Trust-Place and Save Your Wardrobe automate care and repair with digital certificates
A single scan now promises to turn products into repairable, traceable assets - Trust-Place’s digital certificates plug straight into Save Your Wardrobe’s aftersales platform to unlock care and repair.

A single scan can activate the entire post-purchase ecosystem." That line, published by Save Your Wardrobe on 12 February 2026, is the practical promise at the heart of a new partnership with Trust-Place. Save Your Wardrobe announced that Trust-Place digital product certificates will be linked to SYW’s after-sales and care/repair platform so brands can embed scannable IDs that open post-purchase services on demand.
The technical pitch is simple and tight: Trust-Place’s digital certificates become a direct gateway to SYW’s aftersales care services. Save Your Wardrobe’s LinkedIn post lays out the user flow in blunt terms: one scan securely links a product to its owner and opens a personalised service interface, giving customers immediate access to care, repair, and post-purchase support across different industry verticals; from fashion, furniture technology and more. That one-scan activation is being positioned as the frontend of an operational stack that ties product identity to service operations and customer experience.
The partnership sits inside a bigger regulatory and business frame that SYW has been selling as urgent. SYW’s "Stay Ahead of 2025’s Circular Shift" messaging warns that "the transition toward a circular economy in fashion is well underway, and brands that fail to adapt will be left behind." SYW explicitly describes the Digital Product Passport and its contents: "The DPP will include essential details such as a unique product identifier, compliance documentation, and information on substances of concern. It will also provide user manuals, safety instructions, and guidance on product disposal." The DPP is the data backbone SYW says will make traceability and regulatory compliance possible.
The Trust-Place tie-up is folded into a wider ecosystem play. SYW announced a separate partnership with Create Sustain on 5 February 2026 and the LinkedIn copy states the collaboration "brings together SYW’s technology-led aftersales infrastructure with Create Sustain’s strategic and creative expertise." SYW and Create Sustain will collaborate on joint research and innovation initiatives focused on repairability, sustainability metrics, and circular business models, positioning aftersales as a design and communications capability from pilot to scale.

Scale claims are loud in the coverage. Digital Mag’s excerpt goes hard: "Save Your Wardrobe (SYW) passe à la vitesse supérieure ! 7 milliards de dollars de chiffre d’affaires généré pour ses clients, 5 500 points de vente partenaires, et une expansion accélérée en Europe et aux États-Unis." Those figures paint SYW as a major operator in after-sales services, though captured materials do not disclose commercial terms for the Trust-Place integration or name launch customers.
That lack of technical and commercial detail is itself a headline. The SYW blog capture was truncated mid-sentence at "The integration lets brands embed a digital certifi..." and none of the captured texts specify certificate standards, ownership-transfer mechanics for resale, rollout timing, or pricing. For now the partnership delivers a crisp user promise - one scan, instant service - while the engineering, privacy, and commercial plumbing behind that scan remain to be shown. The move signals that aftersales and repair are being baked into product lifecycles as strategic advantages, not optional appendices.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip
