Sustainability is an overused word in fashion, sometimes diluted past meaning. But its essence is mathematical and simple. A piece's environmental footprint comes not from its production but from how long it's worn.
A blazer worn for two years is more sustainable than three blazers worn for three months and discarded. If you don't need a new jacket every season, the pressure on production drops.
So every decision at SUMONE — fabric selection, cutting discipline, bonding method — answers a single question: will this piece still be worn five years from now?
(Eksik olan son iki paragraf için çeviri önerisi / Translation for the missing last two paragraphs): If the answer is yes, it's a good piece. If the answer is maybe or no, it's never started. Fewer pieces, more days; that's it.
This philosophy takes sustainability out of being a marketing slogan. It turns it into architecture.