Taylor Stitch uses a majority of lower emissions materials such as upcycled cotton, organic cotton, recycled polyester, LWG leather, and hemp, as well as some high emissions materials including spandex. Commons couldn't find any stated plans to increase low emissions materials and/or decrease synthetic materials. Taylor Stitch doesn't report having any product or company-level certifications.
Taylor Stitch doesn't share information on its energy strategy. Taylor Stitch sources and manufactures its materials globally, which is standard practice in the textile industry.
Commons couldn't find information on this brand's packaging materials. We assume smaller brands are using a mix of materials.
Taylor Stitch offers free repair options, including: in-store repair, send-in for repair, shared repair guides. Taylor Stitch offers a lifetime warranty for manufacturing defects. It gives basic care instructions that can help extend product lifespan.
Taylor Stitch doesn't offer a take back program to help keep its products out of landfill.
Taylor Stitch offers some products across multiple seasons but also releases new items seasonally each year. It limits overproduction and waste via reusing waste/deadstock, and utilizing small batch production.
Commons is still evaluating this brand's marketing emails.
Taylor Stitch has a prominent sustainability page with comprehensive details on its climate strategy. Like many small brands with limited resources, it doesn't publish an annual sustainability report.
Commons couldn't find information on this brand's emissions tracking. This process can be an expensive undertaking for small brands.
Commons couldn't find emissions reduction targets for this brand. Commons couldn't find evidence that this brand offsets any emissions.
Taylor Stitch publishes information about its supply chain partners, disclosing their names and locations across Tier 1 (final production manufacturing). It doesn't publicly share a supplier code of conduct. Taylor Stitch doesn't have a stated policy of regularly auditing its supply chain partners. This may increase human and environmental risks.
Taylor Stitch intentionally minimizes environmentally harmful materials and focuses on extending product lifetimes.
Taylor Stitch uses a majority of lower emissions materials, including upcycled cotton, organic cotton, recycled polyester, LWG leather, and hemp. It takes responsibility for the full lifecycle of its products by offering various repair services and a lifetime warranty.
It provides transparency into its Tier 1 supply chain. Though it's a small brand, likely with limited resources, we hope it shares information on its packaging materials, energy strategy or emissions measurement & reduction efforts in the future.
Our ratings are based on a scale from 1 (bad) to 5 (best). How we rate →
https://www.taylorstitch.com/pages/responsibility
https://www.taylorstitch.com/pages/responsibility https://www.taylorstitch.com/blogs/help-center/do-your-offer-product-services-like-alterations-or-repairs
https://www.taylorstitch.com/blogs/help-center/if-my-gear-is-damaged-will-my-taylor-stitch-repair-or-replace-it-for-me
https://www.taylorstitch.com/blogs/help-center/garment-care-faq
https://www.taylorstitch.com/collections/mens-new-arrivals
https://www.taylorstitch.com/products/cinder-jacket-in-coal-dry-wax-2601 https://www.taylorstitch.com/pages/responsibility
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