In our previous articlea>, we explored how start-ups at ITMA 2023 Start-Up Valley gained visibility and early recognition within the global textile community.
Initial exposure, however, is only the starting point.
What ultimately defines success is what happens next — how quickly start-ups move from initial interest to real-world application, integration and commercial growth.
The next group of start-ups from ITMA 2023 demonstrates how early exposure can translate into meaningful industry engagement and tangible business outcomes.
Turning Innovation into Industry Adoption
Breakthrough dyeing, AI-powered laundry automation and next-generation fibre traceability were among the innovations spotlighted at ITMA 2023’s Start-Up Valley.
Companies such as COLOURizd, sewts and Haelixa demonstrate how early-stage technologies can move beyond concept, attracting industry attention, forming partnerships and progressing towards real-world application.
Their journeys reflect a critical shift: from visibility to validation, and increasingly, towards commercial adoption.
“Participating in the ITMA 2023 Start-Up Valley was definitely one of the best decisions we’ve made as a company,” says Jennifer Thompson, CEO of COLOURizd, the developer of QuantumCOLOUR, a patent-pending technology for dyeing fabrics that eliminates harmful chemicals while significantly reducing water and energy consumption.
“For a technology like ours, a capital equipment investment that changes how mills colour yarn, being on that floor, in that room, with the right people, is irreplaceable,” Thompson adds.
“You can’t close those kinds of conversations over email, and we came away with over 300 meaningful contacts from mills, brands and industry partners.”
Her experience highlights how ITMA’s Start-Up Valley acts not just as a showcase, but as a catalyst for validation, investment and industrial adoption, bringing together innovators and decision-makers at the point where solutions are tested against real-world demands.
For start-ups seeking to move beyond early exposure, whether through partnerships, investment or industrial validation, this kind of access can be decisive.