Create a free account, or log in

Trash into treasure: These Aussie entrepreneurs are turning used shampoo bottles into $100 sunglasses

Dresden Vision and Sustainable Salons are on a quest to prove plastics can and should be repurposed into more than low-grade products.
Priscilla Pho
Priscilla Pho
Shampoo bottle sunglasses
Sustainable Salon co-founders Ewelina Soroko (left) and Paul Frasca (right) with Dresden Vision's co-founder Bruce Jeffreys (centre). Source: supplied.

Two Aussie businesses are repurposing empty shampoo bottles to createย sunglasses frames, in a quest to proveย plastics can, and should, be reused for more than just low-grade products.

Sustainable Salons collects waste from salons across Australia and New Zealand, and Dresden Vision uses the plastic to create sunglasses, that it sells for up to $100 a pop.

Dresden Visionโ€™s co-founder Bruce Jeffreys tells SmartCompany the properties of recycled plastics means they can be recycled into better products than people realise.

โ€œThe reality in Australia is if any plastics are recycled, theyโ€™re recycled into very, very low-grade uses,โ€ he says, such as bins and speed bumps.

โ€œShampoo bottles are actually a great material that weโ€™ve made into a higher quality product.

โ€œWe want to use the quality of the plastics to their best advantage.โ€

Jeffreys credits the idea to Sustainable Salons owner Paul Frasca, who collects and cleans reusable waste from salons for recycling into quality products.

โ€œItโ€™s not just about recycling, itโ€™s about what we do with all the materials โ€” thatโ€™s a really big part โ€” as well as what it adds to the community,โ€ Frasca tells SmartCompany.

โ€œAnd then the other big part is how do we drive the businesses who sign up to our program?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re all about people, planet and profit,โ€ he adds.

Trial and error

Making the frames wasnโ€™t a one-day process, and Frasca says innovation comes with an initial cost.

โ€œI know it sounds a bit crazy, but when youโ€™re solving problems, you have to think outside the box,โ€ he says.

โ€œIf youโ€™re too focused on the money aspect, in the beginning, nothing ever happens.โ€

An example of this was during research and development where it became clear that recycled shampoo bottle plastics shrink differently to virgin plastics.

It took a lot of experimentation with different additives to allow prescription lenses to fit the plastic frames correctly before the businesses could make a usable product.

โ€œOne of our goals is to make the recycled plastic almost the same quality as the virgin plastics,โ€ Jeffreys says.

โ€œThereโ€™s not a lot of precedent to follow.

โ€œIt took a bit of experimentation and it always takes longer than you think to do something really well.โ€

Finding the right partner

Although Dresden Vision has dappled with the idea of making its frames out of other materials, such as used fishing nets, itโ€™s Frascaโ€™s focus on creating sustainable practices along the entire supply chain that made this idea the first โ€œscalable and commercially viable productโ€ for it.

โ€œWhat Paul and his team gave to us was the smarts around managing the waste so it comes to us in a form that is really usable,โ€ Jeffreys says.

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of practical stuff โ€” collection, sourcing and then re-processing of the material. So you want to do it in a way thatโ€™s really efficient so we can make this a permanent thing.โ€

Similarly, although Sustainable Salons has a network of participating businesses that provide the recyclables, Dresden Vision was one of the only businesses to agree on the need to turn those materials into something more than speed bumps and bins.

โ€œWhatโ€™s unique with Bruce and I is that we think the same,โ€ Frasca says.

โ€œWe just donโ€™t know how to say โ€˜noโ€™ to each other. People like us will find a way to make it happen, even if we lose money in the beginning.โ€

Making it an industry effort

Frascaโ€™s know-how about sustainable recycling practices in business stems from his insistence that Sustainable Salons is primarily in the business of education, rather than recycling.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t work without education,โ€ he says.

He spends a lot of time empowering salons in making change, beyond just flicking off the switch on power outlets when appliances arenโ€™t in use.

The salons are also supported with the infrastructure needed to make the change. An eight bin system is installed to separate waste such as hair, bottles and old electronics โ€” all of which are separated into different programs to be recycled.

โ€œItโ€™s not just throw it in there. Itโ€™s about how to rinse it out and do what we call a light cleaning,โ€ Frasca says.

After being taught, the salons are expected to do this independently before itโ€™s shipped off to Sustainable Salons, which finishes the cleaning process by removing stickers before breaking down the bottles for Dresden Vision.

โ€œAnd the hairdressers are really into it โ€” theyโ€™re really conscious of the waste,โ€ Jeffreys adds.

READ NOW:ย โ€˜What weโ€™ve been looking forโ€™: How Australian startup BlockTexx is turning discarded clothes into raw, commodity-level plastic

READ NOW:ย Chinaโ€™s recycling โ€œbanโ€ throws Australia into a very messy waste crisis