Fashion
ONLY, RE&UP, Deniz Partner to Advance Circular Fashion
This initiative from ONLY underscores BESTSELLER’s strategic focus on reducing the need for virgin materials, including polyester. The project is a collaborative effort between ONLY, materials textile-to-textile recycling company RE&UP, and Turkish garment supplier Deniz.
Bestseller’s ONLY has partnered with RE&UP and Deniz to create garments using textile-to-textile recycled polyester and cotton from worn-out clothes and factory waste.
The project reduces virgin polyester usage while maintaining performance and durability, aligning with Bestseller’s focus on scalable, innovative recycling solutions for its popular NOOS and other collections.
Several of BESTSELLER’s major brands are actively integrating recycled materials into their existing collections, including the popular “Never Out Of Stock” (NOOS) range, known for its classic, timeless basics that transcend seasons and trends.
This enables us to create garments made from worn-out clothing and factory textile waste, while offering the same performance and durability as if it were made from virgin polyester. Pernille Tøttrup Sourcing Process Manager, ONLY.
Ideally, recycled polyester is sourced from textile-to-textile recycling processes. BESTSELLER is investing in and partnering with several innovative technology companies in this field to ensure both innovation and scalability.
RE&UP, specialised in next-gen textile-to-textile recycling, uses a combination of mechanical and thermo-chemical processes. Their modular technology is capable of separating cotton and polyester and regenerating them into ‘new’ high-quality recycled cotton and recycled polyester.
Innovation and quality
“RE&UP shares our dedication to innovation and quality, and their textile-to-textile recycled polyester meets the high standards we set for our products. This enables us to create garments made from worn-out clothing and factory textile waste, while offering the same performance and durability as if it were made from virgin polyester,” says Pernille Tøttrup, Sourcing Process Manager at ONLY.
In the initial production run, 11 styles have been converted from conventional polyester to RE&UP next-gen recycled polyester. This equates to more than 100,000 t-shirts. RE&UP is currently scaling its capacity, with the ambition to process 1 million tonnes of textile waste by 2030.
“This collaboration shows that textile-to-textile recycling is not a distant ambition, it’s already delivering industry-ready, cost-competitive fibres. Transforming the industry is undoubtedly a complex and lengthy process, but by working with partners like ONLY, we demonstrate how recycled polyester from textile waste can be a real and scalable alternative to virgin materials,” says Ozgur Atsan, CCO at RE&UP.
150,000 jackets
Earlier this year, BESTSELLER menswear brand JACK & JONES also successfully converted a NOOS bumper jacket to recycled polyester made from textile waste. This involved their best-selling style ‘Rush’, translating to 150,000 garments.
“We are actively reshaping our approach to materials, prioritising a shift from conventional to organic cotton and from virgin to recycled polyester,” explains BESTSELLER’s Head of Sustainability, Dorte Rye Olsen. She adds:
“In an ideal world, all textiles would become part of a circular production system once they are worn out. Here, we see examples of how this can be achieved. At the same time, we are aware that there is still a long way to go. Therefore, alongside exploring and investing in textile-to-textile solutions, we’re currently also expanding our use of recycled materials from other waste feedstocks.”
Note: The headline, insights, and image of this press release may have been refined by the Fibre2Fashion staff; the rest of the content remains unchanged.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RM)
Fashion
Nigeria’s textile imports up 47.43% YoY in Jan-Sept 2025
The country imported textile and textile materials worth N 228.83 billion in the first quarter (Q1) this year, N 337.12 billion in Q2 and N 248.32 billion in Q3.
Industry experts blame policy failure, weak execution of credit initiatives, abandonment of promised institutional reforms, pervasive corruption and structural bottlenecks like weak cotton farming, insecurity and the inability to scale locally-produced polyester for the decline, according to Nigerian media reports.
Nigeria’s textile imports rose to N 814.27 billion in January-September 2025—a 47.43-per cent YoY rise despite repeated government claims of the sector’s revival.
Rising imports indicate a weak domestic textile industry.
Industry experts blame policy failure, weak execution of credit initiatives, abandonment of promised institutional reforms, pervasive corruption and structural bottlenecks for the fall.
Hamma Kwajaffa, director general of the Nigerian Textile Manufacturers Association, lamented that the 10-per cent tax on imported textiles—which was introduced when the ban on textile imports was lifted so that the amount collected can be ploughed into domestic textile production—has not been directed to improve the private textile sector.
Kwajaffa pointed to the failure to create a dedicated textile development fund domiciled with the Bank of Industry.
Conflicting positions among top officials had stalled any action related to the sector and repeated workshops and announcements without execution had yielded no tangible outcome, Kwajaffa added.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Confident Meadowhall enjoys a year of strength
Published
December 19, 2025
There’s been quite a few end-of-year updates from shopping centres and all of them are upbeat after a busy 2025.
Sheffield’s Meadowhall is one of them, noting it has been a strong year of exchanges on new leases covering 300,000 sq ft of the destination, 80% retail and 20% hospitality, including renewals from 19 tenants.
It said visitor numbers “have also remained consistently high”, headlined by its busiest Black Friday weekend in six years (262,981 visitors across the three days), while October’s school half-term was also the strongest in six years (457,000 visitors representing a 9.7% year-on-year increase).
Meanwhile, commercial brand activations continued to “perform effectively” throughout 2025, including standout initiatives from Trinny London and Jo Malone.
And, of course, new openings and expansions are the lifeblood of any centre with Meadowhall announcing fast-expanding novelty retailer Miniso has just joined its roster while fashion lifestyle brand TK Maxx has extended its presence there, “concluding a strong year of leasing activity and retail performance”.
TK Maxx has added an adjacent unit to create a 19,000 sq ft space, complete with a 173-ft fully-glazed frontage on the Upper Level The Gallery, showcasing its mix of branded fashion, beauty, homeware, and accessories.
Miniso, meanwhile, has opened a 1,759 sq ft store on Lower Level High Street, introducing its range of lifestyle, homeware, and technology products, alongside the brand’s character collections.
These additions follow several major openings in 2025, including beauty majors Sephora and Superdrug.
These introductions round off a period in which several tenants have invested significantly in upgrading and expanding their stores. More than £47 million has been spent by brands alone across 2024 and 2025, with more than a third of Meadowhall’s operators undertaking new fitouts and refurbishments in that time.
Looking ahead to 2026, operator British Land said more than 25 brands have already committed, and will be bringing a further £8 million of investment to the centre.
Louisa Holmes, Asset Director at operator British Land, said: “This year’s level of investment, from new arrivals and long-standing tenants, reflects the confidence brands have in Meadowhall as a critical part of their national portfolio. In addition to that, the centre’s success means our brands are effectively competing to bring the best and latest shop fits and concepts here, elevating the experience for our visitors.”
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