Oxfam
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Oxfam is a charity organization that sells fair-trade and second-hand clothing to support global poverty relief initiatives.
Wear your values, change the world, support those in need
- Fair
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Oxfam is a charity organization that sells fair-trade and second-hand clothing to support global poverty relief initiatives.
Wear your values, change the world, support those in need
An international clothing outlet platform offering discounted fashion and branded apparel.
Designer brands at prices that actually make sense
Zur WebsiteFairFigure offers ethically-produced clothing with a focus on fair trade and sustainable fashion practices. The brand is notable for its commitment to transparency and equitable treatment throughout its supply chain.
Wear clothes made with integrity, not just good intentions
Global Fabric Wholesale specializes in bulk fabric sales, offering a wide variety of textiles including cotton, polyester, silk, and specialty materials at wholesale prices for retailers, manufacturers, and large-scale buyers. They are notable for providing cost-effective sourcing solutions to fashion businesses, clothing manufacturers, and fabric resellers who need high-volume purchases of quality materials at competitive wholesale rates.
Bulk fabrics, wholesale prices, endless possibilities for your business
Zur WebsiteProudpatriots sells patriotic clothing and apparel celebrating national pride and heritage.
Wear your pride loudly with apparel that celebrates who you are
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Zur WebsiteNinetyPercent sells women’s ready-to-wear, loungewear and jersey staples priced £45-£350, sitting in the premium contemporary bracket. The range spans organic-cotton tees, bamboo-cashmere knits, denim and limited-edition dresses. Distribution is DTC through ninetypercent.com plus a small network of ethical boutiques and pop-ups in London and New York. The brand’s name reflects its profit-share pledge: 90 % of distributed profits are split between five charitable causes and the people who make the clothes, traceable via QR code on every garment. Collections are designed for circularity—organic, recycled or low-impact fibres, factory audits published online, and take-back scheme for end-of-life pieces. Their best-known line is the “Better” organic-cotton T-shirt, restocked seasonally in up to 20 colours. Core customer is 25-45, urban, design-literate and values-led, willing to pay extra for verified ethics. She follows sustainability influencers, buys fewer but better items, and expects radical transparency on wages and emissions. NinetyPercent’s voting model lets shoppers nominate the beneficiary charity, turning each purchase into a micro-activist act. They compete with other premium sustainable fashion labels that combine clean aesthetics with certified supply chains. Differentiation lies in the scale of profit redistribution, factory profit-sharing contracts, and the interactive QR voting tool—mechanics rarely offered by even the most transparent competitors.
Wear clothes that vote your values into action