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.
Mário and Regi don’t run a fashion brand — they run a workshop. Every piece of Seapath clothing is designed, cut, and sewn in northern Portugal, in small batches, using deadstock and organic fabrics. This is what sustainable fashion looks like when it’s not a marketing strategy.
Since 1916, Danish family brand Dilling has been crafting merino wool and organic cotton clothing — from base layers to outdoor jackets — using a chemical-free dyeing process unique in the Nordic region. Four generations later, they remain quietly radical: no Superwash plastic coatings, no heavy metals, just natural fibres processed cleanly in their own Danish factory.
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.
Lightweight alpaca essentials made entirely in Europe – combining Andean heritage with Baltic craftsmanship. Thermoregulating, naturally breathable, and backed by a 100-day guarantee.
Poetic merino wool scarves, entirely made in Belgium. Wolvis is a small Belgian brand creating luxury knitwear with lasting impact—designed to be worn for generations. With bold colours, artistic collaborations, and 100% European production, each piece is an investment in quality and craftsmanship.
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.
Did you know that the average shirt travels over 10,000 kilometres from factory to wardrobe, spewing carbon emissions along the way? At CARPASUS, they’re slashing