In the heart of the textile district of Prato, there exists a production culture that does not simply transform raw material, but regenerates it, reinterprets it, and brings it back to life through a process rooted in more than a century of history. When we speak about recycled cashmere, we are not describing a recent trend or a superficial response to the growing demand for sustainability, but rather a layered industrial knowledge, built over time and refined through generations of artisans and technicians who have learned to recognize quality not only in new fibers, but also in those that have already lived a first life.
For Due Toscani, regenerated cashmere is not a compromise, but a conscious choice that begins with the selection of materials and extends all the way to the finished product, passing through a process that requires precision, experience, and a deep understanding of fiber behavior. Everything starts with the collection of discarded garments, a phase that might appear secondary but is in fact one of the most critical moments of the entire process, because it is here that the quality of the future yarn is determined. Not all garments are suitable for regeneration, and not all fibers react in the same way, which is why selection is carried out manually through careful sorting based on composition, color, and the condition of the material.
Once selected, the garments are introduced into the mechanical regeneration process, a stage that clearly distinguishes this type of production from any other form of textile recycling. No aggressive chemical treatments are involved, and the fiber is not artificially altered; instead, it is brought back to a raw, fibrous state by opening and separating it from its previous structure. This is a delicate balance, because cashmere fiber, already extremely fine by nature, must be handled with care to preserve as much length and integrity as possible. It is precisely here that the experience of the district makes the difference, as each step must be calibrated according to the specific material being processed.
After regeneration, the fiber is processed again to become yarn, and even at this stage there is no standardized approach, because recycled cashmere requires specific adaptations compared to virgin cashmere. The spinning process must account for shorter fibers, increased delicacy, and the need to ensure sufficient cohesion so that the yarn can be used in knitwear without compromising the quality of the final product. It is a continuous balance between technique and sensitivity, between machinery and knowledge, between industrial structure and artisanal expertise.
One of the most distinctive aspects of recycled cashmere produced in Prato is the way color is managed, often without resorting to additional dyeing, but instead through the careful selection and blending of already colored fibers. This not only reduces environmental impact, but also gives the yarn a unique chromatic depth that is difficult to replicate through traditional processes. The colors are never flat, but alive with nuances and natural variations that reflect the history of the material from which they originate.
When the yarn is ready, the process cannot yet be considered complete, because the real test lies in knitwear production, the moment when the yarn is transformed into a finished product. It is here that all the characteristics of regenerated cashmere emerge, its hand feel, its performance, its behavior during knitting and after washing. For this reason, at Due Toscani, every yarn is tested directly in production, because only through real experience can its performance be fully evaluated and its use adapted to the client’s needs.
Speaking about recycled cashmere therefore means speaking about a complex system in which every phase is interconnected and every decision influences the final result. It is not a simpler or cheaper material, as it is often perceived, but a different one, requiring specific expertise and a precise design approach. For B2B clients, this translates into a product that combines genuine sustainability with consistent quality, capable of fitting into contemporary collections without sacrificing technical and commercial value.
In a market where sustainability is often reduced to a claim, regenerated cashmere represents one of the few authentic expressions of circular economy applied to textiles, but only when it is produced within a system that understands its rules and respects its limits. It is precisely in this ability to transform a constraint into an opportunity that the difference emerges between those who use recycled materials as a marketing lever and those who, like Due Toscani, integrate them as a fundamental part of their production identity, building not only a yarn, but a coherent vision of what knitwear should be today.