Customs seals hang from seized bamboo bolts like silver handcuffs at Rotterdam’s docks. Inside Milan’s design loft, half-finished EcoLux gowns sag on dress forms. Overnight, the European Chemicals Agency tightened its ban on carbon-disulfide solvents, giving brands ninety days to prove compliance or watch inventory impounded. At the very same press conference, Washington confirmed a 15% tariff on all Bangladesh-sourced garments—effective next Monday—shrinking an already-thin cash cushion.
Paolo Rossi paces between cutting tables, clutching swatches that once flowed like water; the substitute fabrics on his desk drape like cardboard. In Gazipur, Rahim’s phone lights up with photos of idle looms and workers anxious about overtime vanishing with the banned fibre. CFO Manuel pushes a spreadsheet that bleeds red: expedited sampling, tariff bonds and bond interest will burn through emergency funds in six weeks.
Competitors sense weakness. Paris gossip columns tease a rival “climate-positive” collection, and TikTok influencers count down to EcoLux’s runway slot, asking, “But will it still be eco?” In thirty days, either a compliant, convincing fabric story will glide onto the catwalk—or STG’s hard-won reputation will unravel in front of a million livestream viewers.
Choose the fabric path that: (1) meets new solvent & tariff rules, (2) protects EcoLux’s signature look, and (3) preserves liquidity until runway day.
Explore the strategic response options for EcoLux material choices under tariff pressure and compliance scrutiny. Select a tab to read each option’s approach and trade-offs.
“Hold the runway; own the narrative.”
Rebuild EcoLux with certified organic cotton, hemp and peace silk and postpone the show by one season.
Note: This option will be removed with Alert 3.2 at Minute 5.
“Looks natural, feels nylon.”
Replace banned viscose with high-grade polyester blends and offset emissions in marketing.
“Half virtue, half velocity.”
Mix organic cotton, recycled polyester, and Tencel; disclose exact percentages on hangtags.
“Code first, cloth later.” — Scrap the physical runway; stage a virtual show, collect pre-orders, produce only after materials are secured.
Note: This option will be removed with Alert 3.3 at Minute 8.
“Rooted looms, rising luxury.” — Partner with Bengal and Assamese artisans to weave a jute-peace-silk blend dyed in natural pigments.
“Today’s pause, tomorrow’s patent.” — Divert funds to mycelium leather or lab-grown silk; shelve EcoLux and debut a breakthrough next year.
“Let shoppers pick the yarn.” — Release digital swatches; fans vote on fibre mixes; micro-batches made only after orders lock.
After reviewing the options above, choose the strategy that best aligns with STG’s objectives and values. Select one option below to record your decision.