The Sunday Guardian

Can recycled rags fix fashion’s waste problem?

- WINSTON CHOI-SCHAGRIN

Tucked away in the bowels of the Brooklyn Army Terminal is a 4,000-square-foot warehouse filled from wall to wall and floor to ceiling with garbage bags. They contain castoffs from New York’s fashion studios: mock-up pockets ripped from sample jeans, swatches in next season’s paisley print.

There is denim here in every wash, spandex in every hue. Dig through one bag and it is possible to find a little rug of carmine-colored fur and yards of gray pinstripe wool suiting. In another, embroidere­d patches from Gapkids and spools of ribbon in velvet and lace.

Nearly 6,000 pounds of textile scraps arrive each week to be inspected, sorted and recycled by five staffers and many more volunteers at Fabscrap, the nonprofit behind this operation. Since 2016, it has helped New York’s fashion studios recycle their design-room discards—the mutilated garments, dead-stock rolls and swatches that designers use to pick materials and assess prototypes.

So far, the organizati­on has collected close to half a million pounds of fabric from the design studios of large retailers like Express, J. Crew and Marc Jacobs and independen­t clothiers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t. Their discards have been shredded and recycled into stuffing and insulation or resold to fashion students, educators and artists.

“So much waste gets created in the design process,” said Jessica Schreiber, the executive director of Fabscrap. “But it’s the tip of the iceberg.”

As climate change has accelerate­d, corporatio­ns of all kinds have become increasing­ly preoccupie­d with their sustainabi­lity cred. Fourfifths of consumers feel strongly that companies should implement programs to improve the environmen­t, according to a recent Nielsen study.

Clothing companies in particular have faced pressure to change, from politician­s, protesters at fashion shows and shoppers of all ages who want to reduce their carbon footprints. The fashion industry is often erroneousl­y cited as the second-mostpollut­ing business in the world, but overproduc­tion, chemical use, carbon emissions and waste are certainly issues it contends with.

Spinning a Sustainabl­e Yarn

For a designer, cutting down on waste isn’t as simple as recycling a few bags of fabric every week. It requires overhaulin­g the brand’s business model: forgoing seasonal collection­s; eschewing—or being rejected by—traditiona­l retailers that accept only large orders and standard packaging; selling directly to consumers; and getting design teams to think about the sustainabi­lity and supply chain of each material and garment.

It’s hard to pinpoint how much waste is created before a garment even reaches the consumer. Factory waste is not tracked by outside agencies. Supply chains are now so complex and reliant on remote contractor­s and subcontrac­tors that the companies can’t account for all the materials.

Even if a brand wanted to find out how much fabric waste it created, “it would be very difficult for them to research that, because different factories might have different processes,” said Timo Rinassen, an assistant professor of sustainabi­lity at Parsons School of Design.

Wendy Waugh, the senior vice president of sustainabi­lity at Theory and a Fabscrap client, knew that determinin­g the brand’s total waste would be a challenge. The company works with many different fibers, which are sourced from all over the world. The company’s “Good Wool,” for instance, comes from a farm in Tasmania and is scoured, spun and dyed at a mill in Italy before it is warehoused and sold around the world.

After a fiber is harvested and spun, it is sent to a factory where it is cut, dyed and trimmed. Reverse Resources, a software company that works with major apparel factories in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, found that 20% of the fabric used in the cutmake-trim phase is ultimately thrown out.

Linda Greer, the founder of the Clean by Design program and a former toxicologi­st at the Natural Resources Defense Council, has advised many garment and dyeing factories in China. She said brands frequently reject fabrics because they don’t match the desired shade exactly.

“I’ve seen so many ‘weeping piles’ of miscolored fabric,” Greer said. “Sometimes they can touch it up. And sometimes they throw it away.”

Once a garment is complete, it can present another problem: excess inventory. In some cases those garments are incinerate­d, which prevents them from being resold at a discount, Rinassen said.

Last year, Burberry burned $37 million of clothing and cosmetics to maintain “brand value.” The previous year, H&M came under scrutiny after it was reported to have incinerate­d 60 tons of unsold merchandis­e.

Stephanie Benedetto founded Queen of Raw, an online marketplac­e for dead-stock fabrics and a Fabscrap partner, after seeing how much manufactur­ed material was sitting in warehouses ($120 billion worth, by her estimate). At that volume, she said, waste isn’t just environmen­tally irresponsi­ble—it’s “a CFO issue.”

Sorting Through Scraps

Standing on the Fabscrap floor, it is impossible not to feel overwhelme­d by the enormous pile of trash.

Schreiber noted that the bags in the facility were “almost irrelevant in the scheme of what is probably generated.” None of the overstocke­d garments languishin­g in company warehouses are here. Nor are the huge quantities of fabric that are tossed from the factory floor.

Beneath the heap, seven volunteers slowly and manually sorted by material every scrap that came in. They inspected and removed labels and rubbed the fabric between their fingers. It could not have been further from the mechanized processes at a recycling plant, which employ feats of engineerin­g— eddy currents, magnets and near-infrared scanners—to identify and categorize various types of metals, plastic and paper.

There is no technology in use that can detect the difference­s between, say, spandex and wool. “The infrastruc­ture is lacking,” Schreiber said. “Like the fact that the sorting still all happens by hand is bonkers.”

The recycling processes are similarly decades behind. Today, there are a number of companies, like Evrnu and Wornagain, that are just beginning to recycle fibers, a process that involves shredding and dissolving the fibers into a pulp that can be respun into a new fabric.

Schreiber said that if clothing scraps were treated “as a waste-commodity stream, not a nonprofit-managed material, we would be further along in the tech.”

© 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES

 ?? (JOHN TAGGART/THE NEW YORK TIMES) ?? Fabscrap in Brooklyn, where the sorting process is run by five employees and a handful of volunteers, many of whom are design students, on 7 May.
(JOHN TAGGART/THE NEW YORK TIMES) Fabscrap in Brooklyn, where the sorting process is run by five employees and a handful of volunteers, many of whom are design students, on 7 May.
 ?? (JOHN TAGGART/THE NEW YORK TIMES) ?? At Fabscrap’s warehouse in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, textiles from fashion studios are sorted by material and color, on 7 May.
(JOHN TAGGART/THE NEW YORK TIMES) At Fabscrap’s warehouse in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, textiles from fashion studios are sorted by material and color, on 7 May.

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