OUR SUSTAINABILITY STORY

Learn about the less-impactful innovations and materials that went into parts of the Tommy Hilfiger x Shawn Mendes collection.

RECYCROMâ„¢ DYE

RECYCROMâ„¢ DYE

Recycromâ„¢ is a range of dyes made using recycled textile fibers from pre-consumer clothing and manufacturing waste. These fibers are transformed into a fine, colored powder that can be used to dye new fabrics and garments instead of conventional dyes.

CIRCULOSE®

CIRCULOSE®

Circulose® is a pulp created from 100% textile waste that is used to produce manmade cellulosic fibers (MMCF). Fibers made with Circulose® differ to conventional MMCF fibers, as they partly use recycled pre- and post-consumer cotton textile waste instead of wood as a raw material.

ECONYL®

ECONYL®

ECONYL® regenerated nylon is made from nylon waste, like fishing nets, fabric scraps, carpet flooring and industrial plastic. Through a regeneration process, the nylon waste is recycled back to its original purity. That means ECONYL® nylon fiber is as versatile as new fossil-based nylon.

RECYCLED COTTON

RECYCLED COTTON

Made from pre- or post-consumer cotton waste, recycled cotton is a more sustainable form of cotton. Using recycled fibers reduces the depletion of natural resources and the amount of textile waste that ends up in landfills. This enables us to close the loop and avoid producing new cotton.

RECYCLED WOOL

RECYCLED WOOL

Recycled wool is the most sustainable form of wool, because it’s made from wool waste. Recycled wool can be made from pre- and post-consumer wool garments and production scraps which are sorted, cleaned, shredded and blended to create recycled wool fibers that are then spun into yarn. 

ORGANIC COTTON

ORGANIC COTTON

Organic cotton is grown without chemical pesticides, chemical fertilizers or genetically modified seeds. These methods help support biodiversity, healthy ecosystems and improved soil quality, which in turn has a positive impact on the environment.

MORE TO COME

MORE TO COME

We're on the path towards designing more sustainably. There's more work to do — but if you'd like to learn more about what we've done so far, check it out.

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