NookMarket
Liberation X

Liberation X

Elektronik

Liberation X spezialisiert sich auf innovative Elektronik und Wellness-Produkte für Erwachsene mit Fokus auf Qualität und Design.

Innovative Elektronik und Wellness, designed für erwachsene Genießer

Zur Website

Similar brands

Teorant

Teorant ist ein Elektronikunternehmen, das sich auf Audiogeräte, Soundsysteme und Technologielösungen spezialisiert. Die Marke konzentriert sich auf hochwertige Audio- und elektronische Geräte für professionelle und private Anwendungen.

Theorant macht professionelle Soundqualität für jeden zugänglich

Zur Website

Gitryin

Ein Elektronikfachhändler, der Technik-Gadgets, Zubehör und innovative elektronische Geräte anbietet.

Entdecke die Zukunft der Technik mit innovativen Gadgets und Zubehör

Zur Website

Ava of Norway

Ava of Norway sells women’s contemporary outerwear, knitwear and accessories, all built around responsibly sourced Nordic sheepskin and shearling. Core pieces—bombers, long coats, mittens and slippers—sit in the premium price bracket, typically NOK 3,000–12,000. The collection is sold globally through the brand’s own e-commerce site and a small network of Scandinavian boutiques and international concept stores. The label’s signature is reversing traditional shearling construction: wool faces outward for sculptural texture while leather lines the interior, creating coats that are half the weight of classic shearlings yet rated to –20 °C. All skins are by-products from the Nordic food industry, chrome-free tanned in Iceland and finished in Portugal with Oeko-Tex dyes; every piece is numbered and traceable via an online QR code. The “Oslo” reversible aviator and the “Bergen” midi coat are the most recognisable silhouettes. Customers are design-conscious women aged 25-50 who want statement winter pieces without logos and who value animal-origin materials when welfare documentation is transparent. Buyers tend to live in cold urban centres, travel frequently, and prefer minimalist wardrobes where one high-performance coat replaces several; sustainability for them means longevity and traceability rather than vegan alternatives. Ava competes in the elevated shearling segment dominated by Italian fashion houses and heritage British outerwear brands. It differentiates through overt Nordic provenance, lighter-weight pattern engineering, full supply-chain transparency, and a direct-to-consumer model that keeps premium shearling priced 20-30 % below comparable European labels while retaining small-batch exclusivity.

Reversible Nordic shearling that weighs half yet performs twice as hard

  • Nachhaltig
  • Vegan
Zur Website

Harfington

Harfington is a direct-to-consumer menswear label that focuses on business-casual apparel: wrinkle-free dress shirts, performance chinos, knit blazers, merino sweaters and small leather goods. Prices sit in the mid-range band—shirts $49-69, trousers $79-99, jackets $129-159—sold only through its own site and Amazon storefront, with no brick-and-mortar presence. The brand built visibility on “4-way-stretch, machine-washable suiting” that ships with spare buttons and collar stays pre-packed. Core collections (FlexLine shirts, TravelTech suits) use recycled nylon blends and taped seams to retain shape after 50+ washes, a feature repeatedly highlighted in product videos and Amazon Q&A. Customer base is 25-40-year-old urban professionals who need boardroom-appropriate clothes that survive carry-on luggage and same-day client hops. They value low-maintenance garments, neutral color palettes and the convenience of single-site replenishment rather than seasonal fashion novelty. Harfington competes in the crowded “performance menswear” tier populated by startup labels that advertise on social media and podcast reads. It differentiates by keeping SKUs narrow, prices 15-20 % lower than better-known rivals, and offering free hemming plus 90-day returns—policies prominently displayed on every product page to reduce fit-risk hesitation.

Business clothes that work harder than you do, then wash like nothing happened

  • Recycelt
Zur Website

VOLTLIN

Ein Elektronikfachhandel, der sich auf Stromversorgungslösungen, Kabel, Adapter und elektronische Komponenten spezialisiert.

Stromversorgung, Kabel und Komponenten, zuverlässig und immer verfügbar

Zur Website

Port Ta

Port Ta sells minimalist leather carry goods—card wallets, folios, zip pouches, cross-body bags and small travel organizers—cut from vegetable-tanned Italian hides and sewn in the brand’s Seoul studio. Pieces run USD 40–220, placing the offer in the accessible-to-mid bracket; everything is released in limited drops and sold exclusively through port-ta.com with global shipping. The brand’s identity rests on paper-thin, edge-painted panels that fold rather than stitch, creating feather-light wallets only a few millimeters thick. Signature items such as the “Flat Wallet” (holds 8 cards yet measures 6 mm full) and the modular “Link Pouch” system have become reference points in the online EDC community for maximum capacity with minimum bulk. Buyers are design-conscious urbanites—architects, developers, students—who want quiet, pocket-friendly silhouettes that age visibly and fit slim tailoring or techwear. They value domestic craft, understated branding and the patina that untreated leather develops over years of daily use. Port Ta competes with a crowded field of direct-to-consumer leather accessory labels; it distances itself through Korean in-house production, mathematically thin construction and drop-based scarcity that keeps inventory low and colors rotating. Where most brands add features, Port Ta removes material, positioning lightness and tactile patina as the premium experience rather than price or hardware flash.

Leather so thin it disappears, but never stops aging beautifully

Zur Website

Gate194.berlin

Berliner Modemarke mit urbaner Fashion und zeitgenössischer Kleidung.

Urban style that captures Berlin's raw energy and contemporary edge

Zur Website

at-ele

At Ele sells minimalist, design-forward home and lifestyle goods centered on small-format lighting, desk accessories, and portable décor. Price points sit in the mid-range tier—most SKUs fall between US $39 and US $129—placing quality materials within reach without luxury mark-ups. The brand is digital-native: 100 % of sales flow through its own Shopify-powered site, with global DHL shipping from a Hong Kong fulfilment hub. The label’s hero line is a series of aluminum-bodied, USB-C rechargeable table lamps that magnetically attach to matching stands, wall discs, and clamp mounts, letting one lamp migrate through an entire apartment. Matte anodized finishes, hidden touch dimmers, and 2700-3200 K warm-white LEDs give the products an Apple-adjacent aesthetic that photographs well for social media. Every launch is offered in limited seasonal color drops that sell out within days, reinforcing scarcity without collaborations or influencer drops. Core buyers are 22-40 year-old urban renters who work hybrid schedules and value gear that is lightweight, cable-managed, and Instagram-ready. They treat furnishings as semi-portable assets: something that can follow them across co-working spaces, short-term leases, and weekend Airbnb trips. Sustainability matters, so the brand highlights aircraft-grade recyclable aluminum, modular parts for repair, and plastic-free packaging. At Ele competes in the crowded “accessible design” niche against direct-to-consumer houseware labels that import from East-Asian OEMs. It differentiates by narrowing the catalogue to a tightly edited lamp ecosystem, maintaining consistent industrial design language, and shipping from Asia instead of adding a North-American warehouse layer—keeping prices 20-30 % lower than Western counterparts while still offering 12-month warranties and English-language customer support.

Light that moves with you, wherever you go next

  • Nachhaltig
  • Recycelt
Zur Website