Three stories from 2050

As we move closer to the goal of having 80-90% of our revenue stream in Denmark come from the secondary market, I would like to reflect on the progress we have made!

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As I approach the end of my career, I would like to reflect on the significant progress we have made.

As a global society, we’ve realized that clothing is not just a commodity—it’s a shared resource. Our digital platforms have made it possible to access fashion, not own it. This new way of thinking has democratized fashion like never before.

As a Digital Fashion Platform Developer, my work has centered on building the platforms that power this circular economy. These platforms make it easy for people to buy, sell, trade, and even rent garments. Transparency is at the heart of everything—we track every item’s life cycle so customers can make informed choices.

The moment that stands out the most from my career is when I saw the system I helped create facilitating millions of exchanges daily, seamlessly connecting consumers who were sharing, reselling, and reusing garments across the globe. Fashion had finally become a shared economy.

We overcame the obsession with ownership. We realized that access, not possession, is the future.

Now my wishes for the next generation of professionals are that they continue innovating in digital platforms, finding even more seamless ways for consumers to engage with circular fashion. Let them see that true value lies in how many lives a garment can touch.

The rise of digital platforms facilitates a seamless exchange between consumers, enabling peer-to-peer resale, collaborative fashion ownership, and transparent tracking of garments’ life cycles.

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As I approach the end of my career, I would like to reflect on the significant progress we have made.

As a global society, we’ve completely abandoned the notion of waste. Every item is repurposed, recycled, or upcycled. The idea of discarding anything has become taboo, and landfills are relics of a bygone era.

As a fashion industry, we’ve made it mandatory for every garment to be created with its next life in mind. As a Sustainability Manager, my work has focused on building systems that ensure every product is tracked and managed for recovery, repair, and resale. The supply chain has been transformed into a circular loop—nothing escapes without being reused.

The thing that stands out the most from my work is when we successfully created a fully closed-loop system for all our products. Not a single material is wasted; everything is recovered and reintegrated. It took years of collaboration across multiple departments—production, logistics, design—but we did it.

We overcame the belief that newness means progress. We learned that innovation lies in creating something enduring, something with a story behind it.

My wishes for the next generation of professionals are that they continue pushing the boundaries of material recovery, finding creative ways to minimize waste while maximizing value. Let them find beauty in the cycle, not the single-use.

The fashion industry focuses on designing clothing specifically for reuse, resale, and material recovery, embedding circularity at the design phase.

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As I approach the end of my career, I would like to reflect on the significant progress we have made.

As a global society, we’ve transformed from a consumer culture to one where individuals are empowered creators and caretakers of their garments. Repairing, upcycling, and co-creating with clothing is a source of pride and self-expression.

As a Workshop Facilitator and Fashion Educator, my mission has been to teach consumers how to maintain, repair, and personalize their wardrobes. I’ve spent years facilitating hands-on workshops, teaching people to sew, upcycle, and transform their clothes into something new. It’s been inspiring to see how people, once passive consumers, have become active participants in the life cycle of fashion.

The moment that stands out the most from my work is when a young participant proudly showed me a dress they had entirely remade from their grandmother’s old clothing. This intergenerational connection through repair and creativity embodies what I believe fashion should be—a reflection of who we are and what we care for.

We overcame the fast-fashion mentality, replacing it with a deep appreciation for what we own and what we can create.

Now my wishes for the next generation of professionals are that they continue educating, teaching others to see fashion not as something to buy and dispose of, but as something to nurture, repair, and cherish. Let them be teachers, creators, and repairers of the future.

Consumers shift from passive buyers to active participants in fashion’s circular ecosystem, learning skills like repair, upcycling, and customizing clothing to extend garment life and value.