
jellybuddy
Jellybuddy verkauft Kinder- oder Freizeitkleidung, wahrscheinlich mit lustigen, verspielten und bunten Designs.
Bunte Abenteuer anziehen, jeden Tag aufs Neue lachen und spielen
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Flyfittees
Flyfittees is a direct-to-consumer apparel label that focuses on graphic t-shirts, hoodies, and complementary streetwear staples such as joggers and caps. Prices sit in the budget-to-mid range: tees retail for $22-28, hoodies for $45-55, and accessories under $20. Sales are handled exclusively through the brand’s own Shopify site with periodic drops announced on Instagram and TikTok; no wholesale or brick-and-mortar stockists are used.
The brand’s hook is aviation-themed artwork—each release features stylized nose-art, runway iconography, or retro airline logos rendered in limited-edition colorways of 300-500 units. Limited drops sell out within hours, creating a collectible cycle that rewards repeat site visitors. Every garment is cut from 100% ringspun cotton or 320 gsm fleece and pre-washed in Los Angeles, giving small-batch quality at fast-fashion prices.
Core buyers are 18-34-year-old men who follow sneaker culture, flight-sim Twitch streams, and military-history TikTok; many are pilots, aviation students, or airline crew looking for off-duty gear that signals their niche. The aesthetic lets them pair hobby identity with streetwear credibility without resorting to generic “pilot” mall shirts.
Flyfittees competes in the crowded graphic-streetwear space populated by meme-centric and drop-driven labels. It differentiates by owning a single visual vertical—aviation—rather than chasing every pop-culture trend, and by keeping unit costs low through made-to-order small runs, avoiding the discount rack that dilutes other drop models.
Limited aviation graphics that actually fit your lifestyle, not your mall
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Stronger
Stronger is a Swedish active-wear label that sells leggings, sports bras, tops, jackets and swimwear in sizes XS-3XL. Most pieces sit in the €40-€80 band, placing the brand in the mid-range segment. Sales are handled through its own EU, UK and US e-commerce sites plus a small network of European concept stores.
The company builds every collection around “match-point” prints and colourways that drop in limited “chapters” every 4-6 weeks, creating an almost streetwear-like scarcity cycle. All garments are designed in Stockholm, tested by an internal female athlete panel, and manufactured in WRAP-certified factories using recycled polyamide and polyester. The high-rise “Shape” legging with contrast waistband is the bestseller that routinely sells out within days.
Core buyers are 18-35-year-old women who train 3-5 times a week, follow fitness influencers on TikTok and value outfit novelty as much as performance. They want gym pieces that double for coffee runs and selfies, appreciate inclusive sizing, and prefer Scandinavian aesthetics over big-logo mainstream sportswear.
Stronger competes in the crowded “athleisure for her” space populated by digital-native labels that release weekly micro-collections. It differentiates through Nordic design minimalism, rapid small-batch drops, recycled fabrics at accessible price points, and a community-driven product development process that turns customer feedback into new styles within weeks.
Scandinavian design that sells out before your next workout
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Tribalchimp
Tribalchimp sells print-on-demand apparel and accessories focused on graphic T-shirts, hoodies, tank tops, mugs and phone cases; most items fall between $20-$40, placing the brand in the budget-to-mid-range tier. Orders are placed only through the tribalchimp.com storefront; inventory is produced after purchase and drop-shipped directly to customers.
The company’s identity rests on punchy, meme-style slogans and pop-culture references that are crowd-sourced from an online design community; new graphics can go from submission to on-sale within 24 hours. Their “Chimp Club” rewards program and limited-edition drops create repeat traffic, while aggressive social-media ads push bestsellers such as the “Sarcasm Loading” tee and “Gym Now, Taco Later” hoodie.
Core buyers are 16-30-year-old Americans who consume TikTok, Instagram and Reddit humor, value instant self-expression and prefer inexpensive statement pieces that match trending jokes. The brand speaks to a playful, irony-driven lifestyle and promotes user-generated photos under #tribalchimp for social proof.
Tribalchimp competes in the fast-fashion novelty niche against other meme-centric POD shops and mall retailers that rotate graphic basics. It differentiates by turning viral phrases into wearable products within hours, undercutting traditional six-week design cycles, and keeping prices low through made-to-order production that eliminates inventory risk.
Wear the meme before the internet forgets it
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Siksilk
Siksilk sells men’s and women’s street-sport crosswear: muscle-fit T-shirts, hoodies, joggers, denim, outerwear and accessories priced £20-£120. The range sits in the mid bracket, nudging premium for statement pieces such as velour tracksuits or faux-leather jackets. Products are released in weekly “drops” and sold through the brand’s own e-commerce site plus a network of 300+ global stockists including Footasylum, JD Sports and Zalando.
The label fuses 90s American sportswear silhouettes with contemporary slim tailoring and bold baroque branding, creating a recognisable “athletic-street” aesthetic. Signature items include zip-through baseball jerseys, elongated curved-hem tees and reflective-thread tracksuits that photograph strongly for social media. Limited-run colourways and co-lab capsules with influencers keep drops sell-out times under 24 hours.
Core buyers are 16-30-year-old gym-aware, social-media natives who want clothing that transitions from workout to nightlife without losing shape. They value visible branding, flattering tapered fits and the ability to mirror UK rap, footballer and Love Island style on a student-friendly budget. Hashtag campaigns (#SikSilkSoldier, #FitToBeSeen) encourage user-generated content, reinforcing a community built around fitness, music and weekend culture.
Siksilk competes in the crowded “lifestyle sportswear” space against heritage athletic brands moving into fashion and fast-fashion chains launching active lines. It differentiates by owning an unmistakable slim, longline cut, maintaining weekly micro-drop scarcity and marketing through athlete and influencer micro-ambassadors rather than traditional above-the-line spend.
Gym fit meets nightlife drip in every weekly drop
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TrendsetterClub
TrendsetterClub ist ein Modehändler, der trendige Kleidung und Bekleidung für modebewusste Verbraucher anbietet.
Setze jeden Tag Trends, nicht nur Kleidung
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Saltum
Saltum is a direct-to-consumer women’s activewear label that sells performance leggings, sports bras, shorts, tops and matching sets priced in the mid-range (USD $45-$85). The line is released in limited-edition color drops and is sold only through its own site, saltum.com, with global shipping from U.S. fulfillment centers.
The brand promotes “compression without concession”: squat-proof, high-stretch knits made from recycled nylon/elastane blends, flat-lock seaming and 4-way stretch that retains shape after 50+ washes. Every style is wear-tested on a range of body types and launched in inclusive sizing XXS-4X; best-sellers include the 7/8 Contour legging and the Racer-X cross-strap bra.
Core customers are 20-40-year-old women who train 4+ times a week, value aesthetic minimalism and want technical gear that transitions from gym to street without logo overload. They buy Saltum for its neutral color palette, consistent fit and the sense of joining a small drop community rather than mass-market retail.
Saltum competes in the crowded digital-native athleisure space against labels that use heavy discounting and influencer seeding; it differentiates by keeping inventory scarce, offering only two major restocks per year, and publishing exact fabric mill certificates to verify recycled content.
Recycled nylon that actually lasts, drops that actually matter
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Wearclubseven
Wearclubseven operates as a direct-to-consumer online label focused on men’s and women’s elevated streetwear staples—graphic hoodies, oversized tees, cargo pants, and matching knit sets—priced in the mid-range bracket ($60-$180). Drops are released in limited quantities through the brand’s own site only; no wholesale or brick-and-mortar stockists are used.
The brand’s identity hinges on small-run “chapter” collections that remix late-90s club culture cues with contemporary muted color palettes and heavyweight custom-milled fleece. Signature pieces include the reversible “7-Panel” hoodie and the embroidered “Club 7” cargo jean, both of which routinely sell out within hours and appear on resale markets at 1.5-2× retail.
Core buyers are 18-30-year-old urban creatives who queue for limited streetwear drops, value scarcity over logos, and favor gender-neutral fits they can wear from studio to nightlife. The label’s cryptic release calendar and password-protected lookbooks foster an insider community that trades restock alerts on Discord and Reddit.
Wearclubseven competes in the crowded streetwear space dominated by weekly-drop labels and artist merch by keeping unit quantities deliberately low, manufacturing entirely in Los Angeles for quick turnaround, and avoiding graphic-heavy branding in favor of tonal embroidery and numbered woven labels that signal exclusivity without overt logos.
Wear what insiders know before it sells out in hours
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