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Recycled

ECOALF

Kangaroo Jacket - PFC Free

Regular price £155.00
Regular price Sale price £155.00

Be ready for any weather in sustainable style

MATERIAL

Main Fabric: 86% Recycled Nylon, 14% Polyurethane

Black Fabric: 70% Polyester, 30% Recycled Polyester

FIT

Regular Fit

SPECIFICATIONS

Kangaroo Pockets

DELIVERY

Free UK delivery 3-5 working days from dispatch 

CLOTHING CARE

As a consumer you can reduce your impact significantly* by taking care of your clothes. 
 

We recommend that to save water, reduce detergent usage, reduce energy consumption and to extend the life of this garment that you wash it as infrequently as is practical.

 

*wearing your clothes for 9 months longer can reduce carbon, water and waste footprints by 20-30% each.

DESCRIPTION

Smart two-tone kangaroo-style jacket, made with 86% recycled nylon. This jacket is fluorocarbon (PFC) free.
Spanish brand Ecoalf use the highest quality recycled fabrics to create a new generation of sustainable products.

Look behind your jacket icon

Strong points

Made with recycled nylon

Blue sign certified fabrics

Top tier supplier visited by brand

Suppliers

Cut and Sew: China (Sedex / Smeta/ BSCI)

Fabric 1: Korea (Blue Sign / OEKO-TEX)

Fabric 2: Taiwan (Blue Sign / OEKO-TEX)

People

Ecoalf visit their top tier suppliers regularly for quality control and to observe factory working conditions. In addition the factory where this jacket was made has been independently audited using recognised ethical audit techniques.

Planet

This jacket is made with recycled nylon. Ecoalf share that the manufacturing process of recycled nylon produces 28% less CO2 than conventional nylon. Recycling nylon also keeps this slow to break down material out of landfills.

Ecoalf waterproof fabrics are fluorocarbon (PFC) free. Fluorocarbons are long chain chemicals that effectively repel water but can slowly leach into the environment where they take a very long time to break down.

Areas for development

It would be great to see Ecoalf collaborate with an organisation like the Fair Wear Foundation to advance the complex topic of a real living wage for garment workers.

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