Huminly

Huminly

Biotechnology Research

San Carlos, CA 1,488 followers

Using enzymes to recycle the unrecyclable, starting with textiles.

About us

At Huminly, we use enzymes to enable infinite recycling of textiles. Using just water, salt, and enzymes, we take blended textile waste and extract high-quality raw materials like cotton and polyester to make brand new clothes. We help textile manufacturers and fashion brands reach their sustainability targets by diverting more of their waste from landfill while offering them a sustainable source of raw materials without needing to compromise on cost or quality.

Website
www.huminly.com
Industry
Biotechnology Research
Company size
2-10 employees
Headquarters
San Carlos, CA
Type
Self-Owned
Founded
2023

Locations

Employees at Huminly

Updates

  • View organization page for Huminly, graphic

    1,488 followers

    Huminly is delighted to welcome Hao Zhang to our team! Hao joins us from the University of Virginia where he finished up his PhD this past May. As part of his doctoral work, he engineered one of the best fluorescent zinc biosensors in the world. Outside of the lab, he employs his keen observation skills for birdwatching while hiking. As assay development lead on our enzyme engineering team, he is applying his protein engineering chops in developing state-of-the-art screening methods to find new and improved plastic-degrading enzymes. Huminly’s proprietary screening platform already accelerates enzyme performance in a matter of weeks, and with Hao’s expertise we’re making it even faster and more accurate. Want to join Hao and the Huminly team in tackling the global megaton textile waste problem? Apply here! https://lnkd.in/gWGAsPeZ To learn more about our mission: www.huminly.com

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  • View organization page for Huminly, graphic

    1,488 followers

    Huminly is thrilled to welcome Austin P. as our very first hire! Austin comes to us from Modern Meadow, where he was responsible for screening myriad strain libraries with precision and efficiency. He started a recycling business in high school, and once went a month waking up every hour each night to keep batteries from catching fire at work. As the first research associate on our enzyme engineering team, he’s bringing run-through-walls energy to help us crank the flywheel of enzyme evolution. With Austin onboard, we’re moving that much faster now towards finding new and improved plastic-degrading enzymes. Want to join Austin and the Huminly team in tackling the global textile waste problem? We're still hiring! https://lnkd.in/gWGAsPeZ To learn more about our mission: www.huminly.com

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