
EleanosGallery
EleanosGallery selecciona y vende accesorios decorativos y piezas artísticas para la decoración del hogar y colecciones personales.
Transforma tu hogar con piezas artísticas únicas seleccionadas con cuidado
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Lux by Lux
Lux by Lux is a direct-to-consumer jewelry label that sells 14k solid-gold chains, hoops, huggies, signet rings and personalized pendants, plus a small line of gold-vermeil and sterling-silver pieces. Most SKUs fall between $80 and $400, placing the brand in the accessible-premium tier; solid-gold items top out around $800. Sales happen only through luxbylux.com and its Instagram shop—no wholesale or brick-and-mortar stockists.
The company positions itself on “real gold without retail markup,” offering demi-fine pieces that are chemically the same as traditional fine jewelry but priced 40-60 % below mall jewelers. Every item is photographed on models with diverse skin tones and listed with gram weight and gold-market value, a transparency tactic rare in the category. Its 3 mm “Curb Chain” and customizable “Initial Capsule” pendants are repeat sell-outs that drive organic TikTok mentions.
Core buyers are 18-35-year-old women who want everyday, sweat- and shower-proof jewelry that looks luxury yet fits fast-fashion budgets. They value low-key luxury, ethical domestic production (Los Angeles manufacturing) and the ability to stack or layer without the fear of plating fade common to cheaper alternatives.
Lux by Lux competes with venture-backed DTC demi-fine brands and department-store diffusion lines that use gold-plated brass. It differentiates by using only recycled solid 14k or thick 18k vermeil, publishing exact metal weight, shipping in reusable suede pouches, and keeping inventory limited to weekly drops that routinely sell through within hours.
Real gold that actually fits your budget and lifestyle
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Qathu
Una marca de ropa que diseña y vende prendas de vestir y artículos de moda contemporánea.
Qathu transforma tu estilo en expresión auténtica de modernidad
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Eagleeyes
Eagleeyes sells high-definition polarized sunglasses and blue-light filtering eyewear priced $40-$120, sitting in the mid-range between drugstore readers and premium sport optics. The catalog spans driving lenses, sport wraps, aviators, women’s fashion styles, and fit-over frames, all with proprietary lens technology; 90 % of sales occur through eagleeyes.com, while selected styles are stocked in Bass Pro, Cabela’s, and a network of independent opticians.
The brand’s calling card is NASA-origin TriLenium® lens filtration that blocks 99.9 % UVA/UVB and scattered blue light while amplifying contrast, technology originally developed to protect astronauts’ eyes in space. Every pair is polarized, shatter-resistant, and back-coated for anti-glare, and the Classic Aviator and Navigator collections have become staples among long-haul drivers and pilots who need glare-free clarity without the $200-plus price tag.
Core buyers are 35-65-year-old outdoors-oriented men and women who log long hours driving, fishing, or flying and want performance optics that cost less than big-name sport brands. They value safety-certified technology, eye-health benefits, and American customer service, and they frequently repurchase once they experience the high-contrast “eagle-eye” vision the lenses deliver.
Eagleeyes competes in the polarized performance sunglass space dominated by surf-snow heritage labels and fashion licensees, differentiating itself through space-grade lens science, sub-$120 pricing, and a lifetime-limited warranty that includes lens replacement. Instead of athlete sponsorships, the brand leans on NASA pedigree, third-party blue-light studies, and word-of-mouth from pilots and truckers to justify performance claims and maintain margin without retail mark-ups.
See sharper, drive safer, spend less than premium brands
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High Street
High Street is a Mexico-based fashion retailer that sells on-trend women’s, men’s and kids’ apparel, footwear and accessories. Price points sit in the mid-range band—jeans run MXN $700–1,200, dresses MXN $800–1,500—positioned above fast-fashion discounters but below premium international labels. The brand operates 70+ brick-and-mortar stores in tier-1 and -2 Mexican cities plus nationwide e-commerce with next-day delivery to major metros.
The company’s speed-to-market model turns runway and social-media trends into store stock within 4-5 weeks, faster than most regional competitors. Signature lines include “High Denim” stretch jeans and the limited-drop “HS Studio” capsule of elevated neutrals that sell out online within days. Stores are designed as Instagram-ready spaces with neon signage and seasonal pop-ups that drive foot traffic and user-generated content.
Core shoppers are 16-30-year-old urban Mexicans who want current looks without paying import duties or waiting for international shipping. They value being “first” with trends, follow local influencers, and prefer brands that speak Spanish and reflect Latin pop culture. Sustainability messaging is light; emphasis is on affordability, novelty and regional relevance.
High Street competes against global fast-fashion giants and regional department-store private labels. It differentiates by combining Zara-like speed with prices 15-20 % lower than imported equivalents, a sizing curve tailored to Latin bodies, and physical stores in secondary cities where international brands have no presence.
Tendencias globales a precio local, sin esperar a nadie
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Koroshishop
Koroshishop is an online-only lifestyle boutique that focuses on limited-edition streetwear, graphic tees, hoodies, and accessories priced in the mid-range bracket (USD 45-120 for apparel, USD 15-40 for accessories). The catalog is refreshed weekly with small-batch drops that typically sell out within hours; no wholesale accounts or physical stores are maintained.
The brand’s identity is built on Persian-inspired graphics fused with contemporary skate and punk visuals, giving it a distinctive aesthetic rarely found in the global streetwear market. Signature pieces include the “Cyrus” series of oversized tees featuring reimagined Achaemenid motifs and the “Tehran Nights” reflective windbreaker, both of which have gained traction on Reddit’s r/streetwear startup threads.
Customers are 18-35-year-old creatives, diaspora Iranians, and hype-aware students who value cultural storytelling over mainstream logos; they follow Koroshi’s Instagram drop calendar and use VPNs when necessary to secure items that ship worldwide from Los Angeles. The appeal lies in owning pieces that signal both subcultural credibility and heritage pride without overt nationalism.
Koroshi competes in the crowded weekly-drop streetwear space dominated by logo-heavy skate labels and anime-centric micro brands. It differentiates by anchoring every release to historical Persian iconography, limiting quantities to 150-200 units per style, and offering bilingual look-books that double as mini zines, fostering a niche but highly engaged global community.
Wear history like a secret only the coolest people understand
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Nanamall
Nanamall es un mercado de accesorios que ofrece joyas, bolsos y accesorios de moda. Se destaca por proporcionar una selección curada de artículos de accesorios.
Curated accesorios que transforman tu estilo con joyas y bolsos únicos
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