NookMarket
PAKAMA

PAKAMA

Mode · Men's Fashion

PAKAMA ist eine Modemarke, die zeitgenössische Modestücke mit Schwerpunkt auf hochwertige Gestaltung und Komfort anbietet.

Zeitlose Designs, die Komfort und Qualität perfekt vereinen

Zur Website

Similar brands

Boxerman

Boxerman ist eine deutsche Kleidungsmarke, die sich auf Bekleidung und Sportbekleidung konzentriert.

Boxerman bringt deutsche Qualität in deinen sportlichen Alltag

Zur Website

Drakensberg

Eine Modemarke, die Kleidung anbietet, die vom Drakensberge-Gebiet inspiriert ist oder sich darauf bezieht.

Wear die majestätische Schönheit der Drakensberge jeden Tag

Zur Website

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

  • Nachhaltig
  • Recycelt
Zur Website

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

  • Recycelt
Zur Website

Sportano

Sportano.de is a pure-play e-commerce retailer stocking around 15,000 SKUs across running, fitness, outdoor, team sports and racquet sports. Price architecture spans budget basics (€10-30) through mid-range performance gear (€50-150) to premium technical products such as carbon-plated running shoes and GPS watches (€200-600). Everything is sold only through the German-language webshop, with DHL/UPS delivery to Germany, Austria and Switzerland. The site positions itself as a data-driven “sport-specific search engine”: filters cover discipline, surface, foot type, heart-rate zone and even stroke style for swimmers. Exclusive colourways of major brands and a growing private-label “Sportano Performance” line give 10-15 % better price/feature ratios than standard ranges. Same-day dispatch from a 12,000 m² Fulda warehouse and 100-day free returns are promoted more prominently than price. Core buyers are 20-45-year-old urban athletes who train four-plus times a week, value lab-tested kit over fashion hype, and expect Amazon-level logistics from a specialist. Sustainability filters (recycled content, Bluesign) and detailed size-advice videos appeal to informed shoppers who want to minimise returns and environmental impact. Sportano competes against multi-sport mass retailers and brand-direct stores by combining niche assortment depth with pure-play efficiency: it lists every shoe width, carries power-meter pedals that generalists skip, and undercuts MAP pricing through bundled “club packs”. Continuous usability testing and sport-specific content (e.g., marathon training plans) reinforce authority, turning the site into a category gateway rather than a discount outlet.

The running specialist that knows your foot type better than you do

  • Nachhaltig
  • Recycelt
Zur Website

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

  • Recycelt
Zur Website

Separatec

Separatec sells dual-pouch men’s underwear—briefs, trunks, boxer briefs, and long-leg styles—plus matching undershirts and socks. Most items sit in the mid-range tier, running USD 18–28 per pair; limited bamboo or modal blends edge toward premium at USD 32–36. The brand operates DTC through separatec.com and Amazon storefronts, with no owned retail but global shipping from U.S. and Asian warehouses. The core patent is a two-pouch system that separates penis and scrotum, marketed to reduce chafing, support anatomy, and improve hygiene. Fabric mixes—micro-modal, bamboo viscose, and recycled nylon—are promoted for breathability and sustainability, and every style is sold in bold color drops as well as neutrals. Their “No-Shift” waistband and flat-lock seams are repeated product-page differentiators. Primary buyers are 25-45-year-old active or office-bound men who want all-day support without adjusting; gym-goers, runners, and cyclists cite chafe-free workouts in reviews. The brand frames underwear as functional gear, appealing to performance-oriented, body-aware consumers who value tech features over fashion logos. Separatec competes in the crowded premium-basic segment against pouch- or support-focused labels, but undercuts most on per-unit price while keeping proprietary construction. By focusing solely on the dual-pouch architecture and backing it with a 90-day trial guarantee, it positions itself as the specialist solution rather than a general lifestyle label.

Support that moves with you, never against you

  • Nachhaltig
  • Recycelt
Zur Website

Ironpandafit

Ironpandafit sells men’s gym apparel: stringers, tapered joggers, compression leggings, hoodies, and matching short-sleeve sets. Most items sit between $28-$55, placing the brand in the budget-to-mid-range tier. Sales are online-only through the ironpandafit.com storefront and its mobile app, with global drop-shipping from Asian and U.S. warehouses. The label’s identity is built on “Asian street-meets-steel” graphics—oversize panda skulls, kanji prints, and reflective barbed-wire motifs—applied to four-way-stretch, quick-dry nylon blends. Best-known pieces are the 2-in-1 “Panda Split” stringer tank and the 320 g fleece “Heavyweight Panda” hoodie, both restocked in limited color drops that sell out within hours. Every release is promoted with TikTok lifting challenges that double as product demos. Core buyers are 18-30-year-old male lifters and calisthenics creators who want loud, meme-ready gear for gym selfies without premium pricing. The brand speaks to a hustle culture that values aesthetic standout, budget efficiency, and the insider thrill of micro-drop scarcity. Ironpandafit competes in the crowded Instagram-born gymwear space populated by graphic-heavy, discount-priced micro-labels. It differentiates through faster design turnover (weekly drops), Asia-centric artwork, and integrated TikTok athlete codes that give buyers instant repost exposure—something plain-logo value competitors rarely match.

Loud panda graphics, budget prices, viral gym clout every week

Zur Website