Commons couldn't find information on the overall proportion of materials this brand uses. For a small brand, we assume a mix of material types. Industry of All Nations uses both lower emissions materials such as upcycled textile waste and organic cotton, as well as high emissions materials including alpaca fibers. Commons couldn't find any stated plans to increase low emissions materials and/or decrease synthetic materials. Industry of All Nations doesn't report having any product or company-level certifications.
Industry of All Nations doesn't share information on its energy strategy. Industry of All Nations 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. It doesn't appear to have made efforts to minimize the amount of material used in its packaging.
Industry of All Nations offers free repair options, including send-in for repair. It doesn't offer a warranty. It gives detailed care instructions that can help extend product lifespan, some of which are eco-friendly, but some of which rely on dry-cleaning.
Industry of All Nations has a take back program called IOAN Global Exchange. This program accepts the brand's own clothes or shoes for resale.
Industry of All Nations offers some products across multiple seasons but also releases new items seasonally each year. It limits overproduction and waste via reusing waste/deadstock.
Commons is still evaluating this brand's marketing emails.
Industry of All Nations has a sustainability page with high-level details on its climate strategy, but this page is hard to find on its website. 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.
Industry of All Nations publishes information about its supply chain partners, disclosing their geographic locations across Tier 1 (final production manufacturing), Tier 2-3 (materials and packaging sourcing), Tier 4 (raw materials origins). It doesn't publicly share a supplier code of conduct. Industry of All Nations doesn't have a stated policy of regularly auditing its supply chain partners. This may increase human and environmental risks.
Industry of All Nations is rated Acceptable because it has started to improve its products and production process, but still has room to grow.
Industry of All Nations uses a mix of materials, but Commons couldn't find any stated plans to increase low emissions materials or decrease synthetic materials. It helps take responsibility for the full lifecycle of its products by offering repair services and a take back program for resale.
However, Industry of All Nations doesn't provide information on its packaging, supply chain, renewable energy strategy or emissions measurement and reduction efforts.
Our ratings are based on a scale from 1 (bad) to 5 (best). How we rate →
https://industryofallnations.com/pages/about-us
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