Jennyfer is a French fashion retailer founded in 1985 and a young, trendy, cool, and sexy brand for women. The multinational clothing-retail company creates fast fashion at affordable prices.
Jennyfer makes clothing, accessories, shoes, swimwear, jewelry, beauty, and fragrances. It offers stylish, on-trend fashion for young women and girls in Europe.
Jennyfer has a recycled collection to reduce its environmental impact, limit waste, and cut down carbon emissions. It wants to make the fashion industry and clothing more sustainable.
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Sustainability Rating: 1/10
Rating FAQ
Category: Clothing, accessories, shoes, bags, jewelry
For: Women, children
Type: Basics, denim, knitwear, nightwear, underwear, loungewear, swimwear, outerwear, sandals
Style: Casual
Quality: Low
Price: $
Sizes: XS-XL, 2-12 (US), 4-14 (UK), 34-42 (EU), 4-14 (AU)
Fabrics: Cotton, linen, modal, viscose, polyester, nylon, spandex, acrylic, polyurethane, rubber, wool
100% Organic: No
100% Vegan: No
Ethical & Fair: No
Recycling: Yes
Producing countries: not transparent enough
Certifications: no certification
Sustainability Practices
Jennyfer offers to give gently used clothes a second life with its recycling program. It provides customers with the opportunity to do good by diverting clothing waste from landfills.
The French fashion brand has partnered with German sorting, recycling, and reselling service providers SOEX and I:CO to make in-store collection possible and give second-hand clothing a new life through reuse or recycling.
Jennyfer doesn't use any organic or recycled materials such as organic cotton or recycled plastics.
Most of its fabrics are either natural without relevant certifications, such as regular cotton or linen, or synthetic petroleum-based fibers such as polyester, nylon, acrylic, and more.
Jennyfer also uses a little amount of semi-synthetic fibers or regenerated cellulosic fabrics such as modal and viscose.
Jennyfer doesn't publish a list of its manufacturers or processing facilities on its corporate website. It provides no information regarding how it chooses its network of suppliers.
It doesn't show any labor certification standard that would ensure good working conditions, decent living wages, health, safety, and other human rights for workers in its supply chain.
Jennyfer doesn't have a code of conduct that applies to its suppliers and subcontractors to ensure social and labor standards, and ethical and sustainable production.
Jennyfer doesn't use exotic animal skin, hair, fur, or angora. But it uses wool to manufacture many of its clothing pieces.
Wool is a cruel and unethical animal-derived material. It also harms the environment by producing greenhouse gases and waste. More sustainable alternatives exist.
Sustainability Goals
Jennyfer doesn't show any measurement of its greenhouse gas emissions, water usage, chemical release, pollution, or waste across its supply chain.
It doesn't have any clear sustainability goals, science-based targets, or timeline to improve in the future either.
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What We're Up Against
Multinational corporations overproducing cheap products in the poorest countries.
Huge factories with sweatshop-like conditions underpaying workers.
Media conglomerates promoting unethical, unsustainable products.
Bad actors encouraging overconsumption through oblivious behavior.
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