“Despite changing circumstances, our important work for innovation continues. For the first time, we hosted our Selection Day virtually. As such, we are excited to welcome 13 innovators into our Programme, representing the most disruptive solutions in the areas of raw materials and wet processing,” said Katrin Ley, managing director Fashion for Good.
The seventh batch is the first to participate in Fashion for Good’s restructured Accelerator Programme. As with previous programmes, the seventh batch of innovators will receive tailor made mentoring, personal guidance on impact assessments, funding support and market validation from programme partners, Adidas, C&A, Chanel, Bestseller, Galeries Lafayette Group, Kering, Otto Group, PVH Corp, Stella McCartney, Target and Zalando as well as affiliate partners Archroma, Arvind, Norrøna, Vivobarefoot and Welspun, to catalyse the implementation of their innovations at scale.
Previous Selection Days have been hosted in the Fashion for Good headquarters in Amsterdam, where corporate partners, innovators and key industry players convened for an extensive day programme consisting of industry and pilot project focused workshops and panel discussions, keynote speakers, presentations and, of course, pitches from short listed innovators.
In addition, the event provides an opportunity for guests to gather together with other professionals from across the industry, meet face-to-face and network during the lunch and post Selection Day drinks. The virtual Selection Day attempted to capture the same experience online, hosting multiple workshops and panel discussions and providing scheduled times for open discussion.
With more than two years experience in running Accelerator and Scaling Programmes, Fashion for Good has increased the duration of the Accelerator Programme to better cater to the needs of the selected innovators, allowing them the time and means to develop their innovations and businesses further. The extended programme provides more opportunities with programme mentors and bespoke coaching, better preparing them for growth and eventual wide scale implementation.
The selected innovators of the seventh batch are: Bear Fiber, Dryfiber, Econic, Fairbrics, Full Cycle Bioplastics, Galy, HydroCotton, Imogo, Nrel, NTX: Cooltrans Technology, Oritain, Recycrom and Tinctorium.
Bear Fiber is developing a novel biotechnological cottonisation process and manufacturing platform for fibre production with hemp that uses less water and energy. The cotton-like hemp fibre and yarns can be easily spun with cotton to produce textiles and finished garments.
NTX: Cooltrans Technology employs low-carbon, environmentally friendly inkjet and gravure printing technology and eco-friendly dyes for textile printing, renders delicate and vivid prints to textile fabrics.
Dryfiber provides a fluorine-free durable water and oil repellent textile finish which is completely water-borne and can be applied through traditional finishing processes.
Econic provides an innovative catalyst technology that facilitates incorporation of waste CO2 as a raw material into polyols, replacing up to 50 per cent of traditional oil-based feedstocks. Waste CO2 is cheaper than oil-based raw materials, plus offers enhanced product performance and environmental benefits.
Fairbrics provides a novel process to create ethylene glycol (a component of polyester) from waste CO2. The resultant chemical is identical both chemically and practically to petroleum-based ethylene glycol.
Full Cycle’s patented technology converts waste streams such as inedible food waste, agricultural by-products and used paper/cardboard into Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) bioplastics that degrade in the soil and the ocean.
Galy engineers cotton in labs through the multiplication of cells directly into the cotton fibre, removing steps of traditional cotton farming. As a result they can grow cotton without the use of pesticides or fertilisers, using considerably less water.
HydroCotton grows sustainable cotton in a transparent way. HydroCotton is developing a technology for cotton agriculture that reduces water and fertiliser by 80%, while also being grown in an insecticide-free environment.
Imogo focuses on sustainable production processes, primarily in the textile industry. Their innovative new processes for dyeing textile materials can dramatically reduce the wasteful use of water, chemistry and energy in the textile dyeing process.
Nrel works on the development of a polyurethane for carbon capture, reuse and sequestration. They use microalgae as a feedstock to explore the production of various products for polyurethanes, polyurethanes, plastic composites to name a few.
Oritain provides a traceability innovation with science that originates from the criminal forensic field, using selected stable isotopes to identify a product region. They provide a unique and fast process with highly reliable, accurate results.
Recycrom is a dyestuffs range made using recycled, used clothing, fibrous material and textiles scraps made from cellulosic fibres. The dyestuff can colour any cellulosic and natural fibre as well polyamide.
Tinctorium produce natural, pre-reduced Indigo dyes that are a drop-in replacement for synthetic Indigo, free of impurities with the same performance as synthetic Indigo.
Fashion for Good is the global platform for innovation made possible through collaboration and community. With an open invitation to the entire apparel industry, Fashion for Good convenes brands, producers, retailers, suppliers, non-profit organisations, innovators and funders united in their shared ambition.
At the core of Fashion for Good is its innovation platform. Based in our Amsterdam headquarters and recently expanding the programme to South Asia, its global Fashion for Good Accelerator Programme gives promising start-up innovators the expertise and access to funding they need in order to grow. Its Scaling Programme supports innovations that have passed the proof-of-concept phase, initiating pilot projects with partner organisations and guided by its dedicated team that offers bespoke support and access to expertise, customers and capital. The Good Fashion Fund catalyses access to finance to shift at scale to more sustainable production methods.
Fashion for Good also acts as a convener for change, with the world’s first interactive museum dedicated to sustainable fashion innovation. In its headquarters, Fashion for Good houses a Circular Apparel Community co-working space, creates open-source resources like its Good Fashion Guide that provides practical advice to implement cradle-to-cradle certified apparel as well as white papers and reports investigating industry practices and developments.
Fashion for Good’s programmes are supported by founding partner Laudes Foundation, co-founder William McDonough and corporate partners Adidas, C&A, Chanel, Bestseller, Galeries Lafayette Group, Kering, Otto Group, PVH Corp, Stella McCartney, Target and Zalando and affiliate partners Archroma, Arvind, Norrøna, Vivo Barefoot and Welspun.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (PC)