From Sketch to Runway: My Process Behind the Sustainable Streetwear Collection
17 July 2026Every collection starts with a question. For this project, it was: can a sustainable capsule feel just as premium as a brand’s core line?
Kōa Swimwear came to me wanting to launch a limited streetwear capsule using recycled fabrics — without losing the elevated, polished feel their customers expect. Here’s exactly how we got from that first conversation to a sold-out launch.
The Brief
Kōa’s team had three non-negotiables:
- Sustainability first — recycled or deadstock fabrics only
- No compromise on quality — the pieces had to feel as premium as their swimwear line
- Fast turnaround — a five-week window from concept to delivery
That last point shaped almost every decision that followed.
Step 1: Fabric Research
Before a single sketch, I spent the first week auditing three sustainable fabric suppliers, testing for:
- Texture — how the fabric moves and drapes on the body
- Durability — resistance to pilling and wash-wear over time
- Sourcing transparency — traceable recycled content, not just a “green” label
We landed on a recycled cotton-poly blend that held its shape well and had a subtle, tactile texture — something that photographed beautifully but also felt good to wear.
Step 2: From Concept to Sketch
With fabric locked in, I moved into concepting. This stage produced 24 sketches, exploring silhouettes ranging from oversized layering pieces to more fitted, cropped shapes.
We narrowed this down to 6 final silhouettes based on:
- Alignment with Kōa’s existing brand language
- Manufacturing feasibility within the fabric’s constraints
- Versatility — pieces that worked both as standalone items and layered together
Step 3: Prototyping and Fitting
This is where a lot of collections quietly fall apart, so we built in two full fitting rounds:
- Round 1 — raw sample garments, checking fit, proportion, and fabric behavior on the body
- Round 2 — refined samples with adjusted seams, hems, and closures based on Round 1 feedback
Small changes here — a half-inch shorter hem, a slightly wider neckline — made the difference between “good” and “right.”
Step 4: Finalizing the Collection
Five weeks after our first call, we delivered a finished 8-piece capsule: two hoodies, two oversized tees, a cropped jacket, a skirt, and two accessory pieces designed to be sold as sets or individually.
The Result
- Sold out within 11 days of launch
- Featured in Design Milk’s “Sustainable Fashion to Watch” roundup
- 22% increase in Kōa’s Instagram engagement during launch week
What I’d Tell Other Designers
If you’re building a sustainable capsule under a tight timeline, the biggest lesson from this project is: do your fabric research before you sketch, not after. Committing to fabric first meant every design decision downstream — silhouette, seam finishing, even pricing — had a solid foundation instead of being reverse-engineered around a fabric that “should” work.
