Impact Communication — Case Study

From Claims
to Proof

How a circular vintage eyewear brand stopped saying "we love sustainability" , and started proving it, frame by frame.

576

Frames rescued from landfill — 2025

92%

Repurposed vintage or previously loved pieces

3

Deliverables built to make the data speak

The problem

They were doing real work. No one could tell.

A New York–based vintage eyewear brand had built something genuinely rare: a circular business model that rescued designer frames from second-hand markets, dead-stock archives, and forgotten collections, and gave them a second, sometimes third, life through artisanal repair and restoration.

But their communication didn't reflect it. They were making sustainability claims without the data to support them. Phrases like "we love sustainability" were doing the heavy lifting for a story that deserved specificity, evidence, and depth. In an era of rising greenwashing scrutiny, good intentions without proof aren't just ineffective, they're a liability. The brand needed a system. Not a rebrand or better copywriting. A foundational layer of data, measurement, and language that could make their existing work legible — and defensible.

"The story wasn't missing. It was hiding inside every frame they repaired. The work was to surface it , and build the infrastructure to keep telling it."

The insight 

Every frame has a journey. That journey is the strategy.

The lifecycle of a rescued frame: from a designer store to a consumer, to abandonment, to recovery, through an optician's hands, to a second sale, is not just an operational fact. It's a narrative unit. Each origin, each intervention, each destination carries environmental meaning that can be measured, communicated, and felt. The insight was simple: stop inventing a sustainability story and start documenting the one already happening, piece by piece, repair by repair. Then build the system to translate that documentation into communication their audience could actually connect with.

The framework 

An impact measurement methodology built from scratch

Variable 1

Origin Source

Where a frame came from: second-hand market, dead-stock, vintage archive, supplier new, determines the baseline environmental context of each piece and the starting point of its story.

Variable 2

Intervention Depth

Minor (screws, pads, hinges)
Structural (lenses, rims, temples)
Full Restoration (a combination of both)

The depth of repair determines how far the frame traveled to continue its path.

Variable 3

Country of Origin

Sourcing geography shapes the supply chain footprint. A frame from Germany requiring minor alignment tells a different environmental story than one from Egypt requiring full restoration.

Impact Matrix

How origin and intervention combine into impact

What was built

Three systems. One coherent voice.

01

Impact Tracking Database

A structured system to log each repaired or

repurposed frame, capturing origin

source, intervention type, country, and

impact category. Built to scale with the

business and generate monthly and yearly

reporting data.

03

Impact Tracking Database

A workshop-based system to align the

team's language around what they could

actually claim, replacing vague

sustainability language with data-backed,

story-led communication their audience

could trust and verify.

02

Impact Tracking Database

A designed, publication-format document

translating the database output into a

human story, framing waste diverted,

frames rescued, and circular impact in

language that is specific, honest, and

emotionally resonant.

+

Social Content Translation

Database outputs translated into social ready

visual communication, making

impact data accessible and shareable for

consumer audiences without losing the

rigor behind the numbers.

The shift 

They went from "we love sustainability" to being able to say exactly how many frames they diverted from landfills, where each one came from, what it took to restore it , and why every single one of those details matters.