycled
materials.
“We have much, much better choices today than 10 or 15 years ago,” she said,
adding that conversations with vendors “have really changed” over the past five
years.
“The industry has made amazing strides in terms of creating more opportunities
or options for designers to choose from.”
Image credit: MycoWorks
Besides recycled fibres, many fashion brands are exploring the potential for
using regenerative alternatives. Earlier this year, San Francisco-based
startup MycoWorks raised US$17 million in funding
to help scale up production of its Reishi™
textile — which claims to be the first non-plastic, non-animal material that
performs like leather.
Reishi is basically made from mushrooms — from the mycelium root-like fibres in
fungi, using agricultural waste products such as corncobs and hemp fibres to
grow it. A low-tech solution, it can be cultured in different ways for various
textures, patterns and colours — it can even have items such as fasteners grown
directly into it, eliminating the need for glue or seaming. As MycoWorks CEO
Matthew Scullin explained: “When mycelium grows into an interwoven
structure, it becomes very strong. It performs like cow hide, which is pretty
amazing.”
Scullin added that the product is completely natural, unlike a lot of vegan
leather — which is petroleum-based, and will biodegrade at end of use; if added
to fertilizer, for example, Reishi can improve the speed of crop growth. “It’s
an incredibly circular process,” he asserted.
Image credit: Thousand Fell/Facebook
Meanwhile, New York-based Thousand Fell is
shunning leather in favour of other materials such as natural recycled rubber,
castor beans, coconut husks, sugar cane and quartz for its ‘full circle
footwear’ designs — starting with white sneakers, which co-founder Stuart
Ahlum says is the “perfect product to put on a closed-loop system.”
“The first user is usually the last user,” he explains, adding that sneakers
rarely get a chance at a second life due to the fact that they’re worn or can
have issues with odour. “We wanted to design and source materials that could be
easily mechanically recycled; we looked to create a sneaker built for
disassembly.”
Thousand Fell offers a takeback service for its used sneakers in exchange for a
discount on any new purchase. Once separated out, the materials from old
sneakers can either be composted, or recycled and reintegrated back into the
footwear supply chain.
The company is also planning to build a backend digital platform to deliver an
element of transparency, so it can show customers where the materials in their
sneakers go.
Ahlum says a key advantage Thousand Fell has over larger footwear brands is in
its ability to be nimble and responsive when it comes to designing out waste.
“Larger companies may have made fibre commitments with their supply chains five
to ten years out,” he observed, adding that it could take that kind of timeframe
before the footwear industry starts to make the big shifts needed to drive
circularity at scale.
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Maxine Perella is an environmental journalist working in the field of corporate sustainability, circular economy and resource risk.
Published May 12, 2020 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST