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.
Hamburg-born and Europe-made — JAN ‘N JUNE has been fixing fast fashion since 2014. Minimalist, GOTS-certified, and genuinely affordable: this is sustainable style without the sermon.
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.
From graffiti walls to graphic tees, Revolt Clothing translates Sarajevo’s street culture directly into locally made streetwear. Designed, produced and printed in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s capital, this micro-brand shows what European urban fashion can look like when it grows straight out of a city’s own creative scene.
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.
A Danish brand that builds its own factory to prove a point. Colorful Standard makes organic cotton basics in 50+ colours — designed to last, made transparently in Portugal, and worth every wear.
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.
A Toronto founder turned a viral meme into a movement—and proved that the most powerful fashion statement isn’t what you wear, but where it’s made. Meet Saint Javelin: 100% Ukrainian-made apparel that funds defenders, supports veterans, and rebuilds a nation one stitch at a time.
Glein proves that sustainable luxury doesn’t require luxury pricing. This Vienna atelier designs, manufactures, and sells directly—eliminating middlemen, waste, and compromise. Organic materials, European craft, and uncompromising quality at the price of intention, not indulgence.
Founded in Athens in 2013 by Mariloo Katsoni, Karavan Clothing is 100% designed and handmade in Greece by local craftsmen and women, using high-quality and eco-friendly materials.
Founded in 1889 in the village that bears its name in Lower Normandy, SAINT JAMES remains in the very same buildings today. Spinning, knitting, cutting, and sewing all happen under one roof in the historic atelier in Saint-James, Normandy (France), making it one of the last true 100 % French knitwear manufacturers. 100% produced on the European continent.
Verlinne is the first Romanian sustainable fashion brand, built on natural materials and timeless design. Everything is designed and ethically made in small Romanian workshops using premium natural linen and ECOVERO viscose, keeping the entire supply chain local and transparent.