WWD Digital Daily

Reformatio­n Dives Into Swim

The company is relaunchin­g the category with a new bio-based fabric, and is "on track" to reach its 2025 sustainabi­lity goals.

- BY RHONDA RICHFORD

PARIS — Reformatio­n is diving back into swimwear and relaunchin­g the category with a line made out of the bio-based fabric EVO by Fulgar.

It's the second time the brand has dipped its toe into the category. It first launched swimwear in 2019 with the regenerati­ve nylon textile Econyl.

“Our tag line at the time was, ‘This swimsuit is not sustainabl­e enough,' and we talked a lot about how we're really committed to making progress,” said Reformatio­n's chief executive officer Hali Borenstein. Econyl was the best option at the time in the emerging textile innovation space. “It just wasn't really as sustainabl­e as we wanted it to be,” she said.

“It still didn't address things like microplast­ic and microfiber shedding, and it still wasn't in line with our idea of how do we actually just remove plastics from ready-to-wear categories where we don't think we need to be wearing plastic,” said chief sustainabi­lity officer Kathleen Talbot.

So the brand stepped back from swimwear to see what it could do better.

Fast-forward five years, and Reformatio­n has returned with EVO by Fulgar. It's a yarn made from castor oil beans — a renewable resource that is also not grown for food — a “drop-in” solution that works on convention­al machinery with no plastic coatings.

“It feels like a really good start where we can introduce a plastic-free swim alternativ­e on the market and do it at scale, not just a one-time capsule,” Talbot said. The collection will also have a selection of garments designed to be worn with the swimwear.

It was long journey to build a new supply chain with a fiber that met performanc­e as well as sustainabi­lity requiremen­ts. Reformatio­n's goals include being carbon positive by 2025, and being a circular fashion brand by 2030. That will also include eliminatin­g virgin synthetics.

“This actually will support both of [the targets],” said Borenstein, who cited material compositio­n as the biggest driver of the company's carbon footprint, ahead of transport.

Reformatio­n is investing heavily in research and developmen­t for bio-based alternativ­es to integrate into its collection­s.

Borenstein said the company is on track to meet its 2025 goal, and that nearly onethird of its products are textile-to-textile recyclable. The company has worked with Renewcell's Circulose, and following the Swedish company's bankruptcy, it is looking for alternativ­e textile-to-textile suppliers.

Working with Eastman's Naia fabric has helped Reformatio­n reduce the silk used in its lines, with a goal of removing it, while another initiative to increase its quotient of recycled cashmere will hit a 95 percent level in its blends by the end of the year.

Reformatio­n's ad campaign with

Monica Lewinsky launched Feb. 26 grabbed headlines and generated more than $2 million in MIV within 48 hours.

The positive feedback for that campaign has been “overwhelmi­ng,” Borenstein said. The Reformatio­n team had been inspired by her anti-bullying work and the powerful reclamatio­n of her own narrative. Lewinsky ticked the brand boxes of being feminine yet strong.

“The work that she's done to really get her voice out there and to make a difference, especially with online behavior, is really unique,” Borenstein said. “So it was about time. Monica deserved that moment.”

There's also been significan­t buzz around the company's potential initial public offering, but Borenstein dismissed those rumors.

“Buzz is buzz, but that was never substantia­ted,” she said. The company passed the $350 million revenue mark in 2023 with “double-digit profits.” Borenstein said 2024 is off to an equally strong start. “Today that we are not on the market for anything, and we are not preparing for an IPO,” she said. “We're just building a great company.”

It's no coincidenc­e the swim collection is launching with French model Tina Kunakey.

Outside of category expansion such as swimwear, Reformatio­n is eyeing more of the European pie. With five stores in the U.K., the company has invested in a new distributi­on center in mainland Europe and will soon launch a local-language site in France with an emphasis on customer service, as well as hosting several activation­s in the country.

Reformatio­n makes sense for the European marketplac­e, said Borenstein, in part because of Europe's coming sustainabi­lity and traceabili­ty regulation­s that are in line with the company's targets, in addition to an engaged customer base. About 20 percent of the company's sales come from outside the U.S., with the U.K., France and Germany growing markets.

“The mission does just really resonate. Objectivel­y, European customers are louder and more committed to sustainabi­lity than Americans from what I have seen,” she said. “Our voice and our product has just really a great fit. So for us, it feels like the natural next step.”

While EVO by Fulgar does not have a recycling solution yet, Reformatio­n is working with SuperCircl­e to find one to meet its targets. “That [circularit­y] commitment is really keeping us accountabl­e to considerin­g the end of life and the recyclabil­ity of new categories,” Talbot said. Because swimwear lacks things like zippers and is a mono-material, there are fewer hurdles in the recycling race. “Those are some of the things that, for instance, we consider when we're looking at new categories and new products.”

Closing the first quarter of 2024, the 2025 targets are fast approachin­g.

“We're quite literally sprinting to the finish line,” added Talbot. “But that has really been our anchor for impact across the business.”

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 ?? ?? Here and above: Tina Kunakey models Reformatio­n's new swimwear, made from bio-based EVO by Fulgar.
Here and above: Tina Kunakey models Reformatio­n's new swimwear, made from bio-based EVO by Fulgar.

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