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Byborre’s waste-reducing platform

Textile innovator Byborre launches a new platform to empower creators and reduce industry waste

- WRITER: YOKO CHOY

Borre Akkersdijk, co-founder of Dutch textile innovation studio and clothing label Byborre, was drawn to the textile industry because it was one of the few sectors that had yet to be truly modernised. Textiles, of course, were a key driver of the Industrial Revolution. And, much later, the boom of fast fashion in the 1990s accelerate­d the growth of the industry. But, Akkersdijk says, ‘this was all in an old-school way. It was not driven by technology but by big, labour-intensive factories. Byborre was inspired by the tactility of textiles in a world that had not been revolution­ised.’

Founded in 2010, Byborre is committed to curbing wasteful practice in the industry. Within the textile supply chain, fibre makers often influence the direction of yarn makers, who influence the direction of textile manufactur­ers. At the receiving end are the creators, who generally have little say in what and how textiles are made. When they need textiles for their products, they mostly choose from what is on the market, or visit industry fairs in search of something that comes closest to what they have in mind. So paradoxica­lly, while brand designers best understand their end users, it is textile manufactur­ers who are driving the product. It is this misalignme­nt which, over the last decade, Byborre has addressed in its mission to build a new ecosystem. ‘We flipped the supply chain the other way around,’ says Akkersdijk. ‘We start from the creators.’

The company recently launched Byborre Create, a scalable platform, operated through an online app, that provides creators with direct access to sustainabl­e design choices, innovation­s and creative tools. The goal is to democratis­e innovation, support responsibl­e textile production, and encourage fitter-for-purpose, longer-lasting products. ‘We developed a new process that allows creators to innovate,’ Akkersdijk says.

Byborre Create breaks down the supply chain into four simple design steps, and guides brands through an intuitive workflow: firstly, determinin­g the function of the fabric – be it for clothing, interiors or automotive – and choosing suitable yarns from the platform’s curated and vetted library; secondly, exploring knit types to find the perfect weight and structure to match their creative vision; thirdly, composing the colour; and finally, adding aesthetic elements to infuse their brand’s DNA into the textile.

‘When creators and brands start using the platform, we start a new dialogue. So we all learn and improve when everybody uses it. We want to change the industry with this honest open-source mentality. We want brands to make better products and fewer mistakes, so that there is less harm to the environmen­t.’

Akkersdijk points out that the textile industry’s R&D process can be staggering­ly wasteful. ‘As a creator, if you don’t have influence in that process, how can you control your impact?’ he says. So Byborre set up a hub in Amsterdam for R&D and sampling. When creative needs have been defined, a thorough production brief is sent to the respective factories. ‘The machines here mirror exactly those in the factories that we have licences with. Now, because Byborre brings in clients, ensures material supply and provides them with the best programme and design, the factories can lower their minimum order quantity (it was usually between 2,000m and 5,000m, but they can now work with as little as 250m) and it allows quicker delivery.

The brands don’t have to worry about overproduc­ing or sharing the same textile design with competitor­s.’

Akkersdijk believes there also needs to be a transparen­t overview of the product. ‘At the moment, we are making our own life cycle assessment [an analysis of the potential environmen­tal impact of products during their entire life cycle] for all textiles created by or through us, and a product passport that shows where the fibre came from, where the yarn was born, where the textile was created, and how it was shipped; in short, the textile’s full journey.’

Happily, Byborre isn’t short of like-minded stakeholde­rs in the industry. Collaborat­ors, many of whom already use Byborre Create, include AZ Factory, BMW, Kering, Porter, and Natuzzi, with which it most recently launched the ‘Water’ textile collection (W*258). Byborre is also working with Sabine Marcelis and Formafanta­sma for upcoming textile developmen­ts. In the future, it hopes to set up hubs in Asia and the US to achieve another important marker of sustainabl­e developmen­t – proximity to its markets. *

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