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Fashion circularity: potential of reusing and recycling remnant fabric to create sustainable products

Fashion circularity: potential of reusing and recycling remnant fabric to create sustainable products
Fashion circularity: potential of reusing and recycling remnant fabric to create sustainable products
The textile and fashion industry produce a significant amount of solid waste annually. Most of this waste is either disposed of or burned; very little is reused. This research investigates the potential of reusing and recycling remnant fabric to create sustainable luxury fashion products in a circular economy. Focusing on three factories namely Factory A, Factory B, and Factory C, this study analyzes product diversification, capacity, capital investment, supply chain dynamics, and manufacturing operations. A qualitative approach with semi-structured interviews with industry practitioners from the case factories was employed. Data from purchasing orders, production reports, inventory reports, and monthly invoices were analyzed. The factories manufactured a range of sustainable products, emphasizing floor mats, ladies’ handbags, and bedding items (pillow covers). The analysis revealed that each factory achieved a 30–40% profit margin on their monthly sales. Notably, approximately 95% of the remnant fabric was recycled in the production process, with merely 5% being discarded and resold for further use. These findings indicate local employment opportunities and substantial contributions to socio-economic advancement. This study recommends adopting a circular economy model to generate new business opportunities and income streams from remnant fabric. It encourages new financial investment and technical innovations to promote growth in this sector and benefit wider stakeholders.
circularity, fashion products, remnant, sustainability
2071-1050
Shamsuzzaman, Md.
1d4e154e-f054-498c-9df2-f16081a5b730
Al. Mamun, Md. Abdullah
a6b65516-8b8c-403a-b73c-937fd42f8045
Ul Hasan, H.M. Rakib
1bf24974-88cc-42c3-a20f-7f85711b8233
Hassan, Ready
c3d5c760-285a-4445-bc2b-8300f2af995d
Zulkernine, Ayesha
9c7dcac1-e73f-4bcb-ace1-35cfc30aa53c
Atik, Md. Atiqur Rahman
56f461eb-b375-4f84-a34c-f3fb5b1d227a
Islam, Mazed
3b8526f4-9b1e-489b-adb0-0f00ece304c7
Shamsuzzaman, Md.
1d4e154e-f054-498c-9df2-f16081a5b730
Al. Mamun, Md. Abdullah
a6b65516-8b8c-403a-b73c-937fd42f8045
Ul Hasan, H.M. Rakib
1bf24974-88cc-42c3-a20f-7f85711b8233
Hassan, Ready
c3d5c760-285a-4445-bc2b-8300f2af995d
Zulkernine, Ayesha
9c7dcac1-e73f-4bcb-ace1-35cfc30aa53c
Atik, Md. Atiqur Rahman
56f461eb-b375-4f84-a34c-f3fb5b1d227a
Islam, Mazed
3b8526f4-9b1e-489b-adb0-0f00ece304c7

Shamsuzzaman, Md., Al. Mamun, Md. Abdullah, Ul Hasan, H.M. Rakib, Hassan, Ready, Zulkernine, Ayesha, Atik, Md. Atiqur Rahman and Islam, Mazed (2025) Fashion circularity: potential of reusing and recycling remnant fabric to create sustainable products. Sustainability, 17 (5), [2010]. (doi:10.3390/su17052010).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The textile and fashion industry produce a significant amount of solid waste annually. Most of this waste is either disposed of or burned; very little is reused. This research investigates the potential of reusing and recycling remnant fabric to create sustainable luxury fashion products in a circular economy. Focusing on three factories namely Factory A, Factory B, and Factory C, this study analyzes product diversification, capacity, capital investment, supply chain dynamics, and manufacturing operations. A qualitative approach with semi-structured interviews with industry practitioners from the case factories was employed. Data from purchasing orders, production reports, inventory reports, and monthly invoices were analyzed. The factories manufactured a range of sustainable products, emphasizing floor mats, ladies’ handbags, and bedding items (pillow covers). The analysis revealed that each factory achieved a 30–40% profit margin on their monthly sales. Notably, approximately 95% of the remnant fabric was recycled in the production process, with merely 5% being discarded and resold for further use. These findings indicate local employment opportunities and substantial contributions to socio-economic advancement. This study recommends adopting a circular economy model to generate new business opportunities and income streams from remnant fabric. It encourages new financial investment and technical innovations to promote growth in this sector and benefit wider stakeholders.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 February 2025
Published date: 26 February 2025
Keywords: circularity, fashion products, remnant, sustainability

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499662
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499662
ISSN: 2071-1050
PURE UUID: 20f17258-5d8b-45a4-a67b-c11b978194b0

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Date deposited: 28 Mar 2025 18:33
Last modified: 04 Apr 2025 17:00

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Contributors

Author: Md. Shamsuzzaman
Author: Md. Abdullah Al. Mamun
Author: H.M. Rakib Ul Hasan
Author: Ready Hassan
Author: Ayesha Zulkernine
Author: Md. Atiqur Rahman Atik
Author: Mazed Islam

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