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Saturday, June 3, 2023
Home Sustainable Fashion Cashmere Circle: A service to revive, repair, recycle cashmere garments

Cashmere Circle: A service to revive, repair, recycle cashmere garments

A foremost Scottish knitwear entrepreneur and UKFT board member has united forces with a University of Edinburgh graduate to takeoff Cashmere Circle, a service to revive, repair and recycle cashmere clothes.

Cashmere-Circle
Figure: Cashmere Circle will send a courier to collect cashmere garments, which will then be professionally restored, repaired or upcycled into new garments.

Belinda Dickson, Founder of UKFT member Belinda Robertson Cashmere, and Ross Powell have co-founded the company to aid luxury fashion move to a circular economy model while increasing textile skills and jobs in the Scottish Borders.

Cashmere Circle will send a courier to collect cashmere garments, which will then be professionally restored, repaired or – at the end of their current life – upcycled into new garments.

The startup business has joined with a number of Borders based experts with the aim of returning the area to its once leading position in the textiles industry. A knowledge transfer program enabled by Cashmere Circle will guarantee skills are reserved for the next generation of knitwear experts.

Cashmere Circle will also donate 1% of its revenue to Trees for Life, which is rewilding the Scottish Highlands, and has entered an agreement with Oxfam for the charity to divert end-of-life cashmere garments that would otherwise go to landfill.

Dickson, a long-serving board member of the UK Fashion and Textiles Association (UKFT), had been exploring ways to improve environmental sustainability in her industry when she met Powell, a passionate environmentalist, during his final year studying for his degree in International Relations with a focus on environmental policy.

With support from Dickson, Powell analysed how to introduce circularity into the cashmere sector by blending traditional skills with new technologies and an innovative business model.

Powell has been supported by Edinburgh Innovations, the University of Edinburgh’s commercialization service, which offers free business support for staff, students and recent graduates of the University and has helped launch more than 80 businesses and social enterprises in the past year.

Powell approached Edinburgh Innovations soon after graduating, and has since been receiving regular advice on launching and developing the business. The company’s seed funding round opens in the new year and Powell is particularly keen to attract investors aligned with his social and environmental mission.

With artisan techniques, Cashmere Circle will invisibly repair almost any small hole, before treating the garment with pioneering cleaning processes that not only enhance the garment, but also sanitise it. Prices begin at £30 for revival of a single garment, which will return it to like-new condition, no matter how “loved”. For larger holes unable to be invisibly repaired, Cashmere Circle offers a bespoke patching service.

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