What if a coat could be cut with zero fabric left over? ZEROBARRACENTO, a Milan-based brand founded by designer Camilla Carrara, has made this a reality — engineering every garment so that 100% of the fabric is used, and nothing goes to waste. Timeless, gender-neutral, and entirely Made in Italy.
ADEPTT is a Bulgarian womenswear label that makes each garment by hand, to order, using natural and recycled materials. Founded by designer Adelina Markova, it proves that European fashion can be both expressive and genuinely responsible.
From a factory in Quimper, Brittany, Armor-Lux has been making the clothes the French actually wear since 1938. Sailor stripes, real cotton jeans, duffle coats — timeless pieces built where they belong: in France.
Two brothers in Munich couldn’t find the perfect T-shirt — so they built it themselves. SANVT makes premium everyday essentials in certified European factories, using the finest natural fibres, without the inflated price tag. Minimalist, sustainable, and built to last.
German trouser specialist Club of Comfort builds its entire brand around one promise: everyday comfort that feels as natural as breathing, without leaving Europe for production.
With fabrics sourced mainly from EU suppliers and trousers sewn in the company’s own Slovakian factory, these chinos and jeans are designed to work hard in daily life while keeping a relaxed silhouette.
Most denim sold in Europe is made far outside it. Foja Jeans is one of the rare German fashion brands that keeps its entire production process within Europe — fairly paid, environmentally minded, and priced for real people. Here’s why that matters.
Empire Jeans has been crafting men’s denim in Tipton, West Midlands for over 42 years — and they’re the only UK manufacturer still offering hand sanding, blast washing, and chemical spraying in-house. Every pair is 100% made in Britain. Here’s why that matters.
Handcrafted in Belgium from shuttle-loom selvedge denim — raw, unwashed, and meant to fade uniquely with your life. Godfrieds turns jeans into heirlooms, one stitch at a time in the Wakken atelier.
Since 1892, one family in a small Cévennes town has been making jeans the French way — cut by hand, sewn in-house, and built to last a lifetime. Atelier Tuffery is not a heritage brand performing tradition; it is the tradition.
In East London, a small team of craftspeople is quietly rewriting the rules of denim production — using pre-loved jeans, seven litres of water, and no virgin fabric whatsoever. E.L.V. Denim is not just a fashion brand; it is proof that luxury and responsibility can occupy the same pair of jeans.
A B Corp certified clothing brand from Alicante, Spain — Trendsplant makes organic cotton casualwear manufactured in Spain and Portugal. Strong ethics, traceable supply chain, and an elephant that says it all: built to last.
A Paris blog that became a brand — Bonne Gueule has been helping European men dress with intention since 2007. Built on editorial honesty, crafted entirely in Europe. Here’s why it deserves a place in your wardrobe.
Sustainable fashion doesn’t have to be serious. Brava Fabrics designs bold, colourful clothing in Barcelona — produced in Spain and Portugal, with certified organic materials and a B Corp stamp to back it up. Joy and ethics, together at last.
In Prato, Italy, textile recycling predates the word “sustainability” by generations. Rifò turns that local tradition into circular fashion with recycled cashmere, wool, and denim, all made close to home. A rare example of modern clothing rooted in a genuinely old European system.
In a small Welsh town that once made 35,000 jeans a week, a husband and wife decided to bring it all back — one handcrafted pair at a time. Hiut Denim doesn’t chase volume. It chases the best. Here’s why that matters.
Dutch founders, London design, Portuguese craftsmanship — Baukjen is womenswear built on a simple idea: make clothes women actually want to wear, year after year. One of the world’s top-scoring B Corp fashion brands, and a story worth knowing
ISTO. is the Portuguese label proving that slow fashion can be both affordable and radical. Built on four pillars — Independence, Superb, Transparency, Organic — every piece is made in Portugal with full production costs published online. No secrets, no shortcuts.
MR MARVIS started with one ambition: the perfect pair of shorts. Eight years on, every piece is still handmade in Portugal by the same long-term craftspeople — and the fit has never changed. With a B Corp score of 101.7 and GOTS certification added in 2025, this Amsterdam-born brand is proof that slow fashion and sharp style are not mutually exclusive.
Maciej Kowalski grew up fighting for hemp’s right to exist in Poland. Then he grew it himself, spun it into yarn, and made it into clothes. Kombinat is one of Europe’s only fully vertically integrated hemp clothing brands — from field to finished garment, entirely in Europe.
Imagine if clothing brands made products only when customers ordered them—eliminating the warehouse overflow, the excess waste, the forgotten inventory that ends up in landfills. Picea isn’t imagining anymore. They’re doing it. Based in Hof, Upper Franconia, this duo is rewriting the rules of textile production with a radical concept: make less, make better, make only what’s wanted.