Shima Seiki
FIMAST

Free membership

Receive our weekly Newsletter
and set tailored daily news alerts.

Fibres/​Yarns

Wear Wool, Not Waste

Woolmark releases second chapter of its environmentally focused global campaign.

23rd September 2024

Knitting Industry
 |  Australia

Knitwear, Knitted Outerwear

Woolmark has unveiled its latest global brand campaign, Wear Wool, Not Waste, spotlighting the environmental benefits of wool - natural, renewable, biodegradable and the world’s most recycled apparel fibre.

The campaign comes at a time when legislative changes are being introduced to curb the rise in throwaway fashion culture, which has been driven by cheap, synthetic clothing.

© The Woolmark Company

The first synthetic clothing was introduced less than 200 years ago and is predicted to account for 73% of total fibre production globally by 2030. The average polyester product is likely to survive in landfills for more than 200 years, Woolmark says. Built on this uneasy idea that every synthetic garment ever made still exists in some form, the campaign centres around a 60-second film showing people rushing to escape a zombie invasion of the old synthetic clothes that still haunt our planet to this day.

Watch the film here…

John Roberts, Managing Director of Woolmark, comments: “Wear Wool, Not Waste is more than a marketing campaign, it’s an urgent call to citizens and the industry at large to re-evaluate fibre choices. Merino wool is inherently natural and renewable and has the potential to be a transformational solution to fashion’s impact problem. It offers a versatile, biodegradable, recyclable, and long-lasting solution - one that aligns with nature rather than working against it.”

Wool’s sustainable offering

One of the campaign’s key messages is about consumer awareness. With 1 in 3 people admitting they rarely check fabric composition when purchasing online, according to Woolmark, it aims to educate the public on the unique benefits of wool versus fossil fuel-derived synthetics.

According to the organisation, research shows that wool garments are three times more likely to be donated than garments made from other major fibres. This impressive donation rate is further highlighted by the fact that wool, which currently represents about 1% of global virgin fibre supply, has historically achieved a donation rate of 5%, Woolmark says. This far exceeds its share in the fibre market, emphasising wools value in advancing a circular economy.

A call for real change

Woolmark continues to amplify its Filter by Fabric initiative, which calls on industry to stop using misleading language on product names, instead adopting accurate fabric composition descriptions in product names and introducing fabric filters on e-commerce sites to help shoppers make more informed choices.

© The Woolmark Company

The Filter by Fabric initiative was launched last year and has garnered thousands of pledges, with commitments from industry bodies including Copenhagen Fashion Week, No More Plastic and the Plastic Soup Foundation, as well as global brands, from Reformation to Benetton. This campaign aligns with Woolmark’s broader mission to position wool as a key solution to the fashion industry’s sustainability challenges - a vision encapsulated in the recently launched Woolmark+ Roadmap, a program aimed at driving the industry towards a nature-positive future.

Find out more about Woolmark’s campaign, visit www.woolmark.com/wear-wool. To sign the pledge, visit www.filterbyfabric.com.

Latest Reports

Business intelligence for the fibre, textiles and apparel industries: technologies, innovations, markets, investments, trade policy, sourcing, strategy...

Find out more