Fashion
Expanding British luxury brand Sunspel puts down roots in Paris

Published
October 20, 2025
Step by step, Sunspel is steadily expanding its footprint. In Paris, the English specialist in timeless luxury has set up shop at 38, rue Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie, in one of fashion’s favourite districts: the Marais. The label inaugurated a 60-square-metre boutique there on October 8, marking its third opening of 2025.
Located on one of the oldest streets in the Marais, dating back to the 13th century, the space is run by a team of three. The brand, founded in 1860 by Thomas Arthur Hill, presents its classic, tightly edited wardrobe of T-shirts, polos, jumpers, coats and trousers. In the centre of the boutique, customers can explore a number of accessories and other items, including fragrances developed since 2019 in partnership with British perfumer Lyn Harris.
Harris Tweed and Sea Island cotton
From the outset, Sunspel has been known for the refinement of its materials. The brand uses Sea Island cotton, a Caribbean variety that requires abundant water and sunshine, developed in the 17th century by European settlers in the British West Indies. Sunspel T-shirts are also made from Supima cotton, sourced from a Californian farm. For other pieces, the label uses cashmere from Mongolia, spun in Switzerland.

Sunspel’s storytelling is full of such anecdotes. Pointing to a woollen coat, Nicholas Brooke, the brand’s owner since 2005, explains, as an accompanying video shows, that the piece is made from Harris Tweed, a fabric produced by the inhabitants of an archipelago in the north-west of Scotland, in their own homes.
The Riviera polo shirt was created in the 1950s for the climate of southern France by the founder’s grandson. Today, it is produced in Portugal on lace-making machines, in a factory with 25 units. The brand’s enduring classic remains the T-shirt, a line of which was created especially for Daniel Craig in “Casino Royale”. They are made in Nottingham, England, and the seamstresses stitch their first names into them — a way of highlighting these often-unseen workers.
“We want to continue investing in France”
A frequent collaborator, Sunspel has signed co-creations with Lemaire, Comme des Garçons, JW Anderson, Paul Smith and Thom Browne. In these collaborations, the brand primarily contributes its technical expertise, leaving the creative side to its partners. On its own pieces, there is no logo, and the colours are restrained, partly inspired by the paintings of British artist Richard Whadcock. At the same time, the brand continues to build on past innovations and is working on new technical projects. It recently unveiled a blend of Sea Island cotton and cashmere.

Sunspel CEO Raul Verdicchi joined the brand in 2023 after stints at AlphaTauri and the Zegna Group.
“Sunspel is unique because it combines several factors: it is an English brand, with quality products and heritage,” he explains. “It works very well for us — we even grew during Covid. Today, this boutique marks a new milestone. And in the future, we want to continue investing in France.”
For the time being, the Marais space attracts both French customers and international tourists, who account for 55% of its clientele.
A boutique in Tokyo in early 2026
Sunspel already has eight shops across London, and two more in the rest of the UK – in Edinburgh, and a stone’s throw from Liverpool, in the Cheshire Oaks Designer Outlet. In the United States, the label has five standalone boutiques, in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Santa Barbara and New York, in SoHo and on the Upper East Side. In the midst of its international expansion, Sunspel will open a boutique in Tokyo in early 2026. The brand is also present at numerous retailers such as Beams, Saks, Harrods, Selfridges & Co, La Samaritaine and Printemps, giving it a physical presence in 34 countries.

To support this expansion, the brand needs to refresh its customer base. Brooke explains: “We have 60-year-old customers who have been buying from us for 30 years, but also customers who are in their twenties. To retain a customer base, we do not focus on age, but on the quality of our products.”
He goes on to point out that in the UK, the brand enjoys a certain renown, thanks in particular to its first creative director, Northern Irish designer, Jonathan Anderson. Other channels, such as the press and cinema, also help to renew the brand’s customer base.
For 2025, Sunspel posted revenue of £36 million, or almost €41.5 million. Since 2020, the brand has achieved annual growth of 20%.
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Fashion
Indian e-commerce market set to cross $200 billion mark in 2025: GlobalData

Published
October 21, 2025
The Indian e-commerce market is set to cross the $200 billion mark in 2025, growing at a rate of 12.5% as consumer appetite for online purchases and trust in digital payments increases, according to a new forecast by GlobalData.
“The e-commerce market in India has experienced rapid growth in recent years, driven by broader digital adoption, increasing internet and smartphone penetration, and the availability of secure online payment tools,” said GlobalData senior banking and payments analyst Poornima Chinta in a press release. “The growing popularity of online shopping events such as Flipkart’s Big Billion Days, Myntra’s Big Fashion Festival, and Amazon’s Great Indian Festival has further supported the surge in India’s online shopping market.”
GlobalData forecasts that the Indian e-commerce market will reach Rs 17.7 trillion ($211.6 billion) this calendar year. With a projected compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.5% between 2025 and 2029, the market could reach Rs 27.3 trillion ($326.7 billion) in 2029.
Factors which are contributing to sustained Indian e-commerce growth include government-led policy support, increasing digital integration in retail, and rising adoption of AI driven payment options. The Indian government rolled out Goods and Services Tax rate cuts on September 22, applying to sectors including fashion and wellness goods, and large businesses including Reliance Retail and Flipkart announced their participation in the 100-day ‘GST Bachat Utsav,’ highlighting GST discounts to promote consumer spending.
“India’s ecommerce market will continue its upward growth trajectory over the next few years with consumer appetite for online shopping showing no signs of waning,” said Chinta. “The country’s young, upwardly mobile demographic, growing popularity of alternative payment solutions, favourable regulatory initiatives, and technological advancements are converging to transform how Indians shop- creating new market opportunities, improving customer experiences, and attracting fresh investment.”
Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
UK production output drops 0.3% QoQ during quarter to Aug 2025: ONS

The largest negative contributor to the three-monthly fall in August came from electricity and gas (down by 2.6 per cent QoQ), while manufacturing remained flat.
UK production output was estimated to have decreased by 0.3 per cent quarter on quarter (QoQ) during the quarter to August.
The largest negative contributor to the three-monthly fall came from electricity and gas, while manufacturing remained flat.
Monthly production output was estimated to have increased by 0.4 per cent in the month, partly due to increases in manufacturing output.
Monthly production output was estimated to have increased by 0.4 per cent in the month. This followed a decline in July 2025 (down by 0.4 per cent month on month) and a rise in June 2025 (up by 0.9 per cent), an ONS release said.
The rise in monthly production output in August resulted partly from increases in manufacturing (up by 0.7 per cent). Eight of the 13 manufacturing sub-sectors saw a monthly increase.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
New EU strategy proposed to shape global clean, resilient transition

The new EU global climate and energy vision adds an external dimension to the Clean Industrial Deal and sets a new strategy to strengthen existing partnerships and forging new, mutually beneficial ones, an official release said.
A new strategy for securing Europe’s place in global markets was recently proposed by using diplomacy to protect core EU interests, promoting standards for a fair transition and addressing new security threats and challenges.
The vision proposes to ramp up the EU’s clean technology manufacturing capacity to reach 15 per cent of the global technology market, while improving its industrial competitiveness.
Launched in February 2025, the EU’s Clean Industrial Deal is a strategy to boost European industrial competitiveness and decarbonisation by lowering energy costs, accelerating clean technology, supporting circularity and developing skills.
As a market still dependent on fossil energy imports, renewables will remain at the heart of the EU’s clean transition. Almost half of EU electricity was generated by renewables in 2024. This significantly increases the EU’s energy independence and security. The EU has also seen an increase of 111% in the share of clean energy investments since 2015.
The vision proposes to ramp up the EU’s clean technology manufacturing capacity to reach 15 per cent of the global technology market, while improving its industrial competitiveness, in line with the Clean Industrial Deal.
The vision also reaffirms the EU’s commitment to a rules-based international order.
The EU will continue driving robust international climate policies. This includes stronger action to address the nexus between climate change, environmental degradation, and security and resilience by engaging at multilateral (UN and NATO) and bilateral levels.
It will implement the actions set out in the 2023 Joint Communication on the Climate-Security Nexus and continue combatting information manipulation and disinformation on climate change, the release noted.
The new vision presents a series of strategic actions for global energy and climate engagement to drive the clean transition, competitiveness and clean technologies and investments.
These include injecting political momentum by encouraging multilateral and bilateral fora and initiatives to deliver on the Paris Agreement and Global Stocktake commitments; boosting EU clean tech businesses internationally and enabling climate resilient investments by organising business fora, setting up an EU external Clean Transition Business Council, scaling up investments and establishing business models for climate adaptation; and supporting and connecting European businesses with global investments by making full use of the Global Gateway Investment Hub to assist joint investments projects outside the EU.
These also include expanding networks of mutually beneficial partnerships for global and resilient clean value chains and reforming global financial institutions for the clean and resilient transition and stepping up EU’s climate security work.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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