The black fabric is made with 100% Infinna, created out of 100% post-consumer textile waste Circular fashion and textile technology group Infinited Fiber Co has revealed plans to build a EUR220m (US$264.2m) flagship factory in its native Finland to produce its regenerated textile fibres for the global market – and take the industry a step closer to having access to a premium, circular alternative to cotton. The company's technology turns cellulose-based raw materials, like cotton-rich textiles, used cardboard or rice or wheat straw, into Infinna, a fibre with the natural, soft look and feel of cotton. The firm currently operates pilot facilities in the cities of Espoo and Valkeakoski, Finland, with a combined nominal capacity of 150 metric tonnes per annum. The planned flagship factory will have an annual capacity of 30,000 metric tonnes per annum and will use textile waste as feedstock.