Today’s Solutions: November 26, 2024

A pair of designers have come up with a pair of white sneakers that can be recycled in their entirety. The brand, which goes by the name Thousand Fell, is the first to launch a model that actually pays its customers to ship back their old pairs so that the company can assure that they are taken apart and that every component is recycled or composted.

The founders, who both worked in the apparel industry, found that consumers in their twenties tend to replace white sneakers—may be the most popular basic shoe—every four to six months. Once in a landfill, leather, and rubber leach chemicals and take decades to break down; plastic can take centuries. 

The Thousand Fell sneakers, however, are made from sustainably sourced materials that can be taken apart easily. The upper is made from recycled plastic bottles with a corn coating that makes it look like leather; the sole is made from the same carbon-neutral rubber that Patagonia uses to make wetsuits. The insole is made from recycled yoga mat material, with a mesh liner made from aloe vera.

The result of all these materials put together is a fully recyclable shoe that is both eco-friendly and stylish; now that’s a step in the right direction!

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Stronger concrete, cleaner landfills—how scrap carpet fibers are reinventing ...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Concrete is the foundation of modern civilization, but its notorious tendency to crack isn’t just a construction headache—it’s ...

Read More

Investigating when our bodies change the fastest and why it matters

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Aging might seem like a slow, steady march, but science suggests otherwise. If you’ve ever looked in the ...

Read More

16-year-old codes speech app to help his nonverbal sister communicate

Families of individuals who have conditions that make it difficult or impossible for them to communicate verbally can attest to the fact that going ...

Read More

How aspirin and crop resilience go hand in hand

Did you know that plants have been making aspirin for millions of years? And humans have been using it as far back as Neanderthal ...

Read More