A 15-year-old Ethiopian creator known online as Kalu Putik has turned discarded tires, cardboard, plastic, wires, and scrap into one of the internet’s most unexpected fashion stories of 2026.
His videos look like polished runway editorials at first glance. Then comes the twist. The “luxury” outfit is made from things many people would toss aside without a second thought.
Trash becomes a runway
Kalu’s work stands out because it does not begin with expensive fabric, a studio, or a design-school setup. It begins with ordinary waste and a strong eye for shape, texture, and surprise.
In several clips, he appears in a simple setting before a quick transition reveals a sculptural outfit made from reused materials. The effect is fast, visual, and easy to understand anywhere in the world.
That’s the magic. No long explanation needed.
Why the videos work
The videos follow a simple rhythm. First, viewers see the raw material. Then comes the transformation. Finally, the finished look appears with the confidence of a fashion campaign.
Tires add weight and drama. Cardboard and plastic help build volume. Wires and cables give structure, almost like bones under a garment.
The result feels playful, but it also carries a sharper message. What looks like garbage in one moment can become design in the next.
Millions started watching
Reports say Kalu’s following surged rapidly in April 2026, with more than 2 million new followers in a single day and more than 5.1 million fans soon after. One later report said his following had moved past 6 million within about two months.
Some videos have reached tens or even hundreds of millions of views. That kind of reach shows how a strong visual idea can jump across language, location, and age.
Artists, photographers, stylists, influencers, and fashion pages have helped spread the clips. Singer SZA was also mentioned among the names connected to the online buzz.

The waste problem behind the glamour
Kalu’s rise comes at a time when fashion waste is under growing scrutiny. UNEP says about 92 million metric tons of textile waste are produced globally every year, which is roughly 101 million U.S. tons.
In the United States, EPA data show that 11.3 million U.S. tons of textiles went to landfills in 2018. That was 7.7 percent of all municipal solid waste sent to landfills that year.
Kalu is not presenting a formal recycling brand, at least based on the reports available. But his videos do something powerful. They make waste visible, strange, and suddenly full of possibility.
A new kind of sustainable fashion signal
This does not mean every piece of scrap should become clothing, or that viral videos can solve textile waste. Experts still point to bigger needs, including repair, reuse, better recycling systems, and less overproduction.
Still, Kalu’s work lands because it feels immediate. Anyone who has seen a pile of junk in a yard or a broken plastic item on the street understands the raw material.
At the end of the day, his success is not just about shock value. It is about imagination, timing, and the ability to turn overlooked materials into a visual language millions of people want to watch.
The original report was published on Click Petróleo e Gás.













