SM Denim Mills’ new sustainable initiative asks how materials can move toward a more circular future.
Next week at Kingpins New York, the Karachi, Pakistan-based denim manufacturer will launch Daera, an evolving circular denim platform that explores how recycled materials can be engineered into a broader, more desirable product offer.
Daera pushes the conversation beyond recycled content as a singular solution toward a more complete circular product development. The goal is to demonstrate that circular denim can be inspiring for designers, credible for sourcing teams, relevant for brands and compelling for consumers.
Instead of being defined by a single fabric or a fixed fiber recipe, the Denim Deal member describes Daera as a “continuous system in which materials are not simply used and discarded but given the possibility of returning to the product cycle.”
The platform includes a range of rigid and stretch constructions that incorporate recycled post-industrial cotton waste and post-consumer cotton waste and complementary fiber technologies. For brands and designers, that means circular denim with different weights, constructions, hand feels, silhouettes and end uses while maintaining the performance and aesthetic relevance demanded by the global denim market.
SM Denim Mills will also debut Indio Next, a three-part collection that reimagines denim’s heritage through a new generation of fibers, constructions and surfaces.
The mill delivers fresh iterations of core of denim in Modern Icon, a capsule with refined constructions, clear twill lines, rich indigo depths and premium hand feel. Fabrics are designed to become the future classics.
Modern Culture provides fabrics that reflect the way consumers live. Fabrics are more fluid, comfortable and responsive to the body. Lightweight constructions and advanced fibers bring softness and movement to authentic denim aesthetics.
With Urban Alchemy, SM Denim shows its experimental side with fabrics that have surface interest, color, texture and unique finishings geared toward fashion-forward brands.
Select fabrics in the Indio Next range use fiber developments from Lenzing and The Lycra Company.
The mill uses Lenzing’s Tencel Lyocell – HV100, a technique that cuts the wood-based fiber at varied lengths, so it behaves more like cotton areas like dye uptake and washdown and has less shine than traditional Tencel. SM Denim said the fiber innovation preserves visual character while introducing the softer hand and fluidity expected by consumers.
Other constructions incorporate The Lycra Company’s Lycra Vintage FX, allowing stretch denim to retain a more authentic character as it moves, recovers and ages.


