I run a B2B merchandise company in Australia, and after visiting 42+ countries and spending time off-grid in Colorado, I became obsessed with products that actually last versus the disposable junk flooding the promotional industry. Here's what we learned applies to home goods too. The biggest sustainability win isn't buying "eco" products--it's buying things you'll never need to replace. We refuse to stock anything at Mercha unless it's genuinely made to last, because a $50 reusable water bottle used for 10 years beats a $15 "sustainable" one that breaks in two. For your article, I'd push readers toward companies with actual warranties: Bellroy does 3-year guarantees on their products, and that accountability means they build things right the first time. For your bedroom section, look at wool bedding from companies like Holy Lamb Organics--naturally fire-retardant so no toxic chemicals needed, regulates temperature, and lasts 15-20 years versus synthetic comforters dying in 3-5. I've tested hundreds of products with major brands like Coles and Woolworths, and the pattern is always the same: organic materials with proper construction outlive everything else by decades. One filter we use that'd help your readers: if a company won't show their supply chain or has zero certifications (B-Corp, Fair Trade, GOTS), skip it. Real sustainable companies are proud to prove it. The greenwashing in home goods is worse than promotional products, and I've seen enough of it to know the red flags.