The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
The Canadian luxury outerwear brand said Thursday it will stop manufacturing products containing natural fur by the end of 2022, the latest in a flurry of fashion brands, including American department store group Neiman Marcus and outerwear label Canada Goose, to say they would abandon the material in the past week.
The announcement comes as part of Moose Knuckles long-term sustainability strategy.
Among other things, the brand also committed to completely remove conventional cotton and virgin polyester and nylon from its products and fully mitigate its carbon emissions by the end of 2025.
Editor’s Note: This article was revised on 1 July 2021. A previous version of this article stated that the company would stop selling any fur products by the end of 2022. That is incorrect. The company will stop production of fur in that timeframe.
As they move to protect their intellectual property, big brands are coming into conflict with a growing class of up-and-coming designers working with refashioned designer gear.
The industry needs to ditch its reliance on fossil-fuel-based materials like polyester in order to meet climate targets, according to a new report from Textile Exchange.
Cotton linked to environmental and human rights abuses in Brazil is leaking into the supply chains of major fashion brands, a new investigation has found, prompting Zara-owner Inditex to send a scathing rebuke to the industry’s biggest sustainable cotton certifier.
Over the last few years, the run-up to Earth Day has become a marketing frenzy. But a crackdown on greenwashing may be changing the way brands approach their communications strategies.