Passer au contenu principal
Livraison rapide à 28$CA  La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire  
Lire notre Rapport d’avancement

Lire notre Rapport d’avancement

Notre Rapport d’avancement de 2025 explore toutes les nouvelles initiatives, parfois amusantes, parfois un peu étranges, que nous mettons en place pour réduire notre impact sur la Terre, notre unique actionnaire.

Découvrir

Livraison rapide à 22$CA

Livraison rapide à 22$CA

Les commandes sont expédiées dans un délai de 1 à 2 jours ouvrables et arrivent dans un délai de 3 à 5 jours ouvrables.

Les commandes sont emballées et expédiées dans un délai de 2 jours ouvrables. Les commandes passées pendant la fin de semaine ou les jours fériés sont traitées le jour ouvrable suivant.

En savoir plus

La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire

La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire

Si nous voulons préserver notre planète, sans parler de notre activité, nous devons tous agir dans la mesure de nos moyens. Voici ce que nous pouvons faire.

Lire la lettre d’Yvon

Fixation

Patagonia  /  13 févr. 2018  /  Worn Wear

See what happens to your beloved gear at the Patagonia Repair Center.

Welcome to Patagonia’s Repair Center, where we’ll do just about anything to keep your gear in play.

We love fixing gear that’s been worn into near oblivion by our customers. It means we did our job (build beautiful product for years of hard use) and you did yours (play like hell). In our 40 years of business, we’ve learned that, on average, people keep a piece of clothing for just three years, yet the materials and processes of making any new garment—including ours, which are made with the strictest sustainability considerations in the apparel industry—are very costly to the planet. The best way to reduce the environmental footprint of your clothes is to keep them in use longer, by you or by someone else.

While every repair may be different, the sentiment of our customers is largely the same: ‘Please fix this. I can’t go on without it.’

Repairing clothes is hardly a new idea—go back just a couple of generations, when getting more life out of what you owned was the necessary norm for most of the world. In much of today’s world, however, clothing is seen as disposable. The average adult disposes of 70 pounds of apparel into the landfill each year—an appalling number by any standard, especially when you consider that keeping a piece of clothing for just nine more months can reduce that product’s associated CO2 emissions by 27 percent, its water use by 33 percent and its waste by 22 percent. Simply put, the longer we use our stuff, the smaller the impacts become.

At Patagonia, we want to keep the clothes we make in circulation for as long as possible. Not only is durability built into the design of every product, we’re prepared to help extend the life of your gear. Our Repair Center is housed in our Distribution Center in Reno, Nevada. It’s one of the largest apparel repair facilities in the United States, with 42 full-time repair technicians. According to repairs manager Josh Schill, the Repair Center currently keeps upward of 50,000 well-loved, hard-worn pieces out of the landfill, putting them back out into circulation for more use. Each one receives personalized attention, because while every repair may be different, the sentiment of our customers is largely the same: “Please fix this. I can’t go on without it.”

The average repair takes about an hour and a half. Some take far longer, and complicated repairs take longer still. Patagonia repair technicians are skilled sewers from diverse backgrounds: Many have worked in factories in other countries or in the apparel industry in Los Angeles, some have learned their craft on their home sewing machine. Repair techs start on simpler repairs and progress to more involved jobs. “It’s a four- to six-month learning curve for a technician to be solid on 70 percent of what we do here,” says Schill. “The hardest repairs tend to be on specialty stuff like wheeled luggage or bootie alterations on fishing waders, and not everyone takes those repairs on.” But whatever the scale, techs make it a personal mission to get a piece fixed and functioning like new for many years to come.

Used pieces may also be traded for credit into the Worn Wear program (sometimes after being repaired). All eligible Worn Wear items are laundered in a waterless, liquid CO2 washing machine—an ingenious closed-loop system that captures plastics that would otherwise end up in the ocean—and require no drying. They’re then photographed and put on wornwear.com, where someone can purchase a pre-loved piece of Patagonia gear.

And then, there are the items that are simply beyond repair. With the customer’s permission, we’ll bale and prep those for recycling. Of course, if the customer can’t bear to see it go, we’ll send the piece back to them. (We get it.)

“Ultimately, Patagonia’s goal is to keep as much as we can out of the landfill,” says Stacy Weaver, Worn Wear operations coordinator in Reno. “We’ll do that any way that we can: repair, repurpose, upcycle, recycle. Patagonia’s quality standards are so high that even the stuff that’s been worn has so much life left in it. There are so many ways a garment can live on, why waste it?”

This story first appeared in the January 2018 Patagonia Catalog.

https://issuu.com/thecleanestline/docs/patagonia_january_2018_us
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous garantissons tous les produits que nous fabriquons.

Voir la Garantie Ironclad
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous assumons la responsabilité de notre impact.

Découvrir notre empreinte carbone
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous soutenons l'activisme de terrain.

Consulter Patagonia Action Works
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous reversons nos bénéfices à la planète.

Lire notre engagement
Recherches fréquentes