Cotton from named fields. Linen from named flax farms. Wool from named flocks. Leather from named ranches. Hemp, denim, silk — every fiber traceable to the land and the hands that produced it. TILTH is what happens when the transparent supply chain meets what you wear.
Cotton is the world's most traded agricultural fiber — and one of the most opaque. A t-shirt passes through 8-12 intermediaries between field and store. Linen, wool, leather, hemp, and silk face the same problem. Nobody can tell you which field grew the cotton, which farm raised the sheep, or which ranch produced the hide. TILTH traces every fiber to its source — because the producers are already on the transparent supply chain.
Cotton and linen from named fields. Wool from named flocks. Leather from named ranches. Hemp from named farms. Each fiber carries the producer's name, the growing practices, and the harvest data.
Ginning, spinning, weaving, tanning, dyeing — each step at named facilities with published practices. Natural dyes documented. Organic processing verified. Every yard of fabric traceable to specific fiber lots.
Workwear, outerwear, denim, basics, accessories. Each piece carries the full chain — the field or flock, the fiber, the mill, the dye, the cut-and-sew. Scan the label and see every hand that touched it.
The global textile and apparel market is $1.7 trillion. The #1 consumer demand — across every survey, every year — is supply chain transparency. Brands make sustainability claims they can't verify. 'Organic cotton' labels that can't name the field. 'Ethically sourced' tags with no chain of custody. TILTH doesn't make claims. TILTH shows the data — because the producers are on the transparent supply chain and the traceability record writes itself.
Cotton, flax, and hemp farmers join the same network as cattle ranchers and grain growers. Wool comes from sheep already on the platform. Leather comes from cattle already processed through the network. Linen comes from flax grown on the same land as grain. TILTH doesn't require a separate supply chain — it requires the transparent supply chain to extend to every fiber that grows from the land or comes from the animal.
If you grow cotton, flax, or hemp, raise fiber animals, or work in textile processing and want to be part of what we're building, we want to hear from you.
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