After assessing the current state, Saturn Cottage Industries’ identified their main circular challenge as accessing a consistent source of used textiles to salvage and curate, in a way that integrates meaningfully and constructively into existing material/waste flows.
Saturn Cottage Industries’ circular concept is entitled ‘Crafted to Continue’, and is a bespoke 1-1 textile repurposing service. Clients submit their sentimentally valued textiles for the creation of a new, unique piece, such as a jacket, quilt, or wall-hanging. This might be a way for cloth from a favourite but worn-out garment to be salvaged and worn again as part of a new Saturn Cottage Industries jacket, or it may be an old inherited textile remade into a set of wall-hangings for each family member.
Saturn Cottage Industries used the prototyping opportunity to build out their commissioning process, and create a social media marketing video that demonstrates the customer journey along this process. Their short-term goals are to share the video on social media and embed it on their company website, and to complete a first run of this new end-to-end process with one customer.
One of the key hurdles that Saturn Cottage Industries encountered whilst prototyping, was in combining two circular design principles; design for minimal waste and design for emotional durability. Both strategies were important to them, therefore they attempted to integrate both strategies by sourcing their input waste materials from the very customers seeking unique pieces – thereby reducing waste, whilst simultaneously stimulating an emotional connection between their client and the repurposed garment. However, this combined approach has its challenges. Since the client is now the supplier, they have less control over the material input. Clients might submit synthetic or overly damaged fabrics, which can be harder to work with or compromise the integrity of a new piece. In addition, while commissioned work creates a wanted, emotionally durable output, it requires greater intensity of communication and logistics needed with each customer, which is challenging to facilitate online/remotely.
To address these challenges that emerged during the prototyping phase, I met with a potential client to have a wide ranging and in-depth discussion of their sentimental textiles and the memories and people associated with them. The meeting was insightful in terms of better understanding the client’s values and wishes for their textiles, and a potential process moving forward.
Saturn Cottage Industries’ longer term goal is to have a large and well-fitted studio in which to curate salvaged materials and have a customer-facing space in which to welcome clients and talk through commissions. In addition to 1-1 client commissions, they aim to partner with other Irish brands to make capsule collections from pre-consumer deadstock and offcuts, which would make for specific patchwork aesthetics and colour palettes per collaboration. Furthermore, they also see opportunities to collaborate with creative clients such as artists and performers to help tell their stories through craft – be it through costume or art.
Finally, Saturn Cottage Industry aims to act as a thought leader and knowledge broker, by writing about clothing and craft via regular blogs/newsletters and short publications and developing a manifesto around caring for clothing and their methods of material repurposing.
Saturn Cottage Industries will remove textiles from the current waste stream by facilitating the active repurposing of sentimentally valuable worn textiles and salvaging other post-consumer textiles before landfill or export. However the main impact will be social, especially in changing hearts and minds when considering the aesthetic and sentimental value of worn or damaged textiles.
They like to visualise being part of or running a textile repurposing material library of sorts, where post-consumer garments are processed into usable cloth and notions, which are filed by fibre/colour/weights.
To move from prototype to pilot, Saturn Cottage Industries is looking for the following supports: