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- 10 products made from innovative materials you'd never expect - including shoes, leggings, mattresses, and pasta
10 products made from innovative materials you'd never expect - including shoes, leggings, mattresses, and pasta
Rothy's
Ministry of Supply
Considering that a runner was able to set a Guinness World Record for "Fastest Half Marathon in a Suit" while wearing Ministry of Supply, you probably have more than enough proof to know that it will hold up as you travel to and from downtown and uptown client meetings or when you step out into a humid summer day.
Ministry of Supply employs a variety of innovative techniques to make you not dread putting on workwear: the Responsive Tee has coffee-infused recycled polyester to absorb and neutralize odor, the Apollo dress shirts use a NASA-developed "Phase Change" material that's 19 times more breathable than cotton, and the Kinetic collection's Japanese Primeflex polyester is water-repellant and somehow never wrinkles.
Sunski
For years, Sunski demonstrated its environmental ethos by participating in 1% for the Planet, which meant it donated 1% of sales to environmental non-profits. In 2017, the company took its commitment a step further by making sunglasses from plastic scraps that would otherwise end up in a landfill in Illinois. Nearly all of these polarized, scratch-resistant glasses cost under $70 and look like any other pair you'd want to bring with you to the beach, mountains, or road trip — the only difference is that you're not leaving the planet worse off when you buy them.
ADAY
In case you couldn't already tell from its minimalist offerings, ADAY has always valued conscious design. Not one to be complacent, it spent nine months figuring out how to continue to optimize environmental impact at the design, sourcing, and production levels. The designers came up with three solutions and its second "experiment" resulted in the Waste Nothing Jacket, which is made from 41 plastic water bottles. The fabric is weighty yet cool and breathable, and the jacket can be worn two different ways.
Banza
If you can't imagine a life without pasta but also have trouble reconciling this love with traditional dried pasta's nutrition-deficient qualities, then you should try Banza. It's made from chickpeas so you're eating double the protein, four times the fiber, and nearly half the net carbs of wheat noodles. Now, hummus isn't the only way you can enjoy chickpeas. They're low on the glycemic index, and the ones Banza uses are certified non-GMO. In the end, the swap doesn't feel like a dramatic sacrifice because it still cooks, feels, and tastes similar to regular pasta.
Adidas x Parley
Parley for the Oceans is an organization that raises awareness about the threats towards our planet's oceans. Adidas is a shoe and athletic apparel company. These seemingly disparate entities came together to take plastic waste from beaches before it reaches the ocean and turn it into a running shoe that's just as high-performing and comfortable as you would expect from Adidas. The Parley line is just the beginning: Adidas' goal is to make all of its shoes from recycled plastic by 2020.
Allbirds
Other than recycled plastic, it turns out shoes can also be made from merino wool and eucalyptus tree fibers. With its soft, breathable sneakers and loungers, Allbirds flips the commonly held belief that wool is uncomfortable and irritating on its head. Meanwhile, its cool tree fibers are sourced from sustainable farms that minimize fertilizer use and reliance on irrigation. Recycled plastic isn't completely out of the picture either because each pair of Allbirds laces is made from one plastic water bottle.
Girlfriend Collective
One Insider Picks reporter's favorite pair of leggings comes not from a well-known athleisure giant, but a start-up called Girlfriend Collective. It takes 25 recycled water bottles to make these flattering, compressive, and no-pill leggings. Another innovative, eco-friendly option is the moisture-wicking LITE legging, made from recycled fishing nets — the biggest pollutant in our oceans today. The brand's Cupro collection of silky shirts takes advantage of cotton linter, a soft fiber that sticks to cotton seeds and usually gets thrown out.
PangeaBed
There's no one all-encompassing secret to getting good sleep, but breathable, temperature-controlled, and supportive mattresses and pillows are surely parts of the equation. At the same time, you can't spend a large chunk of your life occupying the same bed without it accumulating bacteria, fungus, and dead skin, so PangeaBed infuses its latex sleep products with copper to give you a more sanitary experience. Copper has anti-microbial properties and PangeaBed is one of only a few mattress companies that puts these properties to good use.
Patagonia
Our review of Patagonia's recycled plastic backpack addresses the question all shoppers have on their minds — does using recycled materials compromise quality? The Arbor Pack collection of light, rugged, and comfortable backpacks dismisses these doubts immediately. As an outdoors brand, Patagonia has always advocated caring for the environment and it's putting its money where its mouth by turning used soda bottles, unusable manufacturing waste, and worn-out garments into polyester fibers.
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