Sustainable Development

Since its founding in 2014, WIRK has followed a consistent policy of sustainable development and corporate social responsibility. For the company, this is not a modern trend, but a core philosophy that has been embedded from the very beginning. WIRK is a family-owned company, created by highly educated young people who grew up during Bulgaria’s post-1989 transition and witnessed firsthand the consequences of unfair business practices. This experience shaped the company’s commitment to fairness, transparency, and ethical business standards. Regardless of the sector in which WIRK operates, all employees benefit from the following working conditions:

  • Fair compensation based on skills and expertise
  • Official contracts and bank-only salary payments
  • A five-day workweek with an 8-hour working day
  • Overtime compensation
  • Bright, air-conditioned, and comfortable workspaces
  • A supportive environment for mothers, foster parents, and women across the sector
  • Free training programs to improve professional skills and service quality

Due to these principles, the prices of TRKT (TARIKUTI) garments cannot be compared to those of fast-fashion brands. They reflect real production costs and a fair margin—hallmarks of truly ethical, sustainable, and boutique fashion.

Production Practices & Recycling

For decades, global marketing has encouraged constant consumption, leading to overproduction, degraded values, and a planet overloaded with waste.

In the fashion industry, one of the biggest problems in the last 50 years is mass overproduction: excessive samples, cutting waste, and huge collections that, in the end, fill warehouses and landfills worldwide. Emerging brands are often pressured by distributors to create more styles and purchase more fabrics.

At TRKT (TARIKUTI), we actively avoid these unsustainable practices. We produce only boutique series and small collections of up to 10 outfits, prioritising quality over quantity. Every piece of fabric is reused multiple times. Leftover materials are transformed into prototype samples, and when they can no longer be used, we sort textile scraps by type and color. These materials are then given new life as stuffing for toys or as resources for various art projects.

Through these practices, we stay true to the principles of ethical fashion, slow fashion, and sustainable production, creating garments that respect both people and the planet.