Sustainable Development

Upscale fashion: This French company is making luxury leather out of fish skin

Sustainable Development Retail, Consumer Goods and Lifestyle Future of Consumption

Turning fish skin into leather is an age-old craft. Image: Ictyos

Reuters Staff
  • A French company, Icytos, is using otherwise discarded salmon skin to create luxury leather to be used in wallets and watch straps.
  • The tanning of salmon skin is an age-old art that is being revived, driven by its environmental credentials.
  • The company is currently working with 250 clients who are testing the products for use in watch straps, bags, and clothes.

A French company is collecting fish skins that would otherwise wind up in restaurant trash cans, turning them into leather for use in watch straps and wallets, and pitching them at the high-end luxury market.

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Turning fish skin into leather is an age-old craft. It is experiencing a revival -- driven by its environmentally-friendly credentials -- but has yet to break into the rarefied end of the fashion industry.

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Three friends, who met when studying chemical engineering near Paris and taught themselves the tanning process from scratch, are trying to change that.

“Salmon skin has a suppleness, and a finesse, it’s less than half a millimetre thick, but with a resistance which is nearly equivalent to cow leather,” said Benjamin Malatrait, one of the three friends, who co-founded a company called Ictyos.

Sustainable Development Retail, Consumer Goods and Lifestyle Future of Consumption
Ictyos is working with 250 clients - who are testing the products for use in watch straps, bags, and clothes. Image: Ictyos

“It has a grain which is more marked, with the scales that are a bit reminiscent of lizard,” he said at his firm’s workshop near the French city of Lyon. “Visually its quite exotic.”

Their firm has been given a six-month stint inside a startup incubator run by Paris-based global fashion giant LVMH, owner of brands such as Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior. The idea is that the incubator’s graduates land deals with LVMH fashion houses.

Malatrait said Ictyos is working with 250 clients -- big brands and artisan producers -- who are testing the products for use in watch straps, bags, and clothes.

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