Anonymous

*reclaimed! (from the perspective based in Malaysia)

a direct action initiative to fast fashion, ecology, labor and system

2026

0. Problem statement: ** Fashion / Material Philosophy**

Labor / Production / Economics

Consumer / Relationship / Ownership

Cooperative / Governance / Community

Open Source / Knowledge / Culture

Function / Infrastructure / Future Thinking


1. INTRODUCTION / WHAT IS *reclaimed!

This is a cooperative-based and ideologically and heavily-driven from solarpunk’s

visions of a textile reconstruction system built entirely from reclaimed garments and

existing textile waste. The system exists to transform discarded clothing into wearable

pieces through repair, reconstruction, screenprinting, redesign, and long-term garment

circulation.

The project rejects the logic of fast fashion, disposable consumption, and virgin-material

dependency. Instead, it treats existing textile waste as a permanent resource base and

clothing as a living object that evolves through labor, use, repair, and time.

The cooperative operates not only as a clothing entity, but as a localized circular textile

ecosystem rooted in human-scale production, community participation, open-source

methodology, and low-carbon urban logistics.

2. CORE PHILOSOPHY

The system is built on several foundational principles:

The cooperative does not attempt to become “better fast fashion.” It attempts to operate

outside the disposable fashion cycle entirely.

3. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

The long-term objective of the project is to operate as a cooperative-owned textile

ecosystem rooted in collective stewardship, shared participation, and

community-centered production.

During its initial stage, the enterprise will be incorporated as a Sdn. Bhd. due to practical

considerations, including lower startup barriers, simpler administration, faster

registration, and the ability to operate with a small founding team before meeting the

membership requirements necessary for cooperative registration.

While operating as a Sdn. Bhd., the organization will voluntarily adopt

cooperative-inspired principles wherever practical, including:

As the organization grows, systems will be developed to support broader participation,

including membership structures, contribution tracking, governance frameworks, voting

mechanisms, and shared-benefit programs.

Upon reaching sufficient organizational maturity, sustainable operations, and the

membership requirements required under Malaysian law, the organization intends to

transition toward a formal cooperative structure or another legally appropriate collective

ownership model.

The Sdn. Bhd. structure is therefore viewed as a practical launch vehicle rather than the

final organizational form. The long-term goal is not merely to build a company, but to

develop an institution capable of collective ownership, cultural stewardship, knowledge

preservation, and intergenerational continuity.

The goal is not chaotic collectivism, but resilient collaborative infrastructure.

4. MATERIAL POLICY

All garments are constructed from reclaimed textiles only.

Sources may include:

Natural fibers are prioritized where possible due to breathability, repairability, longevity,

and tropical climate suitability.

The system does not produce virgin fabrics. Existing textile waste remains the

permanent material source.

5. PRODUCT STRUCTURE

The system operates through three integrated clothing lines.

LINE 1 — GRAPHICS / DAILY WEAR

Line 1 focuses on accessible wearable pieces built through reclaimed garments and

heavy graphic intervention using screenprinting.

Characteristics:

Graphics are produced through:

Line 1 also functions as the cooperative’s primary bulk-order structure.

Possible clients:

Bulk orders maintain the cooperative philosophy through reclaimed garments and

localized production systems.

6. LINE 2 — RECONSTRUCTION / EXPERIMENTAL

Line 2 functions as the cooperative’s primary experimental and artistic reconstruction

line. Each garment is treated as a one-of-one material work shaped through

collaboration between textile history, reconstruction labor, artist direction, and wearer

interaction over time.

The line provides space for:

Artists involved in Line 2 may include:

Artists are encouraged to respond directly to the reclaimed materials themselves rather

than forcing materials into industrial consistency. Existing stains, fading, distress,

repairs, and textile histories may remain visible and become part of the final artistic

direction.

The line rejects trend replication and seasonal fashion cycles. Instead, garments are

created through material dialogue, reconstruction logic, and personal artistic

interpretation.

Possible methods include:

Each garment is expected to evolve physically over time through wear, washing, fading,

repairs, and environmental exposure. The wearer becomes part of the garment’s final

form and continuing history.

Line 2 exists not only as clothing production, but as a platform for wearable artistic

experimentation inside a circular textile system.

7. LINE 3 — WORKWEAR / MOVEMENT WEAR

Line 3 focuses on durability, utility, movement and repeated usage.

Garments are reinforced for:

Characteristics:

The line also includes reclaimed movement and athletic-inspired wear, not as

high-performance industrial sportswear, but as practical urban movement clothing

designed for mobility, comfort, breathability, and repeated real-world usage.

Rather than competing with synthetic performance brands, the system focuses on

human-scale movement wear built from reclaimed materials and adapted for everyday

physical life within the city.

Line 3 is intended to survive active use rather than decorative preservation.

8. DESIGN LANGUAGE

The design language prioritizes visibility of labor and material history.

Core principles:

The cooperative does not attempt to imitate industrial perfection.

Imperfection is treated as evidence of human process and material continuity.

9. PRODUCTION PRINCIPLE

Production is guided by material availability instead of industrial standardization.

Garments are created based on:

There is no mass identical production outside of limited bulk-order structures.

Even in bulk orders, variation between garments is accepted and encouraged due to the

nature of reclaimed materials.

10. AFTERCARE PHILOSOPHY

Garments are designed to be lived in.

Users are encouraged to:

The cooperative values visible wear and personal history accumulation.

A successful garment is one that survives real life instead of remaining untouched.

Different lines age differently:


11. ARCHIVE SYSTEM

Every garment is documented as part of a living archive.

Archive data may include:

The archive system functions as:


12. OPEN SOURCE STRUCTURE

The cooperative operates through open-source methodology.

Publicly shareable systems include:

Protected systems include:

The goal is expansion of circular textile culture, not monopolization of knowledge.

13. OPERATIONS MODEL

Operational workflow:

1. Garment sourcing

2. Sorting and textile classification

3. Cleaning and preparation

4. Design planning

5. Screenprinting / reconstruction

6. Repair and reinforcement

7. Quality review

8. Documentation and archiving

9. Packaging

10. Distribution

Production remains intentionally human-scale and labor-centered.

14. LOGISTICS SYSTEM

Distribution prioritizes localized low-carbon delivery.

Methods may include:

Long-distance shipping uses reclaimed packaging materials wherever possible.

15. ECONOMIC STRUCTURE

The cooperative rejects pricing based solely on material cost.

Value is determined through:

The cooperative acknowledges that ethical labor-intensive production cannot compete

with industrial fast-fashion pricing.

Affordability is approached through:


16. LABOR PHILOSOPHY

Labor is treated as visible and valuable.

The cooperative rejects:

Members are encouraged to maintain sustainable working rhythms and collective

support systems.

17. LEGAL POSITIONING

The cooperative operates through transformed secondhand garments under resale and

reconstruction principles.

Guidelines:

Original garment history may remain partially visible as part of reconstruction

storytelling.

18. CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MODEL

Customers are participants in garment evolution rather than passive consumers.

The cooperative encourages:

The relationship does not end at purchase.

19. COMMUNITY FUNCTION

The cooperative exists not only as a clothing system but as a cultural and educational

infrastructure.

Possible extensions:

The long-term objective is expansion of localized circular textile culture.

20. MARKET POSITIONING

The cooperative does not compete directly with fast fashion or industrial streetwear.

It occupies a separate category defined by:

The system is intentionally slower, smaller, and more human than industrial fashion

structures.

21. LAUNCH STRUCTURE

Initial launch combines all three lines in small curated quantities.

Recommended structure:

The launch introduces the philosophy and operational identity of the cooperative rather

than chasing large-scale sales immediately.

22. LONG TERM EVOLUTION

Long-term goals include:

Over time, the project evolves beyond a clothing brand into a living urban textile

ecosystem.

23. FINAL SYSTEM STATEMENT

This cooperative is a reclaimed-textile reconstruction ecosystem operating through

circular material logic, visible labor, open-source methodology, and solarpunk

philosophy.

It transforms discarded garments into evolving wearable objects through repair,

reconstruction, printing, and long-term usage while building localized systems of

sustainable urban production, shared knowledge, and community-centered textile

culture.


*reclaimed! PRODUCT CATEGORIES

Line 1

Line 2

Line 3


all Lines covered:

with Line 2 additional:


FUNDAMENTAL & FOUNDATIONAL SYSTEM QUESTIONS: WHAT KIND OF

SYSTEM ARE WE ACTUALLY TRYING TO BUILD?

These questions exist before the business plan itself. They are the foundational prompts

used to determine the direction, structure, philosophy, labor ethics, operational logic,

and long-term purpose of the cooperative. The business plan is treated as the current

response to these ongoing questions rather than a permanently fixed answer.

1. Is this a clothing brand, a cooperative system, an art project, or a textile

infrastructure?

This question determines:

The cooperative must understand what takes priority when conflicts between art,

business, labor, and sustainability emerge.

2. What are we unwilling to compromise on?

Possible non-negotiables may include:

These non-negotiables become the structural backbone of the system.

3. What happens if demand exceeds capacity?

Possible responses include:

The cooperative must determine whether growth should change the system itself.

4. Are we building for sustainability, survivability, or growth?

These are not always aligned.

The cooperative must determine:

This question defines long-term operational direction.

5. Can labor remain human without becoming exploitative?

Handcrafted ethical systems can unintentionally normalize:

The cooperative must determine how labor can remain sustainable emotionally,

physically, and economically.

6. What level of inconsistency are we comfortable with?

Because reclaimed materials vary naturally:

The cooperative must determine when inconsistency becomes:

or

7. Are we documenting garments as products, or as living archives?

This question affects:

The cooperative must determine whether garments are treated as inventory or historical

objects.

8. Who is the cooperative actually for?

Possible communities may include:

The cooperative must determine who the system is primarily built to serve.

9. What is the role of aesthetics versus function?

The cooperative must determine:

This defines the hierarchy between visual experimentation and practical use.

10. Are we trying to replace fast fashion, or exist outside of it?

Replacing fast fashion requires:

Existing outside of it allows:

The cooperative must determine which direction it truly believes in.

11. What does “affordable” actually mean in this system?

Affordability may refer to:

The cooperative must define affordability beyond fast-fashion pricing logic.

12. How much openness can the system survive?

Open-source methodology creates questions regarding:

The cooperative must determine what remains public and what requires protection.

13. What happens when garments fail?

Possible responses may include:

This question determines whether the system is genuinely circular.

14. Are we designing garments to last forever, or to evolve continuously?

Garments may:

or

The cooperative must determine whether permanence or transformation is the intended

lifecycle.

15. What kind of relationship do we want people to have with clothing?

Possible relationships include:

This affects branding, repair culture, aftercare philosophy, and customer behavior.

16. How do we prevent the cooperative from becoming aesthetically exclusive?

Ethical and artistic fashion systems can unintentionally become:

The cooperative must determine how ordinary people remain welcomed within the

system.

17. What happens if members disagree ideologically?

Questions include:

The cooperative must create structure without destroying collaboration.

18. How localized should the system remain?

Possible directions include:

This affects logistics, production, governance, and environmental impact.

19. Are we preserving garments, or preserving textile knowledge?

The most valuable output may or may not be the garments themselves, but:

The cooperative must determine what knowledge should survive beyond products.

20. If this succeeds, what do we NOT want to become?

Possible risks include:

The cooperative must define the future it refuses to evolve into.

21. What happens when the founder is absent?

If the system depends entirely on:

then the system may not survive long-term.

The cooperative must determine whether the system can eventually outlive its founder.

22. Is repair part of the business, or part of the culture?

Repair may function as:

The cooperative must determine how repair exists within the ecosystem.

23. What is the emotional tone of the cooperative?

Possible tones include:

This affects branding, communication, collaboration, and community identity.

24. Are we comfortable staying small forever?

The cooperative’s philosophy may naturally resist:

The cooperative must determine whether smaller but stable existence is emotionally

and operationally acceptable.

25. How do we transition from founder-led stewardship to collective ownership

without losing organizational coherence?

This explores:

The cooperative must determine how ownership, responsibility, decision-making, and

stewardship evolve as the organization grows, ensuring that collective participation

strengthens the system rather than creating instability, inefficiency, or mission drift.

26. What is the actual end goal?

Possible long-term goals may include:

The cooperative must define what success ultimately means beyond revenue or visibility.