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Blue Rinse Satch Jeans
Blue Rinse Satch Jeans
Blue Rinse Satch Jeans

Blue Rinse Satch Jeans

£62.50 Regular price £125.00

Flax & Loom

SUSTAINABLE DENIM

The Satch Jeans from Flax & Loom are inspired by the cut of the classic American jean initially worn by Marlon Brando in his 50's film On the Waterfront.

Made from GOTS certified organic cotton, recycled cotton and hemp grown in Turkey and manufactured there.

The jeans come in regular (31" length) or long (33" leg) leg sizes and are designed to be worn with a double turn-up.

    Details

    •Elastane, Hemp, GOTS certified Organic Cotton, •Recycled Cotton
    •31" leg / 33" leg
    •Made in Turkey

    Love & Care

    •Wash as infrequently as possible, always inside out
    •Wash at 30 degrees

    Delivery & Returns

    Delivery

    Deliveries to most London postcodes are dispatched using our Zero Emissions carrier and will be with you next day. 

    We aim to dispatch postal orders to the rest of the UK using Royal Mail First Class within 24 hours Monday - Friday. Shipping is free for orders over £50. 


    Click and Collect

    You can collect your order from the store 7 days a week during opening hours. Most orders will be available to collect same day. More

    Returns

    We hope you love your order, but if you do change your mind you can return your purchase to us within 30 days for a refund. Please write your order number on the parcel when you return it. More

    About Flax & Loom

    Flax and Loom is long-time sustainable fashion designer Phil Wildbore's new venture, aiming to produce ‘the world’s most sustainable, commercial jean’.

    Labour has always been an expense in the production of any commodity, which leads to the exploitation of workers, whether it be the farmers growing the raw materials, the people making the garment or even the sales assistant selling the finished product.

    The fast fashion industry has taken this to another level. With fast fashion, not only are the people growing, making and selling the garments compensated only a tiny fraction of the profit, but much of what they produce is either destroyed or sent to landfill. The items which do make it to the consumer may only be worn once, if at all. This is catastrophic not only economically and environmentally but also on a human level, where people are only considered a cost and what they produce is often waste.

    Here’s Flax and Loom’s model for change:

    • Establish a partnership with a cotton grower (in Turkey).
    • Find local manufactures to weave the fabric, make and dye the finished garment.
    • Distribution is also centred in Turkey to ensure a low carbon footprint.
    • Achieve an organic crop rotation for hemp, flax and cotton in a symbiotic programme.
    • Make clothes that last. 

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