FW
Cap Capital acquires Spanish bridalwear brand Pronovias
Barcelona-based bridal powerhouse Pronovias has officially entered a new chapter as the Spanish Commercial Court No. 9 clears the way for its acquisition by the UK-based industrial group, Cap Capital. This judicial approval concludes a highly contested insolvency process that drew interest from major fashion players, including Catalonia’s own Desigual and the American investment firm Enduring Ventures. By formalizing this sale, the court aims to preserve the brand’s extensive production footprint while ensuring the long-term viability of its operations.
Streamlining operations and restructuring debt
Initiated earlier this year, the move into voluntary insolvency was a necessary maneuver to insulate the company’s productive units from its legacy debt burdens. With Cap Capital now poised to take control, the focus shifts toward aggressive operational restructuring. Analysts suggest, the new ownership will prioritize the optimization of the brand’s global supply chain and wholesale distribution networks, which have faced significant headwinds due to shifting retail demand and high post-pandemic inventory costs. The transition is expected to stabilize the company’s cash flow, allowing it to maintain its presence in key international markets across Europe, Asia, and North America.
Strategic implications for the bridal market
This acquisition underscores a broader consolidation trend within the high-end bridal fashion sector, where brand equity remains high despite severe liquidity challenges. For Pronovias, the transition offers a lifeline to restore its market standing and reinvest in its core design capabilities. By integrating Cap Capital’s industrial expertise, the firm intends to move beyond its traditional reliance on physical retail, scaling its digital and direct-to-consumer infrastructure to better serve the contemporary bride. As the deal closes in the coming weeks, the industry is closely watching how this realignment will impact competitive pricing and expansion strategies in the highly fragmented luxury bridal segment.
Founded in 1922 in Barcelona, Pronovias is a global leader in high-end bridal wear and evening gowns. The firm operates across major international markets, emphasizing intricate lace craftsmanship and premium tailoring. It is currently undergoing a strategic restructuring to streamline operations and enhance its global digital retail footprint.
VF Corporation signals inflection point in turnaround strategy as it returns to growth
VF Corporation has officially ended a three-year period of declining revenues, reporting a return to full-year growth for FY26. The Denver-based apparel conglomerate recorded annual revenue of $9.61 billion, a 1 per cent increase over the previous year, signaling its ongoing transformation and brand revitalization efforts are beginning to manifest in tangible financial results.
Resilience through outdoor performance
The company’s return to top-line growth was driven largely by its Outdoor segment, with The North Face delivering standout performance. Global revenue for the brand rose by 7 per cent in the Q4, FY26, boosted by a 16 per cent rise in the Americas. This growth trajectory aligns with the company’s strategic shift toward premium product innovation and category expansion, reinforcing The North Face as the core engine of the portfolio. Meanwhile, the Altra running brand emerged as a significant contributor, achieving a 45 per cent revenue increase in Q4, FY26 and exceeding $270 million in total annual sales, further diversifying the company's reliance on legacy franchises.
Navigating portfolio challenges
Despite the broader return to growth, the company faces uneven performance across its diverse brand stable. A critical component of the conglomerate’s footwear portfolio, the Vans brand experienced a 5 per cent global revenue decline in the quarter. However, management points to an early stabilization in the Americas, where direct-to-consumer sales returned to growth, as a potential harbinger for a wider recovery. Bracken Darrell, CEO emphasized, the brand is accelerating product rationalization, recently delivering new collections in under six months to stay responsive to shifting market tastes. As the firm looks toward FY27, it maintains a cautious but constructive outlook, targeting revenue growth of 1 per cent to 2 per cent and continuing its disciplined approach to debt reduction, having already halved its net debt over the past three years.
A global leader in branded apparel
VF Corporation is a global leader in branded apparel, footwear, and accessories. Its portfolio includes iconic names such as The North Face, Vans, Timberland, and Altra. The company operates through wholesale and direct-to-consumer channels worldwide, currently prioritizing brand revitalization, operational efficiency, and aggressive debt reduction as part of its multi-year ‘Reinvent’ strategy.
Mass-market mass appeal: Walmart secures exclusive apparel capital
The corporate intersection of celebrity equity and mass-market value is redrawing traditional retail boundaries. Walmart has finalized an exclusive partnership with heritage denim brand Lee, launching a 100-plus piece capsule collection co-designed with eight-time Grammy Award winner Kacey Musgraves. Positioned under the ‘Kacey Lee’ label, the strategy deliberately prioritizes price accessibility, capping individual fashion apparel items at $42. By securing high-profile cultural capital for its network of approximately 2,100 domestic stores, the mass-market giant is actively absorbing the consumer demand usually captured by mid-tier specialty apparel brands.
Strategic capital deployment stabilizes portfolios
This distribution maneuver occurs as parent organizations execute significant restructuring strategies to navigate changing macroeconomic parameters. For parent company Kontoor Brands, the mass-volume alignment serves as a strategic catalyst to maximize revenue from Lee before its planned corporate divestiture, following strong first-quarter corporate earnings that exceeded financial forecasts. Consolidating wide-scale distribution via Walmart’s e-commerce platform and extensive brick-and-mortar footprint allows the brand to capture immediate margin upside. "This collection showcases craftsmanship at a value only Walmart can scale," noted Ryan Waymire, Senior Vice President- Adult Fashion, Walmart US, highlighting the commercial objective to convert cultural relevance into substantial volume growth.
Managing historic denim and workwear portfolios
Kontoor Brands is a prominent global lifestyle apparel company managing historic denim and workwear portfolios, primarily driven by the Wrangler and Helly Hansen segments. Operating across global wholesale and direct-to-consumer channels, the corporation expects full-year revenue to reach $3.46 billion, supported by structural cost-saving initiatives and an extensive capital reallocation framework.
UK garment production secures £60M bid amid regional sourcing push
Domestic textile manufacturing is capturing a larger share of corporate supply chains as retail brands prioritize agility over long-haul freight. This commercial shift is anchored by a newly submitted £60 million public procurement bid from an Apparel and Textile Manufacturers Federation (ATMF) consortium representing 20 regional factories. This collective financial play coincides with a strategic expansion by trade exhibition organizer Source Fashion, which is launching a series of regional manufacturing roadshows starting in Manchester this October to bridge the gap between major retail buyers and local mills.
Commercial crises drive structural collaboration
While proximity sourcing offers strong marketing capital, British manufacturers still face intense operational cost pressures and fragmented domestic networks. Industry data shows, retail buyers frequently overlook local capacity simply due to a lack of centralized regional data. British manufacturing is at a crunch point; businesses need localized visibility now to capture immediate order volumes, states Suzanne Ellingham, Event Director, Source Fashion. By establishing regional hubs across Yorkshire, Scotland, and the South East, the initiative creates commercial pathways to integrate ethical, audited UK production back into mainstream retail supply chains.
Focusing on ethical supply chains
Source Fashion is a premier UK-based garment and materials sourcing platform connecting international retailers with audited textile manufacturers. Operating primary trade exhibitions at ExCeL London, the organization focuses on transparent, ethical supply chains across apparel, fabrics, and raw materials. Backed by educational partner Fashion-Enter—a recent King’s Award for Enterprise recipient - and the ATMF, the group is executing national growth plans to scale UK factory visibility, targeting public procurement contracts and expanding domestic market share within a highly competitive global retail landscape.
Raw material resilience fails to cushion downstream garment contraction
The structural divergence between raw material supply chains and finished consumer goods is creating fresh friction within India’s textile ecosystem. According to the latest trade figures from the Ministry of Textiles, outbound shipments of raw cotton yarn, blended fabrics, and synthetic man-made fibers registered a steady growth of 3.59 per cent. This upstream resilience, however, failed to stabilize the downstream manufacturing sector. Punitive tariff realignments in North American markets and escalating cross-border disruptions in West Asia heavily depressed higher-margin segments, triggering an 11.66 per cent contraction in finished apparel exports over the exact same period.
Tariff disadvantages squeeze manufacturing margins
The contraction reveals critical vulnerabilities in domestic factory utilization and labor-intensive production lines. While global sourcing hubs remain eager to secure Indian fiber mills and raw yarn, international fashion conglomerates are increasingly rerouting finished garment contracts to competing trade territories that operate under zero-duty bilateral agreements.
Export-oriented manufacturing requires sustained external demand engines to remain viable, observed a research director specializing in international trade economics. When basic raw materials grow but final wearing apparel collapses, it indicates an inverted structural pattern where domestic factories are losing global market share to lower-cost regional players.
Raw fiber trade dominance
India operates as a primary global source for cotton yarn, synthetic fibers, and value-added traditional handicrafts, catering primarily to processing mills across the United States, the European Union, and emerging manufacturing hubs in the Middle East.
Current state trade strategies focus heavily on expanding market reach across 120 alternative destinations through recently signed free trade agreements. The financial outlook remains tethered to newly introduced productivity missions aimed at lowering domestic logistics overheads to protect thinning export margins.
Branded soft furnishings market expands beyond metros
The organized home textiles sector is undergoing a massive market formalization. Driven by corporate retail structures and shifting consumer behavior, branded premium drapery and bedding have grown beyond Tier-I metros. Industry data shows, India's domestic home decor segment expanding at a CAGR of over 8 per cent, forcing retail players to rapidly scale operational footprints.
Omnichannel infrastructure outpaces traditional distribution models
To capture this demand, legacy supply chains are being replaced with experiential brick-and-mortar stores that showcase coordinated, full-room collections. Retail operators report, immersive store design increases average transaction values by simplifying consumer selection. The challenge remains high inventory logistics costs, which corporate entities are mitigation-balancing through unified supply networks across physical and digital storefronts.
Eco-sourcing becomes a commercial imperative
Environmental compliance has moved from marketing rhetoric to a core financial strategy. Commercial textiles manufacturing facilities are heavily funding alternative thermal energy and water recycling to insulate corporate margins against future regulatory liabilities. Resource efficiency directly impacts production costs, notes Kunal Manchanda, Industry Analyst. Manufacturing units adopting self-sustaining power loops report higher operational resiliency, proving that structural green investments protect long-term profitability.
An eco-conscious home décor brand
Sansaar operates as an eco-conscious home decor brand under textile major D'Decor, specializing in sustainable soft furnishings like bedding and curtains. Targeting a Rs 500 crore revenue milestone within five years, the premium brand leverages its parent company's 1999 manufacturing legacy to scale 450 global retail touchpoints.
Secondhand apparel enters asset era as global resale market targets $393 bn by 2030

Clothing is increasingly being treated not as a depreciating consumer good but as a tradable financial-like asset. As per ThredUp 2026 Resale Report, the secondhand apparel sector is projected to reach $393 billion by 2030, growing at over twice the pace of traditional retail fashion. What was once positioned as a sustainability-led adjunct is now functioning as a parallel market system with its own liquidity logic, pricing signals, and behavioural incentives.
This is not merely cyclical demand growth but a redefinition of value formation in fashion. In 2025 alone, the global secondhand market increased 13 per cent year-over-year, accounting for roughly 10 per cent of total apparel spend. The implication is clear: resale is no longer peripheral; it is embedded into the global fashion consumption base.
Rise of cautious apparel consumption
Macroeconomic stress has boosted the adoption curve for resale across both developed and emerging markets. A growing 72 per cent of consumers report that rising apparel prices are directly influencing their purchasing decisions, while 36 per cent have actively increased secondhand purchases as a hedge against future inflationary pressure. This behavioural shift is redefining how households allocate discretionary fashion spending.
As a result, 59 per cent of global consumers now buy from secondhand apparel markets, a notable seven-point increase within three years. This signals that resale is no longer a niche behavioural layer but a mainstream consumption channel competing directly with primary retail. The traditional apparel value chain is increasingly bifurcated between full-price consumption and value-optimised circular sourcing.
Retailers, however, remain uneven in response. While 58 per cent acknowledge that absence in resale channels creates long-term competitive disadvantage, 52 per cent admit they lack scalable infrastructure to operationalise resale under demand surges or regulatory pressure. This gap is emerging as a vulnerability across global fashion supply chains.
Clothing as a liquidity-driven asset
A defining feature of the modern resale economy is the emergence of what industry analysts describe as a ‘resale flywheel’, where purchase decisions are shaped by anticipated future liquidity. In 2025, 60 per cent of consumers reported that resale value now influences their initial purchase decision, marking a 13 per cent year-over-year increase.
This behavioural shift is most pronounced among younger cohorts, who are now attempting to resell more than half of their wardrobes. Importantly, resale participation is no longer driven purely by profit maximisation. Around 23 per cent of sellers now prioritise speed of transaction over price optimisation, signalling a preference for liquidity efficiency rather than maximum extraction value. The result is a fashion ecosystem that mirrors asset markets, where garments carry residual value expectations, and purchase decisions incorporate downstream monetisation potential.
Table: US market segment growth (2025)
|
Online Resale |
19% |
|
Total Secondhand |
13% |
|
Traditional Retail Apparel |
3.60% |
This difference highlights a widening gap between digital resale growth and legacy retail stagnation. Online resale, in particular, is functioning as the primary growth engine of the apparel ecosystem, outpacing conventional retail by more than five times.
Removing friction from circular commerce
The next phase of resale expansion is being shaped by automation and AI, particularly through the emergence of agentic commerce systems that reduce transaction friction on both supply and demand sides. Approximately 63 per cent of consumers now express comfort with AI-driven purchasing agents, signalling a major behavioural openness to algorithmic retail mediation.
Nearly 60 per cent are willing to allow AI tools to independently negotiate prices, while 69 per cent are open to continuous monitoring systems that track high-demand or rare items across platforms. On the supply side, 66 per cent of consumers are receptive to AI managing their digital closets, identifying optimal resale timing and pricing based on market demand signals.
This automation trend directly addresses a bottleneck: listing friction. Around 33 per cent of non-resellers indicate they would enter the market if AI eliminated manual listing and pricing complexity. In effect, AI is becoming the infrastructure layer that transforms resale from active participation into passive monetisation.
Brand hierarchies in circular demand networks
Within resale market, value is increasingly concentrated among brands that show strong cross-generational demand and consistent liquidity. Data reveals a circular handoff dynamic, where older cohorts supply inventory while younger consumers drive demand, particularly for nostalgic and accessible fashion labels.
Brands such as Zara, Lululemon Athletica, and Gap are among the highest-volume performers, reflecting mass-market liquidity and strong turnover velocity. Meanwhile, premium positioning emerges through brands like Veronica Beard, St. John, and Farm Rio, which command higher Gross Revenue Net Discounts (GRND) per item due to scarcity and perceived enduring value.
The table below captures the dual structure of resale value creation.
Table: Top brands in resale
|
Category |
Brands |
|
High Volume Demand |
J.Crew, Zara, Ann Taylor Loft, Old Navy, Gap, Madewell, Banana Republic, Athleta, Lululemon Athletica, Ann Taylor |
|
High Value Per Item (GRND) |
Veronica Beard, Farm Rio, St. John, Johnny Was, Frye |
The difference between volume leaders and value leaders indicates a layered resale economy where liquidity and margin are driven by distinct brand archetypes rather than uniform demand.
Fragmentation of discovery and regulatory alignment
Discovery channels within resale are undergoing rapid decentralisation. Nearly 46 per cent of resale discovery now occurs through social media feeds, influencer ecosystems, and creator-driven platforms rather than traditional marketplaces. This fragmentation is reshaping how inventory visibility is generated and how demand is concentrated.
Simultaneously, regulatory frameworks are beginning to position resale as a compliance mechanism within broader sustainability mandates. Almost 66 per cent of retailers now recognise resale as a regulatory solution, particularly in relation to circular economy requirements. However, readiness remains low, with only 16 per cent of firms able to scale resale operations immediately under compliance pressures.
To address this gap, 32 per cent of organisations are adopting Resale-as-a-Service (RaaS) models, outsourcing logistics, authentication, and marketplace integration to specialised providers. This shift is effectively creating a circular infrastructure layer within fashion retail.
Platforms such as ThredUp are increasingly functioning as infrastructure providers for the circular economy rather than simple resale marketplaces. Founded in 2009, the company operates a managed marketplace model supported by proprietary technology and Resale-as-a-Service solutions that enable global brands to participate in secondary markets without building independent systems.
Its 2026 direction is anchored in AI-driven automation and supply optimisation, positioning itself to capture a larger share of the projected $393 billion global resale opportunity. In this evolving landscape, resale is no longer an adjacent channel but a parallel operating system for global apparel commerce.
Fashion’s shift from consumption to capital logic
The maturing of the secondhand apparel market reflects a deeper change in global retail logic. Clothing is increasingly embedded within a liquidity framework where value is not exhausted at the point of purchase but continuously recycled through secondary markets.
What emerges is a hybrid system where fashion behaves simultaneously as consumption and capital, driven by inflation hedging, AI-enabled liquidity, and cross-generational demand loops. As the industry moves toward the $393 billion threshold, the defining question is no longer whether resale will scale, but how deeply it will redefine the economics of global fashion itself.
RMG at Inflection Point: Bangladesh’s export slide raises competitiveness questions

Bangladesh’s export economy has entered a decisive phase. Latest Export Promotion Bureau data for July-March FY26 shows merchandise shipments declining 4.85 per cent year-on-year to $35.39 billion, down from $37.19 billion in the corresponding period last year. The sharper warning signal came in March, when monthly exports fell 18.07 per cent to $3.48 billion, marking the eighth straight month of negative growth.
For an economy where export momentum is deeply intertwined with industrial employment, foreign exchange stability and fiscal confidence, the downturn is more than a cyclical slowdown. It reflects a growing mismatch between Bangladesh’s legacy cotton-heavy apparel model and the evolving requirements of global sourcing networks that are increasingly rewarding speed, fibre diversification and energy reliability.
March shock exposes the core weakness
The sharpest pressure point remains the ready-made garment (RMG) industry, still the backbone of Bangladesh’s export earnings. In March alone, RMG exports dropped 19.35 per cent to $2.78 billion, reflecting weak order flows from Western buyers and persistent inventory caution in Europe and the US. The pain was visible across both core categories. Knitwear, traditionally Bangladesh’s strength, faced a deeper fall, while woven garments also posted a steep reduction. On a cumulative basis, the July-March period closed at $28.58 billion, down 5.51 per cent, underscoring that the issue is no longer confined to monthly volatility but has become a trend.
This trend is significant because Bangladesh’s export model has traditionally depended on large-volume cotton basics. That segment is now under twin pressure from lower discretionary spending in developed markets and increased price competition from more diversified Asian peers.
The competitive gap is widening
The regional contrast is becoming increasingly stark. While Bangladesh’s export engine is slowing, Vietnam continues to push its textile-garment sector toward a $50 billion 2026 target, backed by stronger penetration in man-made fibre (MMF), technical textiles and trade-led market access advantages.
India, meanwhile, has leveraged production-linked incentives, domestic fibre integration and supply chain resilience to hold its position in higher-value categories, even as global demand remains uneven.
The difference is now clear. Bangladesh’s MMF share remains materially below Vietnam’s, limiting its access to premium sportswear, outerwear, performance apparel and recycled textile opportunities that are driving the next sourcing cycle. As global brands continue their China plus one diversification, sourcing decisions are increasingly being made on utility stability, traceability and turnaround time, not just labour cost arbitrage.
Table: Apparel & textile sector performance (July-March FY26)
|
Product Category |
Export value (July-March) |
March '26 YoY change |
Sector outlook |
|
Knitwear |
$15.82 bn |
-21.20% |
Critical: Demand slump in EU |
|
Woven Wear |
$12.76 bn |
-17.32% |
Warning: High input costs |
|
Home Textiles |
$625.40 mn |
-4.22% |
Stable: Niche market demand |
|
Jute & Jute Goods |
$618.17 mn |
-13.44% |
Decline: Needs diversification |
|
Specialized Textiles |
$242.15 mn |
+1.10% |
Growth: Technical fabrics gain |
|
Terry Towel |
$72.30 mn |
-5.15% |
Weak: Low-value commodity |
The table shows a two-speed textile economy. Traditional volume categories such as knitwear, woven basics and terry towels are clearly under strain, pressured by buyer caution and aggressive regional pricing. Jute’s continued decline reinforces how legacy fibre categories are losing relevance without downstream innovation. The standout is specialized textiles, where even a marginal 1.1 per cent growth is important. It signals that the limited pockets of resilience are emerging in technical, engineered and sustainable fabrics, segments that command stronger margins and lower commoditisation risk.
Energy, currency and cost are the real fault lines
The current export drop cannot be explained by weak demand alone. Domestic manufacturing friction is becoming a larger drag on competitiveness. Erratic gas supply, higher logistics costs and exchange-rate volatility around Tk 122.143 per dollar are increasing production uncertainty precisely when global buyers are prioritising predictability.
This is where Bangladesh’s challenge turns strategic. Competing hubs are no longer winning only on cost. They are winning on assurance: assurance of power, delivery and compliance. For global retailers operating on shorter fashion cycles, that assurance is now worth more than marginal price advantages.
The change is already visible
The more future-ready part of the industry is beginning to respond. A case in point is the shift by mills in the Narayanganj cluster toward recycled polyester filament and higher-value MMF blends. The economics of that move are compelling: while cotton-based commodity orders have weakened, recycled MMF continues to attract price premiums from European retailers focused on sustainability-linked sourcing mandates.
This is the real takeaway from the current slowdown. Bangladesh’s next growth cycle is unlikely to come from scaling the old cotton-basic model. It will come from MMF, recycled inputs, technical fabrics and green manufacturing-linked premiumisation.
Beyond the slowdown, an LDC deadline looms
The urgency is increased by Bangladesh’s impending 2026 LDC graduation, which will progressively alter preferential market access terms in several export destinations. For a sector that still contributes over 80 per cent of foreign earnings, the current slowdown is a warning that the old playbook is running out of runway. The industry now stands at a strategic crossroads: continue defending scale in low-value basics, or accelerate the move toward fibre diversification, technical textiles and sustainable manufacturing. The March export shock suggests the decision can no longer be deferred
Cultural capital eclipses fast fashion as specialty retail reclaims value
"
" Specialty retail is shifting sharply toward curated, high-margin product launches to drive consumer foot traffic and combat digital fatigue. American apparel powerhouse Gap Inc is executing this strategy by launching two highly anticipated, limited-edition capsule collections in partnership with the influential founder and creative director of style label The Brooklyn Circus, Ouigi Theodore.
This commercial collaboration bypasses mass-market volume cycles, leveraging Theodore’s ‘modern prep’ aesthetic - which infuses classic Ivy League tailoring with contemporary street style and Black cultural history - to capture a highly engaged, upscale demographic.
Monetizing authenticity amid discretionary spending compression
The business architecture of the partnership capitalizes on scarcity, utilizing tier-one flagship drops across metropolitan corridors to create immediate transactional urgency. By integrating Gap's structural silhouettes with Theodore’s signature graphic iconography and varsity-themed outerwear, the collections command premium pricing thresholds compared to baseline seasonal inventory.
This tactical execution directly addresses current retail pressures, where consumers are cutting back on generic apparel purchases but demonstrate a strong willingness to pay for authentic, culturally rich storytelling. Modern retail success requires transitioning from a transactional warehouse to a cultural destination, states Richard Dickson, CEO, Gap Inc. Partnering with cultural architects like Ouigi Theodore allows the brand to drive full-price sell-throughs, stabilize their operating margins, and re-establish brand equity among premium fashion connoisseurs, he adds.
Specialty retail architecture and global scaling
Gap Inc is an international specialty retailer offering a diverse portfolio of casual apparel, accessories, and personal care products under its namesake brand, Old Navy, and Banana Republic. Operating across a vast network of company-owned and franchise locations globally, the retail group is pursuing a margin-led recovery plan focused on operational efficiency. Founded in 1969 in San Francisco, the corporation leverages high-profile creative collaborations to strengthen its financial outlook and maintain long-term market leadership.
Riopele and John Varvatos boost menswear evolution in high-performance sustainable textiles
The long-standing alliance between Portuguese textile powerhouse Riopele and luxury menswear brand John Varvatos has shifted toward hyper-functional, circular material design to satisfy evolving market demands. Leveraging its New York creative hub, Riopele has commercialized bespoke, high-performance textiles tailored for John Varvatos' signature rock-and-roll aesthetic. This commercial strategy addresses the rising global demand for premium menswear that seamlessly transitions from urban environments to casual settings without sacrificing structural integrity.
Navigating supply chain dynamics and Green mandates
The luxury apparel sector faces intense pressure to reduce its carbon footprint while maintaining premium tactile quality. A case study in overcoming this challenge is Riopele's integration of its proprietary ‘Çeramica’ recycled polymer technology into heavy-wear menswear lines, a move that aligns with John Varvatos’ goal of incorporating smart, low-maintenance properties like crease resistance and moisture management. Integrating recycled components into intricate fabric structures like tweeds and checks requires substantial capital allocation, but it mitigates the unpredictability of raw virgin material costs.
According to Karl Aberg, Vice President, John Varvatos, this operational proximity is invaluable. Riopele's New York library serves as a critical asset for our design timelines. It allows us to balance heritage construction with the technical, sustainable updates necessary for modern premium retail, he says.
Riopele fabric innovation
Founded in 1927 in Portugal, Riopele manufactures premium fashion fabrics, exporting over 95 per cent of its output across international markets, with the US representing a key growth region. The company operates a fully integrated, vertical production cycle and is executing a €35 million modernization framework aimed at achieving operational carbon neutrality by 2027.











