
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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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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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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Sgshirt
Sgshirt is a Singapore-based e-commerce label that focuses almost exclusively on graphic T-shirts, long-sleeve tees and toddler sizes. Most designs are priced S$29–S$39, squarely mid-range for cotton blanks printed in-house. The brand sells only through its own website, shipping regionally from a local fulfilment centre with same-day courier options inside Singapore.
The entire catalogue is built around hyper-local references—Singlish phrases, MRT station icons, hawker-centre puns—rendered in hand-drawn illustrations that are refreshed monthly. Limited drops of 100–200 pieces per colourway create quick sell-outs and a resale premium on Carousell. Their “Kopi-O” and “Chope” tees have become informal souvenirs cited by tourism boards and local influencers.
Core buyers are 18-35-year-old Singaporeans and expats who want wearable inside jokes that signal local identity without flag graphics. The brand appeals to a city-pride ethos, eco-conscious packaging and a “designed by locals” story that resonates with shoppers tired of generic fast-fashion prints.
Sgshirt competes in the crowded online graphic-tee space against global print-on-demand sites and fast-fashion chains. It differentiates by anchoring every design to hyper-specific Singapore culture, keeping production runs small to avoid dead stock, and fulfilling locally within 24 hours—speed and cultural specificity the offshore giants cannot match.
Wear your Singapore story, not someone else's souvenir
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Kiadeevaboutique
Eine Boutique-Modemarke mit kuratierter und exklusiver Modekleidung.
Exklusive Stücke für den, der sich von der Masse abheben möchte
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Element Brand
Element Brand ist ein im Vereinigten Königreich ansässiges Bekleidungsunternehmen, das moderne und minimalistische Kleidung anbietet.
Britische Minimalisten lieben Element für zeitlose, schlichte Eleganz
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Ursime
Ursime ist eine Modemarke, die sich auf lässige und zeitgenössische Kleidung mit einzigartigen Designelementen spezialisiert.
Ursime macht lässig cool mit Designs, die wirklich auffallen
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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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