Brooklynn Gould-Bradbury’s quest for the perfect yoga pants took her to an unlikely place — the coffee filters in Taiwanese Starbucks.
The result is a budding Tacoma-based business called Five12 Apparel (Named for the highway linking Lakewood and Puyallup) that sells athletic clothing and gear made with recycled and sustainable materials. Leggings and shirts made with coffee grounds. Raincoats made with recycled water bottles. Backpacks made with recycled windshields. And they soon hope to make products from recycled fishing nets.
The clothes made from coffee grounds — 75 percent of which come from Taiwanese Starbucks — are proving to be the company’s most intriguing items. NPR briefly featured Five12 on an August edition of “How I Built This.”
As it turns out, using fabric with coffee grounds is more than just a good sales pitch. Coffee helps block odors, dries quickly and provides UV protection, Gould-Bradbury said. Gould-Bradbury and her silent business partner found a company in Taiwan that creates material by blending coffee, cotton and polyester They worked with the company and factory in Vietnam to make the first Five12 clothes. They now use a factory in China. The company researched and visits the factories to assure they are properly run and don’t use child labor.
The company debuted in January 2016 and broke even its first year. It’s ramping up business this year.