Thesis Project
Indivisual Project
4.17.2025
Advisor: Peipei Bao
The project provides a design-led service where customers can send in their unused denim and receive a one-of-a-kind accessory in return. Each bag tells a story—of memory, transformation, and conscious choice. Leftover materials are also reused to create small accessories, ensuring minimal waste throughout the process.
This mindset creates massive textile waste. Every year, millions of garments end up in landfills, wasting resources and polluting the environment. And yet, many of those clothes still hold value — not just in fabric, but in memory.
That’s why I created JOEY.
To give meaningful pieces a second life.
I started with denim because it’s timeless, personal, and worth saving.
Story
She’s 28, lives in the city, works in creative marketing.
She shops at vintage stores, brings her own tote to the farmers’ market.
She doesn’t chase trends — she chooses meaning.
One weekend, while cleaning her closet, Emma found an old pair of jeans — soft, faded, frayed at the knees.
She had worn them on road trips, first dates, solo walks. They still felt like her.
She sent them to JOEY.
A few weeks later, a package arrived. Inside was a custom bag — cut and stitched from her denim.
The tag read No. 123456. She looked it up on the JOEY site, and saw what the leftover fabric became: a small cardholder and a pouch, made for someone else.
It wasn’t just a bag.
It was part of her story — carried forward, piece by piece.
A few weeks later, her JoeyBag arrives. It’s beautiful. It’s practical. And it’s hers—designed from something that used to sit in the back of her closet. Inside the package is a small card with a number.
She learns that leftover fabric from her jeans was turned into small accessories—like card holders or AirPods case. With her bag number, she gets 10% off to collect a matching piece.
It’s how we make sure nothing goes to waste!
But as we grow, we plan to expand to more fabrics, like corduroy, leather and wool.