Time to declutter and bring new life to your used clothes. And reward yourself and the planet.
#MAKEITENDLESS
Pledge to bring new life to 10 pieces of clothing you’re no longer wearing.
STEP 1
Find 10 quality items you're no longer wearing.
STEP 2
Post a pic on #makeitendless, tag us and a friend who needs a declutter cleanse too. We all know one.
STEP 3
Send the clothes, on us, carbon free. Fill in the form below. Get a chance to win $200 when you participate.
CHALLENGE ACCEPTED.
Complete this to get your free pre-paid return label.
Then send in 10 pieces of clothing you're no longer wearing so they can find a new, sustainable home. Offset carbon and get rewarded.
#MakeItEndless Challenge Ends Leap Day 2020.
REWARD YOURSELF AND THE PLANET
We'll bring your quality clothes back into circulation, offset some carbon, reduce waste, and make the world great again.
REWARD YOURSELF
Chip away at your cluttered closet. We'll enter you in a give-away for a $200 sustainable experience.
REWARD THE PLANET
We will offset 500 lbs of carbon -- through our partner, Cool Effects -- for each high-quality item you send. (That's about 500 miles of driving your car.)
THE DEETS.
For those who are curious, here are the answers to your questions.
It's simple. Complete the form above. We'll send you a pre-paid shipping label.
Then, go into your closet, pull out ten things you're no longer wearing, snap a pic, post it of them on Insta #makeitendless tagging @shopsustainably_ and a friend who needs to declutter too, then send them away. We'll provide you a pre-paid shipping label and make the transportation carbon neutral.
We will email or text you when we receive the items, and keep you posted on how much additional carbon we offset from their sale.
You're sending us clothes that you likely care a lot about. So, we know how important your trust is.
Adam, Endless's founder, has worked on sustainability and ethical sourcing for the past decade. He understands the science of sustainability and knows the difference between greenwashing and greenrealing. He left his full-time job last year to make the industry more sustainable, since he was especially fed up with fast fashion, and wants to forge a new path.
For any items that can't be resold, Endless will donate them to an amazing non-profit called Springclean. They partner with artists and create jobs by finding creative ways to reuse donated textile. We encourage you to check them out.
We're doing this to bring items back into circulation -- each item we successfully resell eliminates the need to produce new items. Plus, we're offsetting the transportation emissions and 500 lbs of carbon for each quality item. Our partner, Cool Effects, manages those carbon reductions through third-party certified offset projects. And together, we're reducing some of the tremendous clothing waste that America produces each year.
For your support, we'll enter you in a give-away for a $200 sustainable experience. Like surprises? Good, we have one for you!
We will first inspect, clean, press, and repair them. Everything that is resellable will go on the Endless site to be sold. We estimate we will get about $10 for each item to cover our costs and to offset about 500 lbs of carbon emissions through our offset partner, Cool Effects.
For items that cannot be resold, we will sustainably manage them by donating them when appropriate, or sending them to fiber recycling partners. One partner is amazing non-profit in North Carolina called Springclean. They partner with artists and create jobs by finding creative ways to reuse donated textiles. We encourage you to check them out.
No worries, I'm here for you. I'm Adam, the founder of Endless. And you can email me at a@wearendless.com.
In case you're curious to learn more about me: I've been working on sustainability in the retail and consumer products for the last decade.
I left my full-time job last year to make the industry more sustainable. I was especially fed up with fast fashion, which produces tons low quality garments, enormous waste, and, frankly, doesn't value the people who create the clothes. It's an industry in desperate need of change. So that's why I'm trying this now.