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.
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.
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.
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.
Did you know that Lagoped was the first outdoor brand to publish an eco-score for their products, transparently rating environmental impact? As part of inspiring
A glimpse inside Seapath’s small Portuguese workshop, where organic fabrics and deadstock become timeless everyday pieces.
Real people, real wages, slow and sustainable fashion made close to home in Europe.