
House of Baukjen
House of Baukjen sells women’s ready-to-wear, denim, maternity and petite capsules, plus a small line of responsibly sourced leather bags and shoes. Most pieces sit between £89-£189, placing the brand in the mid-range segment; coats and leather reach £350. Sales are 95 % direct-to-consumer through baukjen.com, with a showroom and same-day courier service inside London.
The company is a certified B-Corp and Climate-Negative enterprise that publishes annual impact reports; 85 % of fibres are organic, recycled or Lenzing™ this season. Its “Forever” collection of organic-cotton denim and jersey staples is promoted on a take-back and repair scheme that credits customers for returns. Design is London-based, production is European, and small, repeat runs keep deadstock under 2 %.
Core shoppers are 30-50-year-old professional women who want polished but low-maintenance wardrobes and rank sustainability above fast trends. They value traceability, capsule dressing and inclusive sizing (UK 4-22, maternity and petite) delivered with carbon-neutral shipping and paperless returns.
House of Baukjen competes with mid-price, design-led labels that sell primarily online; it differentiates through third-party-verified environmental accounting, rental and resale integration, and a garment-recycling programme that funds tree-planting in Madagascar and re-wilding in Scotland.
Timeless pieces that prove sustainability and style need not compromise
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Organic
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NinetyPercent
NinetyPercent 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 well and vote where your money goes
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Organic
- Ethical
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Komodo
Komodo is a UK-based sustainable-fashion label selling women’s and men’s apparel, accessories and small lifestyle goods. Core categories are organic-cotton tees & sweats, hemp denim, recycled-poly outerwear and hand-knit jumpers priced £45-£250, situating the brand in the mid-range bracket. Distribution is DTC through komodo.online plus about 250 independent boutiques and eco-minded department stores across Europe, North America and Japan.
Founded in 1988, Komodo was one of the first European brands to convert entire ranges to GOTS-certified organic cotton, hemp and Tencel, and has been vegan-approved by PETA since 2019. Signature pieces include the “Hemp Denim 5-Pocket Jean,” the recycled-fiber “K-Jacket” and brightly patterned fair-isle knits produced in small Nepalese cooperatives; every garment ships in compostable bags with a lifetime-repair voucher.
Customers are 25-45-year-old design-conscious urbanites who prioritize environmental impact, animal welfare and transparency over fast-fashion trends. They value wardrobe staples that combine minimalist aesthetics with ethical provenance, and are willing to pay 15-25 % more for verified sustainable materials and long product lifespans.
Komodo competes in the crowded “contemporary sustainable” segment against labels offering organic basics or recycled outerwear; it differentiates by integrating long-standing artisan partnerships, small-batch production runs and a single-digit carbon footprint verified annually by Climate Neutral, while keeping prices below premium designer tiers.
Timeless pieces that prove sustainability and style needn't compromise
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Handmade
- Independent
- Organic
- Ethical
- Vegan
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Net Positive
Net Positive sells men’s and women’s wardrobe staples—organic-cotton tees, French-terry sweats, recycled-nylon active sets and small accessories—priced in the mid-range tier ($38-$120). Everything is offered only through its own Shopify-powered site; no wholesale or marketplaces are used, keeping margins lean and prices steady year-round.
The brand’s headline promise is “100 % net-positive impact”: every garment’s cradle-to-gate carbon, water and waste footprint is measured, verified by Climate Neutral, then over-offset by 10 % through verified projects. Each product page displays exact kg CO₂e, liters of water and grams of waste, updated quarterly; packaging is home-compostable and inbound freight moves by boat or rail only.
Core buyers are 25-40-year-old urban professionals who want minimalist style without greenwashing and are willing to pay $60 for a traceable T-shirt. They value data transparency, carbon accountability and muted color palettes that fit a capsule wardrobe; Reddit threads and Substack newsletters, not influencers, drive most referrals.
Net Positive competes with direct-to-consumer “sustainable basics” labels that rely on generic claims. It differentiates by publishing third-party-verified impact receipts for every SKU, limiting drops to four per year, and locking prices to discourage fast-fashion consumption cycles.
Wear what you can actually measure, not just feel good about
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Organic
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Lavender Hill
Lavender Hill sells women’s everyday basics made from sustainable bamboo, organic cotton and cashmere blends. Core categories are ultra-soft T-shirts, long-sleeves, leggings, loungewear and knitwear priced £28-£120, placing the label in the mid-range bracket. Distribution is DTC through its own UK site with global shipping; no wholesale or bricks-and-mortar stores are operated.
The brand’s signature is a patented “Bamboo & Organic Cotton” jersey that uses closed-loop processing and Oeko-Tex dyes, yielding a naturally breathable, hypoallergenic fabric. Collections are released in small, seasonless drops dyed in muted, colour-matched tones designed to layer interchangeably; the “Lavender Hill 10” tee is repeatedly restocked as a best-seller for its claimed pill-resistant finish after 50 washes.
Customers are 25-45-year-old professional women in the UK, EU and US who want elevated staples that align with low-waste values without visible logos or trend-chasing. They buy for work-from-home comfort, capsule wardrobes and sensitive skin, prioritising traceability—each garment carries a QR code linking to fibre farm, factory and carbon-offset data.
Lavender Hill competes in the crowded sustainable-basics segment against larger eco labels and premium high-street casualwear. It differentiates by limiting SKUs to perfected fits, using predominantly bamboo (faster renewability than conventional cotton), keeping margins lean through direct online sales, and offering free lifetime repairs to reinforce durability over volume.
Everyday basics that breathe, last forever and tell your sustainability story
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Jeanerica
Jeanerica sells men’s and women’s denim, knitwear, tees, sweats and leather accessories priced €140-€260 for jeans and €80-€350 for tops and outerwear—positioned in the contemporary premium tier. Distribution is 70 % direct-to-consumer through jeanerica.com and 30 % select high-end department stores and boutiques across Europe, the U.S. and Asia; no own-flagship stores exist.
The brand’s core is “denim uniforms”: seasonless fits (AV5 straight, MX3 skinny, TR1 flare) cut from Italian and Turkish 10–13 oz stretch or rigid organic cotton, then garment-dyed in small Stockholm batches for a washed-but-unworn finish. Every style is produced in the company-owned Tunisian factory, allowing 4-week restock cycles and free lifetime repairs—rare speed-to-market and circularity pledges in denim.
Customers are 25-45-year-old creatives, architects and tech professionals who want minimalist, gender-neutral jeans that last and prefer traceable supply chains over logo flexing. They value quiet design, Nordic sustainability credentials and the convenience of a single “perfect fit” replenished online without seasonal fashion risk.
Jeanerica competes with premium denim labels that rely on heavy washes, hardware branding or wholesale mark-ups; it differentiates through pared-back aesthetics, in-house manufacturing, transparent pricing and repair-for-life service, positioning itself as a utilitarian uniform rather than trend-driven fashion.
One perfect fit, worn forever, never out of style
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Omnes
Omnes is a London-based womenswear label that sells dresses, tops, knitwear, skirts and outerwear made from certified organic, recycled or lower-impact fabrics. Most pieces sit between £35 and £120, placing the brand in the mid-range segment. Sales are currently online-only through omnes.com and selective marketplace pop-ups.
The company builds small, tightly edited drops released every few weeks to keep inventory low and waste minimal; every garment carries a QR code that traces fabric origin, factory and carbon footprint. Their printed midi dresses—cut from Lenzing™ Ecovero™ viscose—have become a recurring sell-out thanks to flattering silhouettes priced under £70. Omnes offsets remaining emissions and publishes impact data in an annual sustainability report.
Core shoppers are 20-35-year-old city dwellers who want fashion-forward pieces but rank environmental transparency above fast-fashion novelty. They value inclusive sizing (UK 4-24), vegan options and styling videos that show how one dress transitions from office to weekend.
Omnes competes with other direct-to-consumer womenswear brands that balance trend and ethics; it differentiates by offering design-led prints at high-street prices while meeting independent certifications such as GOTS and FSC, a combination rarely found in the same price bracket.
Fashion that looks good and proves it does good
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Independent
- Organic
- Vegan
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Ecoerfashion
Ecoerfashion sells women’s and men’s everyday apparel made from certified organic cotton, bamboo, and recycled polyester—T-shirts, hoodies, joggers, dresses, and a small line of canvas tote bags. Most pieces sit in the $35-$90 bracket, placing the label in the mid-range segment. Sales are handled exclusively through the brand’s own Shopify site with worldwide shipping; no physical stores or third-party marketplaces are used.
The company offsets 100 % of its carbon output through verified reforestation projects and ships every order in home-compostable mailers. Its “Zero-Dye” capsule, launched in 2022, uses unbleached, color-grown cotton and became the bestseller that accounts for roughly 40 % of annual volume. All garments are cut and sewn in a single Fair-Wage certified factory in Portugal, a fact prominently traceable via QR code on each hangtag.
Core customers are 20-40-year-old urban professionals who want wardrobe basics that align with climate-action values without sacrificing style or budget. They tend to cycle, use public transport, and follow eco-influencers on Instagram and TikTok where Ecoerfashion runs most of its marketing; repeat buyers cite transparency and plastic-free packaging as key motivators.
Ecoerfashion competes with other direct-to-consumer sustainable apparel labels that emphasize organic fabrics and carbon neutrality. It differentiates by offering only a tight, seasonless core collection, keeping prices 15-20 % lower than comparable premium-eco brands, and backing every purchase with a free send-back repair program that extends product life and reduces return waste.
Clothes that last longer, cost less, and actually fight climate change
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Organic
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