Displaying 26 - 50 of 64
26
Article
The performance luxury brand evaluated every material is uses and is planning to use a more sustainable version.
27
Article
The British fashion brand launched ‘made to last’ sustainability manifesto geared at transforming into a fully regenerative and circular business model by 2030.
28
Article
The fashion resale market in the U.S. is projected to grow to $64 billion by 2024.
29
To fix fashion’s sustainability problem, we need a little less conversation and a little more action
Article
Sponsored: The industry is on the verge of a climate revolution, but progress is getting bogged down by semantics and distracted by low-hanging fruit.
by Angela Adams
30
Article
More than 100 billion garments are produced annually. Many end up in the landfill.
31
Article
The apparel and footwear giant says its scale requires it to address textile waste and to design out waste from the beginning.
32
Article
The EU-funded New Cotton Project aims to collect, sort and regenerate old clothing into new items for sale on the high street.
33
Article
Fast fashion has destructive impacts on the environment and people. Buying secondhand clothing could provide consumers a way to push back against the fast-fashion system.
by Hyejune Park
34
Article
In order to scale its solution, the labeling and embellishment manufacturer must partner with apparel companies and other stakeholders.
35
Article
From Levi's first resale offering to H&M's first in-store garment-to-garment recycling system, the runaway for innovation is intriguing.
36
Article
As fashion brands adapt and survive, they can drive a renewed vision of how to decouple volume growth from value growth.
37
Article
The summit, which took place during Paris Fashion Week, presented a glimpse of our technological fashion future and showed that there's room to push our circular impact and ambition.
by Lilian Liu
38
Article
Millions of fashion supply chain workers are expected to lose jobs by the end of the year due to the global COVID-19 crisis. A recovery must center people who've been most affected.
39
Article
Companies across the fashion industry have deployed pilots for circular — or more sustainable — products, but too often they stop there.
40
Article
Building a circular economy will need disruptive ideas that shift the status quo — and these five startups showcased at Circularity 20 could be those innovators.
by Holly Secon
41
Article
As Hungarian biochemist Albert Szent-Gyorgyi said, 'Water is life’s matter and matrix, mother and medium. There is no life without water.'
42
Article
This company is trying to show the world that we can create industrial systems that are beneficial to humanity and to our habitat.
43
Article
If we can't keep certain items from winding up in oceans or landfills, we should redesign with the expectation of that leakage.
44
Article
Man-made cellulosic fibers, the second biggest cellulosic fiber group after cotton, holds huge untapped potential to transform the fashion industry, according to Forum for the Future and the Textile Exchange.
45
Article
Eon, an IoT platform, is working with the fashion companies and retailers to minimize waste and build the infrastructure for circular business models.
46
Article
Eighty percent of a product’s environmental impact is decided on the design table but most apparel professionals weren't trained to design with the end-user or end-of-life of the garment in mind.
by Jade Wilting
47
Webcast
From our clothes and eyeglasses to the water bottles and handbags we carry, the choices we make about how we present ourselves to the world says a lot about who we are and what we value.
48
Webcast
Date/Time: October 13, 2020 (1-2PM ET / 10-11AM PT)
As global apparel consumption continues to rise—an expected increase of 60% by 2030—that growth
49
Article
From carbon-negative polyester to dissolvable thread, here's a handful of surprising startups making waves in the apparel industry.
50
Article
Tracking technologies could provide information throughout a product's journey, from the start all the way through to its use at the consumer level, and ultimately to its disposal or reuse in the future.