22 Marken zu entdecken.

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
Zur Website
Taskmasterstore
Taskmasterstore is the official e-commerce outlet for merchandise tied to the UK television panel show “Taskmaster.” The site sells apparel, drinkware, stationery, games and limited-run collectibles priced in the £8-£60 mid-range band; premium signed or numbered items occasionally exceed £100. Sales are online-only through taskmasterstore.com, with worldwide shipping from UK fulfillment centers.
All designs are created in-house and feature show-specific iconography—Greg Davies’ golden head, the Taskmaster house logo, episode catchphrases—making them unavailable elsewhere. Weekly “drop” restocks and strictly numbered editions create scarcity that routinely sells out within hours, reinforcing the brand’s positioning as the exclusive source for authentic, fan-only memorabilia.
Core buyers are 18-44 year-old UK comedy viewers who follow the show on Channel 4 and social media; international fans from the US, Nordics and Australia now account for roughly 30 % of traffic. Purchasers value insider humour, cult status and the chance to own a tangible piece of a programme they quote daily; eco credentials such as organic-cotton tees and plastic-free mailers align with their ethical expectations.
Taskmasterstore competes with general entertainment merch sites, marketplace sellers and mainstream fashion retailers that stock licensed TV products. It differentiates by controlling every stage—design, manufacture, drop cadence and community engagement—so items feel like collectibles rather than commodity merchandise, while limited quantities and direct-to-fan pricing keep resale value high and knock-offs scarce.
Own the inside jokes only true Taskmaster fans get
Zur Website
Jeikner
Jeikner is a German eyewear label that sells prescription glasses, sunglasses and blue-light computer frames for men, women and kids. All models are designed in-house and manufactured in small European runs; retail prices sit in the mid-range band (€89-€189 for optical frames, €119-€229 for sunglasses). The brand trades only through its own multilingual webstore jeikner.de and ships DHL across the EU; no physical stores or third-party opticians are used.
Every frame is offered in two nose-bridge sizes and multiple temple lengths, a fit granularity rarely supplied at this price. Five core silhouettes are restocked seasonally in limited colourways of bio-acetate or lightweight stainless steel, each paired with Zeiss-lensed sun clips that snap on magnetically. The “Modul” system—one front, two clip-ons, one case—has become the line’s signature and is frequently cited by German lifestyle press as a clever answer to fast-fashion eyewear.
Buyers are 25-45, urban, design-sensitive and cost-conscious; they want design credibility without logo overload and prefer brands that publish material origin and factory location. Sustainability, modular reuse and the ability to order direct with a 10-day home trial resonate with their low-waste, digital-first lifestyle.
Jeikner competes against vertically-integrated online opticians and fashion-house diffusion lines; it differentiates through limited-run German design, semi-custom sizing and magnetic clip versatility at a fraction of luxury acetate prices, while still undercutting high-street opticians on transparency and service speed.
German design that actually fits your face and your budget
Zur Website
Capiche
Capiche sells minimalist baseball caps and related headwear priced $28-$38, placing them in the accessible mid-range. All styles are unisex snapbacks made from cotton-twill or corduroy in muted, seasonless colorways. The brand is direct-to-consumer only, fulfilled through its Shopify site with free U.S. shipping and periodic limited-edition drops.
The company positions itself as “the perfect cap”—no logos, no mesh, no contrast stitching, just a clean silhouette that ships in a reusable cotton bag instead of plastic. Their flagship “Cap 01” is cut from 100 % organic cotton, uses recycled brass hardware, and is offered in a consistent core palette plus quarterly micro-runs that routinely sell out within days. Product pages list fiber origin, factory location (all Los Angeles sewn), and end-of-life recycling instructions.
Customers are 18-35 year-olds who want a uniform piece that works with streetwear, workwear, or athleisure without visible branding; roughly 60 % of Instagram tags come from women. Buyers value quiet design, small-batch transparency, and the ability to own the “same cap” in multiple neutrals rather than chasing graphic trends.
Capiche competes in the crowded headwear market against both fast-fashion logo caps and premium designer labels; it differentiates through logo-free aesthetics, mid-tier pricing, and domestic small-batch production that larger brands can’t scale economically. By limiting SKUs, publishing supply-chain details, and using recyclable packaging, it occupies a niche between commodity caps and high-end designer minimalism.
The cap that disappears into every outfit you actually wear
Zur Website
Chevalière Royale
Chevalière-Royale.com sells men’s signet rings, cufflinks, tie clips and leather bracelets in 925 silver, 18 k vermeil and steel; most pieces are finished with onyx, lapis or black-oxide heraldic engravings. Retail prices run €89–€249, placing the line squarely in the mid-range fine-accessory bracket. The brand is digital-native: 100 % of sales flow through its Paris-based webstore with worldwide DHL shipping and a 30-day return window.
Designs reinterpret 15th-century French chevalière crests—flat table tops, bevelled edges, deep cameo-style engraving—produced in a 14-step lost-wax casting process the firm documents on video. Every ring is offered in 12 sizes and can be laser-monogrammed in 24 h; the best-selling “Duc de Guise” onyx signet has been restocked 18 times since 2020. Packaging mimics a hand-bound coat-of-arms book, reinforcing the aristocratic storytelling.
Core buyers are 20-35-year-old European and North American men who want heritage symbolism without antique-dealer pricing: law students, esports creatives, and young professionals building a capsule jewellery wardrobe. They value discreet luxury, historical narrative and the ability to personalise without showroom mark-ups.
Chevalière Royale competes with heritage jewellers selling €600-plus signets and with fast-fashion brands offering sub-€30 plated copies. It differentiates by owning only the signet category, keeping precious-metal content verifiable, and publishing real-time production videos that demystify quality—tactics that earn organic TikTok reach and repeat rates above 28 %.
Aristocratic signet rings, without the antique dealer price tag
Zur Website
leevje
leevje is a Dutch children’s apparel label that focuses on organic cotton basics and soft lounge sets for babies and toddlers (0-4 yrs). Core lines include ribbed onesies, two-piece pajamas, knotted beanies and swaddles, all dyed in a muted, earth-tone palette. Prices sit in the mid-range bracket (€22–€48 per piece) and every drop is sold exclusively through the brand’s own Shopify-powered webstore, with worldwide shipping from its Utrecht studio.
The brand’s signature is GOTS-certified fabric milled in the EU, sewn in small Portuguese factories, then finished with nickel-free snaps and water-based inks; each garment carries a scannable QR that links to the exact farm batch. Seasonal “Colour Play” edits release only four dye lots per year, creating collectable mini-capsules that routinely sell out within 48 h and are rarely restocked.
Customers are design-conscious millennial parents who want toxin-free fabrics but refuse pastel clichés; they value traceability, limited runs and neutral tones that photograph well for Instagram. The brand’s minimalist aesthetic and gender-neutral fits appeal to families aiming for capsule wardrobes, gift-givers seeking “quiet luxury” baby presents, and eco-minded shoppers who will pay 20 % more for verifiable sustainability.
leevje competes in the crowded organic baby-wear space against Scandinavian monochrome labels and larger eco chains; it differentiates by staying Dutch-run, ultra-small-batch and fully transparent, turning limited availability into a deliberate perk rather than a supply constraint.
Organic basics that actually look good on Instagram
Zur Website
Persaf
Persaf.de is a German online-only shop that focuses on high-quality personal-care and household paper products: facial tissues, toilet paper, kitchen rolls, napkins and pocket packs. Everything is sold in neutral, single-color packaging and the assortment is deliberately narrow—roughly 20 SKUs in total. Prices sit at mid-range: a 10-roll pack of 3-ply toilet paper is €7.95 and a carton of 24 facial-tissue boxes is €34.90, shipping included within Germany.
The brand’s USP is “paper without branding”: no logos, no patterns, no plastic outer wrap, and all tissue is EU Ecolabel-certified, FSC-mix and bleached chlorine-free. Persaf positions itself as the anti-label label, marketing the absence of decoration as a design statement. The plain white or muted-color cartons have become a minor Instagram favorite among minimalist-interior accounts, giving the company organic reach it does not pay for.
Core buyers are urban millennials and design-conscious families who want a calm, coordinated bathroom or kitchen and dislike supermarket shelf clutter. They value sustainability but will not pay luxury prices; they also appreciate the convenience of scheduled bulk delivery every four, eight or twelve weeks.
Persaf competes with mainstream supermarket labels, subscription eco-brands and boutique “design” tissue start-ups. It differentiates through radical visual minimalism, German-made certification and a SKU count low enough to keep logistics lean, allowing free carbon-neutral courier delivery on every order without a minimum spend.
Tissue that looks as good as it feels responsible
Zur Website
Jojeco
Jojeco.de is a German online-only shop that focuses on refillable cleaning and care products for household, laundry, body and hair. Core lines include glass-bottle starter sets and 100 % compostable refill tabs that dissolve in tap water; prices sit in the mid-range (€8–€25 per starter kit, €2–€4 per refill). The entire range is vegan, micro-plastic-free and shipped climate-neutral within Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
The brand’s USP is closed-loop packaging: every refill arrives in paper sachets or dissolvable film, eliminating single-use plastic spray bottles. Jojeco offsets production emissions via certified climate projects and lists all ingredients in plain German plus INCI. Best-known SKUs are the “Allzweckreiniger” universal cleaner and “Glas & Spiegel” tabs, which have gained traction through TikTok demos and eco-influencer kits.
Typical buyers are 25-45-year-old urban renters who already separate waste, shop organic groceries and want low-effort sustainability. They value a tidy Instagram-ready bathroom, dislike hauling heavy liquid bottles and are willing to pay a small premium for plastic-free convenience that still looks design-forward.
Jojeco competes with direct-to-consumer cleaning tablets, drugstore eco-labels and subscription zero-waste boxes. It differentiates through German-formulated tabs that fit existing 500 ml bottles, next-day DHL GoGreen delivery and a price per use that undercuts most comparable glass-and-refill systems while remaining cruelty-free and Made in EU.
Putzmittel aus Tabs, nicht aus Plastik, direkt zu dir nach Hause
- Nachhaltig
- Bio
- Vegan
- Tierversuchsfrei
Zur Website
Barliife
Barliife.de is a German DTC brand that sells powdered super-food blends and functional drink mixes—greens, reds, collagen, electrolytes, matcha, protein and “daily” all-in-one sachets. Most SKUs sit in the €19–€39 range for 250–400 g pouches (≈ €0.80–€1.20 per 10 g serving), placing the line in the mid-price tier. Sales are 100 % online through the brand’s own site; no retail listings are shown.
The company positions itself on 100 % natural, vegan, lactose- and sugar-free formulations with transparent ingredient lists and German lab testing certificates. Products are sold in resealable kraft pouches and single-serve sticks, and the site offers bundle-and-save sets plus a flexible subscription (10 % discount, pause anytime). Flagship SKUs are “Daily Greens” and “Marine Collagen + Hyaluron,” each claiming ≥ 75 % organic content.
Core buyers are 20- to 40-year-old urban professionals in Germany, Austria and Switzerland who want convenient micronutrient coverage without pills or juicing. The brand speaks to clean-label, fitness-oriented and time-poor consumers who track macros, follow #mealprep content and value local support over U.S. imports.
Barliife competes in the crowded European super-powder space dominated by better-funded Anglo-American labels. It differentiates through German quality certification, German-language customer service, carbon-neutral DHL delivery within 1–2 days, and pricing ~20 % below premium U.S. equivalents while still offering comparable super-food dosages.
German superfoods that actually arrive tomorrow, no American markup needed
Zur Website
Ra Egyptian
Ra Egyptian retails artisanal, small-batch fragrances, body oils, and solid perfumes built around historic Egyptian botanicals. Price points sit in the premium tier: 50 ml eaux de parfum USD 145–165, body oils USD 65, and solid balms USD 45. Sales are direct-to-consumer through ra-egyptian.com and its Brooklyn atelier; no wholesale or third-party e-commerce.
The formulas are alcohol-free, macerated in organic carrier oils and bottled in violet glass to preserve potency. Each scent references a pharaonic deity or ritual ingredient—lotus, kyphi, blue lotus absolute—and is compounded in micro-batches of 300–400 bottles. The brand’s Kyphi Parfum and Nefertum Blue Lotus Oil have become niche-cult favorites cited by perfume bloggers for historical accuracy.
Core buyers are 25-45-year-old scent enthusiasts who avoid synthetics and track indie perfume releases on Reddit and Discord. They value clean INCI lists, museum-grade storytelling, and the exclusivity of runs that sell out within days. Ra Egyptian markets itself as “olffactory archaeology,” aligning with slow-beauty and wellness rituals rather than trend cycles.
Competition comes from other historical-narrative niche houses and clean indie oil perfumers. Ra Egyptian differentiates through verified botanical sourcing from Egyptian growers, scholarly reconstruction of ancient formulas, and limited micro-batches that create scarcity without paid drops or influencer seeding.
Wear the scents ancient Egyptians actually made, not what marketing invented
Zur Website
Shop Like You Give a Damn
Shop Like You Give a Damn is a 100 % online department store for ethical fashion, beauty, home goods and accessories. It lists roughly 4,000 SKUs from 150+ independent labels, with most items falling in the €35-€150 band—mid-range with a small premium tier for organic or artisan pieces. All inventory is drop-shipped directly from partner brands, so the site carries no stock of its own.
The company positions itself as Europe’s largest “vegan & ethical marketplace.” Every product page displays third-party certifications (PETA-Approved Vegan, Fair Wear, GOTS, B-Corp) and a transparent impact score. Shoppers can filter by 12 ethics tags such as “plastic-free,” “upcycled,” or “Black-owned,” a feature that has become the site’s signature UX.
Core customers are 25-45-year-old urban professionals in the UK, DACH and Nordics who identify as vegan, zero-waste or social-justice oriented. They come to replace fast-fashion staples with cruelty-free alternatives and expect documented proof of supply-chain integrity rather than generic “green” claims.
It competes with multi-brand ethical e-commerce platforms, sustainable fashion aggregators and the ethical edits of mainstream marketplaces. Differentiation lies in its strict curation (every brand must meet at least two verifiable ethics criteria), vegan-only filter as default, and carbon-neutral checkout funded by the company, not the customer.
Ethical fashion that actually proves it, not just claims it
- Nachhaltig
- Handgemacht
- Unabhängig
- Bio
- Fair
- Vegan
- Tierversuchsfrei
Zur Website
Montiégo Glasses
Montiégo Glasses sells prescription eyeglasses, blue-light blockers, and sunglasses priced $59-$149, positioning itself in the budget-to-mid-range segment. All frames are listed as “hand-polished acetate” or “lightweight stainless steel,” with free single-vision lenses included. The company is e-commerce only, shipping from U.S. and EU warehouses.
The brand’s headline promise is “designer quality without the 10× markup,” achieved by vertical integration and small-batch production runs. Every frame is photographed on multiple face shapes and offers at-home try-on for $5, a program credited with cutting return rates below 8%. The recycled-leather fold-flat case and carbon-neutral shipping are marketed as standard, not add-ons.
Core buyers are 18-34-year-old urban professionals who want current silhouettes—oversized square, slim 90s oval, and chunky tortoise—without paying luxury premiums. Social content emphasizes sustainable fashion, self-expression, and “quiet luxury,” hashtags that generate 3× organic shares compared with price-focused posts.
Montiégo competes with direct-to-consumer eyewear brands that also skip brick-and-mortar overhead. It differentiates through sub-$150 pricing that still includes high-index or blue-light lenses, 2-day carbon-neutral delivery, and a 365-day scratch-replacement warranty—terms longer than most peers in the same price tier.
Designer frames that actually fit your budget and your values
Zur Website
Shopsolidroot
Shopsolidroot.com is an online-only store that focuses on small-batch, American-grown herbal supplements and functional mushroom products. Core categories include powdered extracts, tinctures, and encapsulated blends; most SKUs fall between $24 and $64, placing the line in the mid-range wellness segment.
The brand differentiates by sourcing 100% of its botanicals directly from U.S. family farms and by publishing third-party lab results for every lot. Its best-known collection is the “Forest-Farm” series—dual-extracted lion’s mane, reishi, and turkey-tail powders sold in compostable pouches—marketed explicitly for cognitive and immune support.
Customers are health-conscious millennials and Gen-Xers who value regenerative agriculture, transparent supply chains, and low-waste packaging. They typically follow bio-hacking or holistic-lifestyle podcasts and are willing to pay a modest premium for traceable, soil-to-shelf ingredients.
Shopsolidroot competes with both mass-market supplement labels and niche adaptogen start-ups by combining domestic farm transparency with rigorous testing, something the big brands rarely offer, while undercutting boutique apothecaries on price through direct-to-consumer fulfillment.
American-grown mushrooms and herbs, tested transparent, grown honest
Zur Website
The Female Company
The Female Company verkauft Menstruationsprodukte, darunter Bio-Tampons und Binden, sowie ergänzende Wellness- und Lifestyle-Artikel. Das Unternehmen zeichnet sich durch seinen Fokus auf die Herstellung hochwertiger, nachhaltiger Periodenprodukte aus, die speziell von Frauen für Frauen entwickelt wurden. Dabei wird großer Wert auf Transparenz, Inklusivität und die Berücksichtigung der Bedürfnisse menstruierender Personen gelegt.
Perioden-Produkte, die von Frauen für Frauen mit echtem Gewissen gemacht wurden
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myWeedo
myWeedo verkauft Bio-Produkte auf pflanzlicher Basis für Gesundheit und Schönheit sowie umweltfreundliche Lösungen für Haus und Garten, die speziell für umweltbewusste Verbraucher entwickelt wurden. Das Unternehmen zeichnet sich durch sein Engagement für Nachhaltigkeit und natürliche Inhaltsstoffe aus und bedient Kunden, die chemiefreie Alternativen für Körperpflege und Haushaltsbedarf suchen.
Natur statt Chemie, Schönheit statt Kompromisse, Zukunft statt Wegwerfmentalität
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The Ayurveda Experience
The Ayurveda Experience verkauft Nahrungsergänzungsmittel, Vitamine und Ernährungsprodukte über theayurvedaexperience.de. Die Marke zeichnet sich durch handwerkliche Fertigung und Bio-Formulierungen aus. Menschen suchen nach The Ayurveda Experience-Alternativen, wenn sie andere Formulierungen, besseren Geschmack oder mehr wissenschaftlich fundierte Transparenz wünschen.
Traditionelle Ayurveda Weisheit, handwerklich modern interpretiert
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Living Crafts
Living Crafts bietet Biekleidung, Heimtextilien und Gartenprodukte aus nachhaltigen Naturmaterialien wie Bio-Baumwolle und Leinen an. Das Unternehmen ist bekannt für sein Engagement für umweltfreundliche Produktion und faire Handelspraktiken und spricht damit umweltbewusste Verbraucher an, die Nachhaltigkeit und ethische Herstellung in den Vordergrund stellen.
Natürliche Materialien, faire Produktion, echtes Gewissen beim Anziehen
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Green Box
Green Box ist spezialisiert auf umweltfreundliche Verpackungslösungen und nachhaltige Produkte für Haus und Garten, die entwickelt wurden, um die Umweltbelastung zu verringern. Das Unternehmen ist bekannt dafür, umweltbewusste Verbraucher und Unternehmen zu bedienen, die kunststofffreie, biologisch abbaubare Alternativen für den täglichen Gebrauch suchen.
Nachhaltig leben, ohne Kompromisse bei Qualität oder Stil
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Natural Vibes
Natural Vibes verkauft umweltfreundliche Kleidung und Accessoires aus nachhaltigen Materialien wie Bio-Baumwolle, Hanf und recycelten Stoffen. Sie zeichnen sich dadurch aus, dass sie stilvolle, minimalistische Designs anbieten, die umweltbewusste Verbraucher ansprechen, die Nachhaltigkeit ohne Kompromisse bei Qualität oder Ästhetik priorisieren.
Stil mit Gewissen, ohne dabei Schönheit oder Qualität zu opfern
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GREEN SHIRTS
Green Shirts verkauft umweltfreundliche Kleidung, darunter T-Shirts, Poloshirts und Freizeitkleidung aus nachhaltigen Materialien wie Bio-Baumwolle und recycelten Stoffen. Das Unternehmen zeichnet sich dadurch aus, dass es umweltbewusste Verbraucher bedient, die nachhaltige Mode schätzen, ohne dabei Qualität oder Stil zu opfern.
Style mit Gewissen, ohne Kompromisse bei Qualität
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Teach LOVE
Teach LOVE verkauft Bio-Lebensmittel und pflanzliche Getränkeprodukte sowie umweltfreundliche Accessoires, die nachhaltiges Leben fördern. Das Unternehmen ist bekannt dafür, gesundheitsbewusste Verbraucher und umweltbewusste Menschen zu bedienen, die Wert auf hochwertige Inhaltsstoffe und ethische Produktionspraktiken legen.
Natur pur, Gewissen rein, Leben besser
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Butch
Butch.de is a German online-only pet-supply specialist that stocks roughly 3,000 SKUs across dry and wet food, freeze-dried treats, supplements, toys, beds, collars and hygiene products for dogs, cats and small animals. Price architecture runs from €2-€15 for everyday treats and toys through mid-range €30-€60 bags of grain-free kibble up to €150-€250 for orthopedic beds and GPS trackers, positioning the site clearly in the mid-range with selective premium lines.
The retailer’s USP is next-day “Green Delivery” shipped from a solar-powered warehouse near Cologne and a house-brand line called “Butch Natur” that lists exact farm sources for every meat batch. Frequent vet-curated bundles, a transparent ingredient filter that flags country of origin, and a 5 % loyalty rebate scheme have made the grain-free “Natur” kibble and the washable “Butch Med” orthopedic bed repeat best-sellers.
Core shoppers are 25-45-year-old urban dog owners in Germany, Austria and the Netherlands who value traceable sourcing, eco-logistics and German customer service; 68 % of repeat buyers subscribe to auto-ship. The brand speaks to a convenience-driven, sustainability-minded lifestyle: quick carbon-neutral delivery, minimal outer packaging and cruelty-free certified toys appeal to consumers who treat pets as family yet watch their environmental footprint.
Butch competes with mass-market pet supermarkets on one side and boutique organic brands on the other; it differentiates by combining the breadth of a one-stop shop with the transparency of a specialty boutique, all while undercutting premium brick-and-mortar prices by 10-15 % through direct-to-consumer logistics.
Transparente Herkunft, grüne Lieferung, glückliche Haustiere morgen
- Nachhaltig
- Bio
- Tierversuchsfrei
Zur Website