| What it is | Regenerated cellulose fiber |
| Made from | Cotton-rich textile waste |
| Feels like | Natural cotton |
| Significance | True textile-to-textile recycling |
Infinna is a regenerated cellulose fiber made by Infinited Fiber Company from cotton-rich textile waste, breaking down discarded fabrics and reforming the cellulose into a new fiber that looks and feels like natural cotton. As a true textile-to-textile recycled fiber, it offers a circular alternative to virgin cotton and conventional viscose for more sustainable apparel.
Closing the loop
A circular form of man-made cellulosic fiber, complementing recycled polyester in sustainable apparel.
Frequently asked questions
What is Infinna fiber?
Infinna is a regenerated fiber created by the Infinited Fiber Company from cotton-rich textile waste. The process extracts the cellulose from discarded fabrics and reforms it into a brand-new fiber that looks and feels like cotton, enabling old textiles to become new clothing rather than ending up in landfill.
How is Infinna different from recycled polyester?
Recycled polyester is a synthetic usually made from plastic bottles, while Infinna is a natural-feeling cellulosic fiber made from recycled textile (especially cotton) waste. Infinna represents textile-to-textile recycling of natural fibers, aiming to close the loop on cotton-rich garments rather than downcycling plastics.
Why is Infinna significant for sustainability?
Most clothing is not recycled back into new clothing; Infinna is one of the emerging fibers that genuinely turns textile waste into fresh, cotton-like fiber, supporting a circular textile economy. It can reduce demand for virgin cotton (water- and land-intensive) and for conventional wood-based viscose.
Sources
- Infinna fiber — Infinited Fiber Company
- Circular fibers — Textile Exchange