NookMarket
Tower London

Tower London

Shoes · Sneakers

Tower London is a footwear-led fashion retailer that stocks men’s, women’s and kids’ shoes, boots and sneakers alongside small accessories such as bags and socks. Price points sit in the mid-range: adult styles open around £60 for canvas or entry-level leather and climb to £220 for premium suede or Goodyear-welted boots. The company trades both online at tower-london.com and through four east-London brick-and-mortar shops in Shoreditch, Liverpool Street, Walthamstow and Boxpark. Founded in 1980, the brand built its name by being first-to-market with limited-edition colourways from heritage British makers and by curating a tight edit of global sneaker labels. Its own-label “Tower” line reproduces classic creepers, desert and Chelsea boots in exclusive colours and wide-fit options, while the in-store “Sneaker Lab” wall launches weekly drops tracked by trainer forums. Same-day London bike courier and a 365-day return policy reinforce the service proposition. Core shoppers are 18-35 year-old Londoners who want credible heritage styles without premium designer pricing; parents buying durable school shoes and tourists seeking British-looking footwear make up secondary segments. The brand appeals to value-driven individualism—customers can wear Dr. Martens, Grinders or Tower’s own line and still stand out through limited colourways. Tower competes with high-street footwear chains, department-store shoe departments and global sneaker apps. It differentiates by combining multi-brand breadth with own-label exclusives, faster drop cadence than legacy retailers, and a physical presence in trend-setting neighbourhoods that function as marketing for its e-commerce operation.

Limited drops, heritage style, London prices that actually make sense

Visit site

Similar brands

Walk London

Walk London sells men’s and women’s footwear—brogues, loafers, Chelsea boots, sneakers and sandals—priced £70-£160, sitting in the mid-range bracket between fast-fashion and premium British makers. Shoes are designed in-house at their London studio and sold exclusively through the brand’s own e-commerce site, with free UK delivery and worldwide shipping; there is no wholesale or brick-and-mortar network. The label’s USP is “London-designed, European-crafted”: classic British silhouettes updated with subtle trend details and made in small Portuguese factories that also supply luxury houses. Seasonal drops are limited, restocks are rare, and best-sellers like the tan ‘Battersea’ Chelsea or white ‘Mayfair’ sneaker routinely sell out within days, creating a cult following on Instagram and TikTok. Core buyers are 20-35-year-old urban professionals who want refined, work-to-weekend shoes without logo overload or triple-digit designer pricing. They value looking put-together on foot or bike commutes, favour capsule wardrobes over fast fashion, and tag #WalkLondon to show how the same pair shifts from office to pub. Competitors are other direct-to-consumer footwear brands that bridge high-street and entry-level designer, plus heritage British names that charge 2-3× more. Walk London differentiates through tighter collections, faster design turnover, aggressive social-media engagement and price points that undercut traditional premium labels while still offering full-grain leathers, Blake-stitched soles and recyclable packaging.

London-designed shoes that work as hard as you do, without the price tag

  • Recycled
Visit site

Savannah's

Savannahs is a UK-based luxury footwear and accessories retailer that stocks women’s, men’s and kids’ shoes, bags and small leather goods from more than 120 premium fashion houses. Price points sit squarely in the premium bracket, with adult shoes typically £350-£900 and bags £700-£2,500. The company trades exclusively online at savannahs.com and ships worldwide from its London warehouse. Founded in 1995, Savannahs differentiates itself by curating hard-to-find runway styles and limited colourways from top-tier European labels, often receiving new-season stock ahead of mainstream department stores. The site is known for its deep size runs in smaller and larger shoe sizes and for offering a pre-order model that lets customers reserve next-season pieces before they hit physical boutiques. Core customers are fashion-literate professionals aged 25-45 who follow runway trends and value exclusivity over logo-heavy branding. They tend to shop internationally, prioritise express delivery and are comfortable buying high-priced items without trying them on, relying on Savannahs’ detailed product copy and liberal return policy. Savannahs competes with global luxury e-commerce platforms and upscale brick-and-mortar department stores. It counters their breadth by focusing narrowly on footwear and leather goods, providing specialist sizing filters, same-day London courier service and personalised stylist chat, positioning itself as a niche authority rather than a one-stop luxury supermarket.

Runway pieces before anyone else, delivered to your door tomorrow

Visit site

Hudson Shoes

Hudson Shoes sells men’s and women’s footwear—brogues, boots, sneakers, loafers, and desert boots—priced £90-£220, sitting in the mid-range bracket between fast-fashion and premium bench-made labels. The London-based company trades through its own e-commerce site plus a small network of UK independents and department-store concessions; it does not operate stand-alone retail stores. The brand is built around re-working classic British shapes with contemporary lasts, mixed-material uppers, and bold colour pops such as cobalt suedes or burnished burgundy calf. Signature lines include the “Houghton” two-tone brogue and the “Luke” chukka, both cemented on lightweight rubber soles that soften traditional silhouettes for everyday city wear. Core buyers are 25-40-year-old urban professionals who want footwear that nods to heritage but feels current enough for slim denim or office chinos; they value design detail over logo status and prefer attainable pricing to luxury mark-ups. Marketing imagery features East-London backdrops and creative-industry casting, reinforcing a smart-casual, culturally plugged-in lifestyle. Hudson competes with other British-heritage-update labels and diffusion lines from premium shoemakers; it differentiates by delivering fashion-forward colourways and lighter constructions six to eight weeks faster than traditional Northampton factories, while still using full-grain leathers and hand-finishing touches rarely found at the same price tier.

Classic British shapes reimagined for how you actually dress today

  • Independent
Visit site

Mou Online

Mou-online.com is the e-commerce arm of Mou, a London-based footwear label founded in 2002. The site sells shearling-lined boots, rugged sneakers, hiker sandals, après-ski slippers and limited-edition leather bags, priced £150-£450 (mid-range to entry-premium). Sales are direct-to-consumer online plus a small network of global department-store corners; the brand does not operate its own brick-and-mortar stores. Signature construction pairs hand-finished cow, goat or yak hides with natural shearling, crepe or recycled-rubber soles, all stitched rather than glued for repairability. Iconic lines—the Eskimo, Calf-high and Super-Grip platforms—are instantly recognised by their fluffy wool cuffs, contrast whip-stitch and chunky trek soles, positioning Mou as “eco-luxe adventure” footwear. Core buyers are 25-45-year-old women who split time between city commutes and weekend escapes, want winter warmth without sacrificing style, and will pay for ethically sourced shearling and small-batch production. The brand speaks to values of slow fashion, outdoor spontaneity and understated British individuality. Mou competes in the crowded premium shearling-boot space dominated by heritage and fashion labels; it differentiates through lighter, sportier silhouettes, vegetable-tanned leathers, traceable wool and a colour palette updated every season. By keeping volumes low and storytelling artisanal, it avoids mass-trend saturation and maintains higher full-price sell-through than volume-driven rivals.

Shearling-lined boots built for city weekdays and mountain weekends alike

  • Recycled
  • Handmade
  • Ethical
Visit site

Sizeer

Sizeer.lv is a multi-brand footwear and apparel retailer offering men’s, women’s and kids’ sneakers, athletic shoes, and streetwear from Nike, Adidas, Puma, New Balance, Jordan and others. Prices sit in the mid-range bracket, typically €70-€180 for current-season sneakers and €30-€90 for hoodies or joggers. The Latvian site complements a chain of brick-and-mortar stores across the Baltics, giving customers both click-and-collect and home-delivery options. The chain positions itself as a “sneaker hotspot,” dropping weekly new releases, limited editions and size-exclusive colourways that are often unavailable in general sports shops. Sizeer runs loyalty app rewards, student discounts and flash sales, making sought-after models accessible at or below regional market rates. Core shoppers are 15-30-year-old urban Latvians who follow sneaker culture, hip-hop and e-sports and who value fresh drops more than elite performance specs. Parents buy children’s school shoes here because the same marquee brands are stocked year-round in full size runs. Sizeer competes with global footwear chains, mono-brand outlets and regional fashion e-tailers by combining immediate stock of hype sneakers, localized Baltic sizing and language support, and faster 1-2-day shipping within Latvia than most cross-border alternatives.

Fresh drops, Baltic speed, sneaker culture at your doorstep

Visit site

Sans Matin

Sans Matin is a British footwear label that sells men’s and women’s sneakers, loafers and boots priced £150-£250, sitting in the premium-accessory segment. All collections are designed in London and handmade in small Portuguese ateliers; the brand trades only through its own website and a single Marylebone pop-up, keeping distribution deliberately narrow. The company builds every pair on a custom, ergonomic last and uses certified Italian leather, recycled ocean-plastic linings and natural-latex soles—materials rarely combined at this price. Its “24/7” sneaker, sold in limited colour drops that sell out within days, has become a quiet cult item among design professionals for its matte, logo-free silhouette. Customers are 25-45-year-old urban creatives, consultants and tech workers who want luxury comfort without visible branding; they value sustainability audits, repair vouchers and carbon-neutral shipping included in the purchase. The brand speaks to a “quiet luxury” lifestyle—wardrobes built on neutral tones, multi-modal commuting and weekend European rail travel. Sans Matin competes directly with other direct-to-consumer, European-crafted sneaker labels that pitch clean design against heritage sportswear giants. It differentiates by offering true hand-built construction, repair-for-life aftercare and drop-based scarcity, positioning itself as an insider alternative to both mass premium and hype-driven streetwear brands.

Handmade sneakers that whisper instead of shout

  • Sustainable
  • Recycled
  • Handmade
Visit site

Esska Shoes

Esska Shoes sells women’s footwear centered on everyday comfort: cushioned trainers, ergonomic sandals, lightweight slip-ons and low-profile boots. Prices sit in the mid-range band, typically £70-£120 per pair, and every style is offered in UK sizes 3-9 with half-sizes and multiple width options. The brand operates a direct-to-consumer model through esskashoes.com and a single London showroom; there is no wholesale network. The label’s identity is built around podiatrist-approved design: deep toe boxes, memory-foam footbeds, shock-absorbing EVA midsoles and removable insoles to accommodate orthotics. Each collection is released in limited colour runs of muted, Scandinavian-influenced neutrals, and the shoes are manufactured in small Portuguese factories that also produce for premium comfort labels. Their best-known line is the “Cloud” trainer, advertised as weighing 180 g and selling out repeat drops within days. Core buyers are women aged 35-55 who want shoes that look minimal and urban yet can be worn on 12-hour city days without discomfort; many customers are teachers, nurses and commuters who prioritise foot health over fashion trends. The brand appeals to value-driven shoppers who will pay slightly more for ethical European production, recyclable packaging and inclusive sizing. Esska competes in the niche between orthopaedic comfort brands and mainstream fashion sneakers by offering biomechanical support without clinical styling. Where competitors either medicalise aesthetics or chase fast-fashion silhouettes, Esska keeps a pared-back design language and emphasises technical comfort features as standard, not optional upgrades.

Comfort that looks this good shouldn't feel this honest

  • Recycled
  • Ethical
Visit site

Johnsonshoes

Johnsonshoes.co.uk stocks men’s, women’s and kids’ footwear: formal leather shoes, everyday boots, trainers, sandals and school pairs, plus shoe-care accessories. Price points sit in the mid-range bracket, with most adult leather styles between £70 and £150 and children’s pairs £35-£60. The company trades both online and through four family-run stores in the West Midlands, offering click-and-collect and free UK delivery on orders over £40. The retailer positions itself as a “proper shoe shop” that has measured feet since 1937, emphasising width-fitting expertise and half-size availability across most ranges. Private-label lines such as the Johnson London Goodyear-welted collection and the lightweight Flex+ comfort range sit alongside curated British and European brands, giving shoppers niche widths (E-6E) without special-order delays. Seasonal “Made in England” limited editions reinforce the heritage angle. Core customers are 30-65-year-old professionals and parents who want durable, correctly-fitted footwear and prefer personal service to fast-fashion trends. They value local retail heritage, repairability and classic styling that complies with school or office dress codes, and they appreciate staff who can fit orthotics or wider feet on the spot. Johnsonshoes competes with national department-store shoe halls, value-led online marketplaces and niche comfort brands. It differentiates through in-store gait assessment, width expertise, on-site repairs and a UK warehouse that keeps extended size/width combinations in stock year-round, reducing the wait times and return rates common with specialist-fit competitors.

Shoes that fit properly, stay for years, made by people who actually care

  • Independent
Visit site