Armoire x Redyoos: Closing the Loop on Fashion Waste Together
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Most of us love a good wardrobe refresh. But what about the accessories we’ve outgrown, the single earrings and tangled chains left behind? This spring, two Seattle-born brands — Armoire and Redyoos — are teaming up to make fashion’s next chapter circular.
Why This Partnership Matters
Armoire built its community around sharing wardrobes instead of buying more. Redyoos does the same for jewelry — giving every piece a second life.
Together, the partnership helps reduce fashion waste, recover precious materials, and make sustainability feel simple.
“We’ve teamed up with @Redyoos, a jewelry recycling service that turns pre-loved accessories into essential materials for clean energy,” says the Armoire team. “That means your forgotten gold, silver, and fashion jewelry can help reduce mining, combat climate change, and fuel a circular economy.”
For both brands, it’s about turning small daily habits into real-world impact.
What’s Inside Your Next Case
When your next Armoire case arrives, look for something new tucked inside — a free Redyoos Jewelry Recycling Kit. It’s your invitation to clear space, recycle responsibly, and feel good doing it.
Here’s how it works:
- Do a jewelry purge. Any condition, any material — from fine gold to costume beads.
- Drop your unwanted pieces in the free Redyoos kit provided in your case.
- Mail them back with your Armoire return. Redyoos will determine the best way to reuse, repurpose, or recycle each piece.
That’s it. No separate trip, no extra postage, no guilt. Just a new, easy way to make fashion circular.
How Jewelry Recycling Works
Jewelry isn’t just decoration — it’s material, memory, and potential. When you recycle through Redyoos:
- Metals like gold, silver, and copper are refined and re-introduced into manufacturing for clean-energy technology and new designs.
- Stones and beads are sorted for reuse in community programs and small-batch makers.
- Fashion pieces are responsibly separated so nothing ends up in landfill.
Every step is traceable and transparent — a reflection of Redyoos’ commitment as the most trusted consumer jewelry recycle service in the U.S.
Seattle Leads the Circular Fashion Movement
It’s no coincidence this partnership was born in Seattle. The Pacific Northwest has long been a hub for conscious innovation — from clothing rental to green energy.
“Seattle has such a deep sustainability spirit,” says Cleo. “Armoire embodies what happens when we redesign systems that already work — we make them better for people and the planet.”
This collaboration shows that local action can scale global impact. Each envelope mailed back helps recover resources that would otherwise require new mining.
Fashion That Comes Full Circle
For Armoire members, the Redyoos kit is more than a bonus — it’s an invitation to participate.
- Rent your wardrobe. Recycle your jewelry.
- Enjoy fashion without waste.
- Be part of the movement.
“Keep an eye out for your free kit in your next case and help close the loop on fashion waste,” the Armoire team shares.
“Let’s make a sustainable difference, together.”
Each act — one mailed-in bracelet, one recycled necklace — adds up. It proves that what already exists is enough.
A Shared Purpose
Cleo Escarez founded Redyoos with a simple mission:
“I wanted to make jewelry recycling simple, meaningful, and accessible, so more of it actually happens.”
Her team calls Redyoos “an urban mine” — because everything we need already exists in what we’ve left behind. For Armoire, that same philosophy drives every rental case that ships out the door: reuse, share, repeat. Together, these two women-led companies are setting a new standard for how the fashion industry can rethink waste — with beauty, transparency, and trust.
Ready to Start?
Check your next Armoire case for your free Redyoos kit, or request a mail kit here.
It only takes a few minutes to send your old jewelry on its next journey — from forgotten to found. Because sustainability shouldn’t be complicated. It should feel human, hopeful, and as easy as dropping something meaningful in the mail.
