Accessories Sustainability
Accessories can be made far more responsibly than most buyers realise. This hub explains the terms and standards you will meet -- from responsible leather to recycled fabrics and cleaner finishing -- grouped by responsible leather, recycled materials and cleaner processes.
Responsible leather
Vegetable Tanning
Tanning leather with natural plant tannins instead of chemicals.
What it is
Vegetable tanning uses tannins from bark and plants rather than mineral salts, over a slower natural process.
Why it matters
It avoids chrome chemistry and produces a biodegradable leather that ages beautifully.
Responsible Leather
Leather from tanneries audited for environmental and social practice.
What it is
Responsible leather comes from tanneries assessed on chemical management, water use and working conditions.
Why it matters
It gives assurance that the leather was made with lower impact and better oversight.
Leather Working Group
A leading standard auditing tanneries for environmental performance.
What it is
The Leather Working Group (LWG) audits and rates tanneries on water, energy, waste and chemical control.
Why it matters
An LWG rating is a recognised signal that leather is sourced from a better-managed tannery.
Traceable Leather
Leather that can be tracked back through its supply chain.
What it is
Traceable leather carries documentation linking the finished hide back through tannery and origin.
Why it matters
Traceability supports claims about welfare and environmental practice with evidence.
Recycled materials
Recycled Leather
A material made by bonding reclaimed leather fibres.
What it is
Recycled leather binds offcut and reclaimed leather fibres into a new sheet material.
Why it matters
It diverts leather waste and lowers the footprint, though it is less durable than full-hide leather.
Recycled Polyester
Polyester fabric made from reclaimed plastic.
What it is
Recycled polyester is spun from post-consumer plastic such as bottles, cutting reliance on virgin material.
Why it matters
It lowers the footprint of bag linings and fabrics while keeping performance.
Recycled Nylon
Nylon regenerated from waste such as fishing nets.
What it is
Recycled nylon reprocesses waste nylon into new yarn with the same strength as virgin nylon.
Why it matters
It turns waste into tough, technical bag fabric with a smaller impact.
Organic Cotton Canvas
Canvas woven from cotton grown without synthetic chemicals.
What it is
Organic cotton canvas uses cotton farmed without synthetic pesticides or fertilisers.
Why it matters
It reduces the chemical and water impact of a natural, hard-wearing bag fabric.
Cleaner processes
Water-Based Finishes
Coatings and dyes that use water rather than solvents.
What it is
Water-based finishes replace solvent carriers with water in dyeing and surface treatments.
Why it matters
They cut harmful solvent emissions in manufacturing.
Circular Fashion
Designing accessories to be repaired, reused or recycled.
What it is
Circular fashion keeps materials in use through durable design, repair and end-of-life recycling.
Why it matters
A well-made, repairable accessory is the most sustainable choice of all: one that lasts.
Frequently asked questions
What does Leather Working Group certification mean?
The Leather Working Group audits tanneries on water use, energy, waste and chemical management, then rates them. An LWG rating signals that the leather comes from a tannery managed to a recognised environmental standard.
Is vegetable-tanned leather more sustainable?
Vegetable tanning uses natural plant tannins instead of chromium salts and produces a biodegradable leather. It avoids chrome chemistry and ages well, though it is a slower process; it is generally seen as the more environmentally considered tannage.
What is the most sustainable accessory choice?
The most sustainable accessory is usually a well-made, repairable one that lasts for years, since durability avoids replacement. Beyond that, look for responsible or vegetable-tanned leather, recycled fabrics and cleaner water-based finishes.