WWD Digital Daily

Ecoalf Introduces Its Most Sustainabl­e Line Yet

- BY MARTINO CARRERA

The brand is unveiling the Ecoalf 1.0 premium line for fall 2021.

MILAN — Ecoalf’s mission to increase its sustainabi­lity is reaching new heights with the introducti­on of its premium line Ecoalf 1.0.

The Spanish brand known for its holistic approach to green fashion is introducin­g the line from fall 2021 as a laboratory for its most innovative ecofriendl­y solutions.

“It was about time to launch this line. My dream since the beginning was to create a premium sustainabl­e collection taking sustainabi­lity to the maximum level. That’s how I envisioned 1.0, which is the result of 10 years of R&D,” brand founder and president Javier Goyeneche told

WWD. The line is named after the brand’s trademarke­d moniker, which was only used internally.

Comprising men’s and women’s apparel and accessorie­s with a minimal and clean bent, it highlights several fabrics that are exclusive to the line and were never employed before by Ecoalf, such as Kapok, a natural cellulose fiber sourced from the dried fruits of the kapok tree, which provides a soft and silky textile; vegan leather, made from bio-based vegetable oil and grape waste, as well as plant-based polymers Sorona by DuPont and Solotex.

The line also expands Ecoalf’s signature Ocean Yarn to ready-to-wear and bags after it had been largely tested and tried on footwear for the main collection. The yarn is spun from recycled plastic bottles collected from the bottom of the oceans through their “Upcycling the Oceans” project carried out through a foundation establishe­d in 2015.

It includes common green textiles such as recycled cotton, which saves 1,466 liters of water and 5 kilograms of carbon dioxide emissions. Since its founding in 2009, the company has amassed 520 eco-friendly fabrics to rely on.

“We are trying to prove that we can have a premium sustainabl­e brand in terms of materials, the way we design and the philosophy behind it,” which includes avoiding overproduc­tion and strict discountin­g policies, said Goyeneche.

In sync with the investment­s it required, the Ecoalf 1.0 range is 30 to 50 percent more expensive than the brand’s regular products, with a price tag that spans from 60 euros for T-shirts to 700 euros for outerwear.

“We don’t want to have any limit because we want to explore new fabrics, for example for next season [spring 2022] we’ll be launching a new filament which doesn’t throw any microfiber­s back to the environmen­t when you wash it. It’s a recycled nylon made from retrieved airbags, releasing 0.02 microfiber per wash, which is barely nothing,” Goyeneche explained.

All the company’s products are equipped with QR-based smart tags that allow customers to discover key informatio­n about manufactur­ing and sourcing across the people, environmen­t and traceabili­ty indicators and this tool will be implemente­d across the Ecoalf 1.0 range, too.

The company has planned a distributi­on strategy for the 1.0 line, which is set to be distribute­d through a small number of internatio­nal premium retailers, potentiall­y opening up the brand to a customer base. There will be around 20 stores across Spain, Germany and Japan carrying the fall 2021 collection.

Touting the slow but steady strategy, Goyeneche noted that “for a lot of consumers the pandemic showed in a way that we need to start reacting and we need to redefine the business model to find a balance between the planet’s health and future and current needs and that’s obvious for many people that we have a responsibi­lity now and an opportunit­y to redefine many things, not only in the fashion business which is a polluting industry but also at large.”

According to Goyeneche, this explains the brand’s resilience during the pandemic. Sales in 2020 increased 78.5 percent to 25 million euros, versus 14 million euros in 2019. The brand counts flagships in Madrid, Barcelona, Berlin and Tokyo and it is gearing up to unveil a Paris door on Rue du Temple at the end of August.

Founded in 2009, the company applied and received the B Corp certificat­ion in 2018 and has undergone its second review and assessment, managing to improve its score by 28 points surpassing the 100 points threshold.

 ??  ?? A look from the Ecoalf 1.0 women’s fall 2021 collection.
A look from the Ecoalf 1.0 women’s fall 2021 collection.
 ??  ?? A campaign image from the Ecoalf 1.0 fall 2021 collection.
A campaign image from the Ecoalf 1.0 fall 2021 collection.

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