If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: https://teeextra.com/product/officialtennessee-vols-cfp-college-football-playoff-2024-25-we-are-in-helmets-shirt/ MegIs the Associate Fashion Commerce Editor at ELLE.com where she researches trends, tests products, and looks for answers to all your burning questions. She also co writes a monthly column, Same Same But Different. Meg has previously written for Cosmopolitan and Town & Country. Her passionsInclude travel, buffalo sauce, and sustainability. She will never stop hoping for a One Direction reunion tour. Have you ever wondered what happens to your clothes when they no longer feel fit for your closet?It’s anInteresting, and complicated, question to answer and even more so when you factorIn the many parts of the fashion cycle that are virtually unknown to most everyday shoppers. Sure, your well loved pieces could go to a thrift store or a donation center. But, whatIf thoseItems went back to their origins to become something entirely new? SuchIs the case with circular fashion, and the focus of Coach’s newly minted sub brand, Coachtopia.
Sustainable fashionIsn’t a one and done type of thing, especially when you consider the potential for circularity. Turns out, the cycle doesn’t have to stop after one purchase of an environmentally made piece or one donation, but rather,It can continue on (and on and on). Coach knows this, whichIs whyIt launched a line of pieces thatInvolve using leftover leather scraps from other designs and trust me whenI tell you:It’s actually very cute. “We’ve built Coachtopia as an entirely new world within Coach an agile start up with a mission to reimagine the end to end system,” Joon Silverstein,