Remove Accessories Remove Dead-Stock Remove Fast Fashion
article thumbnail

From Kampot to Myer: the journey of Cambodian fashion label Dorsu

Inside Retail

Earlier this year, the brand made a debut inside Myer’s Bourke Street Mall flagship store and became the first Cambodian apparel brand to be stocked by the Aussie retailer. From luxury makers like Dior and Gucci to fast-fashion labels like Zara and H&M, the industry is working towards cleaning up its sustainability credentials. “So

Fashion 246
article thumbnail

Behind the evolution of 107-year-old Japanese eyewear brand Tanaka Optical

Inside Retail

What inspired us to be more accountable for sustainability is from the core of our business, that is based on the traditional format of the optical retail business rather than the fast-fashion optical business format. Thus, we don’t need to rely on mass production of trend-led products and excessive dead stocks after the trend is over.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

How Bo & Luca’s founder navigated warfare whilst remaining true to her purpose

Inside Retail

It is an art form and one that is rarely, if ever, found in a world of fast fashion. We create for the customer and do not create large runs, which ensures there is no dead stock. Tambour is an age-old skill handed down through the generations of families. Some of our pieces can take up to 300 hours to embroider.

Fashion 130
article thumbnail

Sustainable Fashion: Elvis & Kresse

Retail Insider

Welcome to this column within our broader sustainability section which focuses on what fashion retailing is doing to address the issues in its industry. From fur farms to fast fashion, excess packaging to plastic coat-hangers – this is where the real action is. Diverted from landfill to your wardrobe. Supported by:

Fashion 52
article thumbnail

5 Highly Effective Retail Markdown Strategies that Work in 2021

Retalon

Markdowns are used to temporarily increase demand for low-demand products, ideally long enough to sell through all stock. For example, they can keep their prices high when competitors are out of stock. New television SKUs maintain demand for up to twelve months while fast fashion SKUs need to disappear in sixty days.

article thumbnail

Jason & Scot Show Episode 314 – Lovesac Founder and CEO Shawn Nelson

Retail Geek

We don’t, we don’t stock things there. And yeah, it is, I was like, I’m not going to look at the stock, it’s not going to influence me. So I’m gonna guess you’re not a fan of fast fashion.