
Persh
Persh ist eine zeitgenössische Modemarke, die moderne Kleidung mit Schwerpunkt auf Stil und Tragekomfort anbietet.
Persh macht dich bequem stylish, ohne Kompromisse einzugehen
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Bogliolimilano
Italienische Mode- und Bekleidungsmarke mit zeitgenössischer Kleidung und Designermode.
Zeitlose italienische Eleganz trifft moderne Designermode für deinen Alltag
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Fashion4theleisureclass
Fashion4theleisureclass sells ready-to-wear, footwear, and small accessories for women and men. Core categories are statement outerwear, tailored knitwear, and limited-run graphic tees priced $180-$650, placing the label in the premium bracket. Distribution is direct-to-consumer through the brand’s own e-commerce site and seasonal pop-up showrooms in New York and Los Angeles; no wholesale accounts are maintained.
The brand’s USP is its “leisure-formal” hybrid: silhouettes borrowed from classic suiting are cut in washed silks, loop-back cashmere, and recycled tech-mesh, producing pieces that look boardroom-appropriate yet feel lounge-soft. Each drop is numbered rather than named, photographed on anonymous models with obscured faces, and routinely sells out within 48 hours, creating a cult following for the unbranded trench-coat and drawstring tuxedo trouser.
Customers are 25-45, urban creatives and remote executives who want clothes that transition from Zoom calls to gallery openings without looking effortful. They value discreet luxury, small-batch production, and fabrics that travel without creasing; sustainability is implicit through dead-stock usage and made-to-order replenishment.
Fashion4theleisureclass competes in the niche between avant-garde streetwear and minimalist designer labels. It differentiates by rejecting logos, offering gender-fluid sizing, and keeping unit quantities below 300 per style, cultivating scarcity without resortway pricing or influencer saturation.
Clothes that work as hard as you rest
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Albamclothing
Albam Clothing sells understated menswear rooted in British casual tradition: rain-worthy outerwear, selvedge denim, merino knitwear, sun-washed chinos, and wardrobe staples such as Oxford shirts and loopback sweats. Garments sit in the mid-price tier—£65 for tees, £150 for knitwear, £250 for coats—positioned between fast-fashion and luxury heritage labels. The brand trades only through its own channels: the London e-commerce site and small flagship stores in Soho and Cliftonville.
Cut-and-sew production is kept within the UK and northern Portugal, allowing small-batch runs, quick restocks, and visible provenance; fabrics are mostly Japanese denim, British Millerain canvas, and Scottish lambswool. Signature pieces include the “Field Jacket” waxed cotton, the weekly-dropping “Made in England” jeans, and seasonally recoloured “Classic Crew” sweatshirts that rarely reach markdown. Limited numbers, clean branding, and neutral palettes reinforce a quiet, anti-logo stance.
Customers are 25-45-year-old design, media, and tech professionals who want quality without visible branding and prefer to buy fewer, better things. They value locality, craft transparency, and a relaxed British aesthetic that works in city offices, coastal weekends, and bike commutes alike.
Albam competes with other craft-focused, direct-to-consumer menswear labels that emphasise provenance and restrained styling. It differentiates by keeping manufacture close to home, refreshing core staples rather than chasing trends, and pricing garments so that premium materials and ethical production remain attainable.
British craft that actually fits your life and budget
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Garcia
Garcia sells denim-centric apparel for men, women and kids, anchored by jeans in fits from skinny to loose (€79-€129) and complemented by knitwear, shirting, outerwear and accessories. The line sits in the mid-range: better-than-high-street quality but below premium designer pricing. Distribution is mixed—wholesale to ~3,500 independent retailers across Europe, own-flagship stores in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and Austria, plus a direct-to-consumer webstore that ships to most EU countries.
The 47-year-old Dutch label positions itself as “European denim culture,” translating Italian fabrics and laundry techniques into fits sized for Northern-European body types. Core collections G-Fit and G-Motion use 98-100% cotton denim with 2% elastane or recycled polyester for recovery; every season 20-30% of the line switches to BCI, recycled or organic cotton without moving the price needle. Garcia is best known for its five-pocket “Garcia Jeans” that keep the same style codes season-to-season, allowing multi-year replenishment for stores and consumers.
Typical buyers are 25-45-year-old urban professionals and young families who want presentable, day-to-night denim that lasts 2-3 years of weekly wear. They value understated European styling over logo-heavy fashion, appreciate inclusive sizing (women’s 24-38, men’s 28-44) and respond to the brand’s gradual shift toward lower-impact cotton and ozone-wash finishing.
Garcia competes with mid-priced European denim brands that balance fashion turnover with classic replenishment programs. It differentiates through continent-wide store coverage that gives physical try-on access, consistent fit blocks that reduce return rates, and a color palette tuned to Northern-European neutrals rather than sun-bleached Southern tones.
European denim that fits your life, not the other way around
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Kalisa
Kalisa.com is a direct-to-consumer women’s fashion label focused on elevated wardrobe staples: silk slip dresses, linen separates, cashmere knits and leather accessories. Most pieces sit between $120-$380, placing the brand in the accessible-luxury tier. Sales are online-only through its own site; no wholesale or marketplaces are used, keeping margins lean and prices below comparable quality levels.
The brand’s identity rests on small-batch production in family-owned ateliers (L.A. and Porto) and a tightly edited, season-less color palette of bone, espresso and black. Signature 22-momme washable silk slips with adjustable bias cut have generated repeat wait-lists and organic press coverage. Every drop is released in numbered editions, photographed on real customers rather than models, reinforcing scarcity and authenticity.
Core shoppers are 28-45-year-old creative professionals who want understated luxury without logos. They value ethical make, natural fibers and pieces that transition from desk to dinner; sustainability is table-stakes, but aesthetic minimalism drives the purchase. The brand’s private Instagram account, followed by 20 k, functions as a styling club where members vote on next colors, deepening loyalty.
Kalisa competes in the same whitespace occupied by indie “modern uniform” labels that sit above fast-fashion and below legacy designer diffusion lines. It differentiates through true small-batch scarcity (units rarely exceed 300), washable natural fabrics at half the market price, and a customer-co-creation model that turns buyers into micro-investors in each collection.
The closet that listens to you and actually gets better with wear
- Nachhaltig
- Unabhängig
- Bio
- Fair
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Wunderwerk
Wunderwerk ist eine Modemarke, die einzigartige, handwerklich gefertigte Modestücke mit kreativen Designs und hochwertigen Materialien anbietet.
Handgefertigte Meisterwerke, die deine Individualität ausdrücken
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Les Jacottes
Les Jacottes ist eine französische Modemarke, die sich auf elegante und anspruchsvolle Modekleidung spezialisiert.
Les Jacottes apporte l'élégance parisienne à votre garde-robe quotidienne
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