10% discount on your first order. Use code: WELCOME10
May 09, 2025
When I created EcoPersona, I wasn’t just looking for fashion, I was searching for meaning. I wanted accessories and clothing that felt as good on the inside as they looked on the outside. Pieces made from natural fibres, recycled materials, and durable designs that align with a lifestyle of purpose, not excess. From the very beginning, my mission has been clear: to be intentional with what we wrap our bodies in.
Our journey began with a simple question: What’s the impact of every material we use? That led us into deep research, into mushroom leather, cactus skin, orange peels, pineapple fibres, and more. But it wasn’t just about the novelty of the material. We asked:
Our circular scarves are made from 100% certified Baby Alpaca wool, sourced from Incalpaca, a Peruvian partner deeply committed to ecological care. These scarves are undyed, with natural hues like caramel, black, ivory, and ash grey, shades born from the alpaca’s fur, not artificial colouring. Some scarves have subtle variations in tone, a beautiful reminder that nature never repeats itself.
What drew us to Incalpaca was more than wool. It was their care for the alpacas, their support for local farming communities, and their mixed-crop farms that nourish the land. We also partner with a small intermediary — a team of four (three men, one woman) — who work directly with women’s cooperatives and elderly artisans in rural Peru. Sustainability here is not just environmental — it’s social.
Our Temiqui collection — totes and backpacks — is crafted from Piñatex, a revolutionary material made from discarded pineapple leaves. We chose it not only for its durability (it doesn’t crack like other alternatives) but also for its closed-loop production: waste turned into resource.
Each bag is a story of circularity. The interior lining is made from RECOS, a leather-like material created from recycled plastic bottles. Organic cotton threads, metal zippers, and minimal chemical treatments complete the design. With every Temiqui bag, you help repurpose 3–5 plastic bottles.
Production is kept small and intimate with fair labor and sustainability:
Named after the Nahuatl word for “embrace,” our Apapachoa sweaters are a soft blend of 70% recycled PET bottles and 30% organic cotton. Each sweater rescues around 7–8 bottles from the waste stream and is crafted in Peru through the same ethical sourcing model we’ve built with our scarves. Our vendor is a small team of four (three men, one woman.)
Sustainability doesn’t stop at our products. All our packaging is sustainable with recycled boxes and packaging, everything is carefully selected to make sure every single component of the wrapping is sustainable or recycled, as an example, we use recycled clothing to the bags and boxes form our partner ECO-ENCLOSE. Also, We offset our shipments, all of them, and prioritize low-impact transport. I personally avoid car travel whenever possible, opting for public transportation. Our partners live in off-grid communities, surrounded by 400 trees they’ve planted in place of fences, and their homes are powered by solar panels.
Sustainability doesn’t stop at our products. We offset our shipments and prioritise low-impact transport. I personally avoid car travel whenever possible, opting for public transportation. Our partners live in off-grid communities, surrounded by 400 trees they’ve planted in place of fences, and their homes are powered by solar panels.
In a world of greenwashing, transparency is revolutionary. At Eco Persona, we believe you deserve to know:
This isn’t just about fashion. It’s about rethinking consumption, valuing craftsmanship, and honouring the people and planet behind every thread.
Thank you for being part of this journey with us. Your choice matters—and together, we’re making fashion that feels right in every sense.
January 22, 2024
Can you imagine a world in which every product we consume could go back to its origins at the end of its life cycle?
When we are done eating an apple, the core can be composted. It decomposes with other matter to create new soil to help generate future apples and other food. This process is a regenerative sustainable cycle. It is also part of the philosophy and practice that we at EcoPersona are applying to our fashion and products. We believe that a healthy future for the planet and ourselves requires these sustainable cycles and that the textile and fashion industry needs to transform. #jointransformation