Oskar Mortensen is a Content Specialist at Repax who loves turning complicated sustainability rules into something everyone can actually understand. Think of him as your friendly guide through the world of EPR regulations and circularity—breaking down the confusing stuff so you can focus on what really matters for your business. His goal? Making environmental compliance feel less like homework and more like a conversation. When Oskar's not writing helpful content, you'll find him out on the golf course, breathing in that fresh air and enjoying nature's own waste-free system.
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Cotton makes soft, breathable clothes but needs lots of water and chemicals. Choosing organic or recycled cotton and caring for clothes helps reduce waste, protect the planet, and support farmers.
Textile eco-modulation makes fabrics eco-friendly by using safe materials, reducing waste, saving water and energy, and enabling recycling, supporting a circular, sustainable textile industry.
Textile labels show fabric type, care tips, and eco info. They help you pick, care for, and recycle clothes better, supporting less waste and a healthier planet. Want label tips?
Repairing and reusing textiles cuts waste, saves resources, lowers pollution, and supports a circular economy. Small fixes extend clothes’ life, helping both your wallet and the planet.
Textile product lifespan means how long clothes stay useful. Longer use cuts waste and pollution. Choosing quality, caring well, repairing, and recycling help make textiles more sustainable.
Textile durability means fabrics last longer by resisting wear, tears, and fading. Durable textiles reduce waste, support recycling, and help create a more sustainable, circular fashion system.
Ultra-fast fashion creates lots of waste and pollution by making cheap clothes quickly. Choosing sustainable brands, buying less, and recycling helps protect the planet and workers.
Fibre composition shows what fibers make fabric—natural or synthetic. It affects comfort, durability, recycling, and environmental impact. Checking it helps you choose sustainable, longer-lasting clothes.
Fibre-to-fibre recycling turns old textiles into new fabrics, saving water and energy while reducing waste. It helps close the loop in fashion, making clothes more sustainable and eco-friendly.
Chemical textile recycling breaks down old clothes into pure fibers, enabling high-quality reuse. It cuts waste, saves resources, and supports circular fashion, making clothes eco-friendlier.
Mechanical textile recycling breaks down old fabrics into fibers to make new materials, reducing waste, saving water and energy, and supporting a circular economy by extending textile life.
The Textile Waste Hierarchy ranks actions from best to worst: prevent waste, reuse clothes, recycle fibers, recover energy, and dispose last. It guides smarter, greener textile management.