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Sustainable Fabric Guide: From Best to Worst

7 min read·Updated June 1, 2026

A practical, ranked guide to clothing fibers — what they're made of, what they impact, and which actually live up to the marketing.

Best in class

Recycled polyester (rPET): made from post-consumer plastic, ~50% less energy than virgin. Sheds microplastics; pair with a Guppyfriend bag.

Tencel / lyocell: closed-loop solvent process, FSC-certified eucalyptus. Soft, biodegradable, low water use.

Organic linen and organic hemp: rain-fed, minimal pesticides, biodegradable. Heavier carbon cost to spin but long-lasting.

Mid-tier

Organic cotton: GOTS-certified means no synthetic pesticides and audited social standards. Water-intensive but far cleaner than conventional cotton.

Recycled cotton: lower-quality fiber, usually blended. Saves significant water vs virgin.

Recycled wool: gives discarded wool a second life with minimal new shearing.

Avoid where possible

Conventional cotton: 16% of global insecticide use on 2.5% of cropland.

Virgin polyester, nylon, acrylic: fossil-derived, microplastic shedding, energy-intensive.

Conventional viscose / rayon: linked to ancient-forest deforestation unless FSC-certified.

Virgin leather: high carbon footprint, water use, and animal-welfare concerns. Plant-based and recycled alternatives are improving.

The most ethical fiber

The one you already own. Cost-per-wear math beats fiber choice almost every time — a $200 garment worn 200 times costs $1/wear; a $20 garment worn 5 times costs $4/wear.

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