Materials science and digital identification solutions company Avery Dennison said its pilot program with circularity specialist ReCircled confirms how RFID-enabled systems can allow garment sorting ...
Avery Dennison, with European headquarters in the Netherlands, and Texaid, headquartered in Switzerland, have piloted the impact of RDIF-tagged garments on the textile collecting and sorting industry ...
With the textile industry staring down a 2028 digital product passport (DPP) deadline, one of circular fashion’s least glamorous problems is becoming its make-or-break constraint: sorting. RFID is ...
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They say the system was 100 percent accurate, which opens the door for companies to consider using RFID instead of bar codes for sorting cartons. Siemens Dematic, which has installed more than 10,000 ...
Avery Dennison and ReCircled pilot shows RFID can accurately automate garment data collection. Credit: Avery Dennison/ReCircled. Conducted in collaboration with two major apparel brands, the pilot ...
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Avery Dennison recently reported that its pilot project with ReCircled achieved 99% accuracy in automated garment sorting using RFID tags, sharply reducing labour hours while capturing detailed ...
One of the world’s largest RFID deployment has gotten larger: Correos, Spain’s postal service provider, has expanded its use of RFID technology, from an initial 16 sorting centers to 56 sites all over ...