Fashion
Centric Brands acquires Fownes Brothers & Co. licenses
Published
January 8, 2026
Centric Brands announced on Wednesday it has acquired select assets of Fownes Brothers & Co., as the U.S. management firm looks enhance its portfolio and strengthen its grip on the cold-weather accessories market.
Under the deal, the U.S. management firm will assume key licenses including Ugg, Timberland, and Cole Haan, as well as private label manufacturing agreements with The North Face and Lululemon.
Moreover, Andrew Gluckman will join the Centric Brands team as SVP, division head cold-weather, overseeing the acquired licenses and supporting the continued growth of the broader cold weather accessories division, according to a press release.
“We are excited to welcome Andrew and the Fownes Brothers legacy into Centric Brands,” said Jason Rabin, chief executive officer at Centric Brands, whose portfolio includes Avirex, Fiorelli, Hudson, Robert Graham, and Taste Beauty.
“Our growth strategy is built upon developing powerful, scalable brands across key categories, and this acquisition meaningfully advances that approach. By integrating the Fownes Brothers business into our accessories platform, we are expanding our capabilities, accelerating scale, and positioning the business for sustained, profitable growth.”
Established in 1777 by Tom Gluckman and the Gluckman Family as leather glove manufacturer in Worcester, England, Fownes Brothers is an importer and distributor of licensed and private label cold-weather accessories.
Copyright © 2026 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
Pandora eyes 6% organic growth in 2025 as weak US market mutes prior guidance
Published
January 9, 2026
Pandora expects to deliver 6% organic growth in 2025, the Danish jewellery brand announced on Friday in its preliminary and unaudited results for 2025, falling below previous guidance of 7% to 8%.
“We delivered 6% organic growth in 2025 despite softer than expected Q4 holiday trading, particularly in North America,” said Pandora’s CEO Berta de Pablos-Barbier, the brand announced on its website on January 9. “While the year was marked by macro headwinds, it has also highlighted opportunities to sharpen execution and strengthen brand desirability.”
Pandora is eyeing a full-year operating profit of approximately 7.8 billion Danish crowns ($1.2 billion) along with an EBIT margin of around 24%, in line with its previous guidance. The North American market reported 2% like for like growth in the fourth quarter of 2025 with trading in November and December below expectations due to weakened consumer sentiment causing muted in-store traffic. Although EMEA like for like growth came in at -1% and Italy lagged, Spain, Poland, and Portugal reported strong growth, according to the business.
“As new CEO, my focus will be to navigate the current market environment, reduce our commodity exposure and course-correct in select areas to accelerate profitable growth,” said de Pablos-Barbier. “Pandora continues to pursue significant untapped growth opportunities as a full jewellery brand. Our fundamentals are strong. We are building a bigger Pandora.”
The business will announce its audited full-year 2025 results on February 5. Pandora plans to launch designs in new materials this calendar year, aiming to use high silver prices as fuel for innovation, according to de Pablos-Barbier.
Copyright © 2026 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
India’s Arvind Fashions buys Flipkart stake in Flying Machine unit
Over the last five years Flying machine has re-established as a well-accepted brand on the digital channels. The partnership with the Flipkart group helped Flying Machine become one of the top casual wear brand on digital platforms, catering to the fashion-conscious youth of India.
Arvind Fashions Limited will acquire Flipkart Group’s stake in Arvind Youth Brands for ₹135 crore (~$15.02 million), making it a wholly owned subsidiary.
The partnership helped Flying Machine rebuild and grow as a leading youth casualwear brand on digital platforms.
The brand will remain available on Flipkart while expanding its presence across other online channels in India.
Amisha Jain, Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer of Arvind Fashions, said, “We are thankful to the Flipkart Group for their support in building Flying Machine into a brand of choice on digital channels. Our relationship with the Flipkart group will continue ensuring consumers can still shop Flying Machine on its platforms. The brand will also be available to consumers on other digital channels and portals.”
Note: The headline, insights, and image of this press release may have been refined by the Fibre2Fashion staff; the rest of the content remains unchanged.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RM)
Fashion
Recycling Europe Textiles calls for compulsory recycled content in textiles products in Europe from 2028
By
Portugal Textil
Translated by
Nicola Mira
Published
January 9, 2026
Recycling Europe Textiles (RET), the European association representing the textiles reuse and recycling sector, has urged the EU Commission to introduce ecodesign rules mandating the presence of at least 10% of recycled fibre content in textile products from 2028.
RET believes that the forthcoming European regulation on ecodesign for textile products is a decisive opportunity to accelerate the industry’s transition to a truly circular model. In a position statement published on January 7, the organisation underlined that introducing mandatory recycled-content requirements is essential to strengthen the recycling industry and respond to the growing pressure on textile-waste collection and treatment systems in Europe.
According to RET, the sector currently faces a critical juncture, characterised by an excess of low-quality textile waste, weak demand for recycled fibres, and funding constraints. The situation is likely to worsen as the separate collection of used textiles became mandatory in Europe in January 2025, and given the growing consumption of apparel products driven by the ultra-fast-fashion phenomenon. Without clear market signals, RET warned, increasing volumes of used textiles risk being incinerated or sent to landfill, rather than reutilised to make new products.
To reverse this cycle, RET is advocating a strict, targeted definition of ‘recycled content’ that prioritises post-consumer textile waste generated in Europe, excludes open-loop sources such as PET bottles, and discourages the generation of industrial textile waste. The aim is to promote genuine fibre-to-fibre circularity and ensure that recycling efforts focus on the main textile-waste stream in the European market.
Targets-wise, RET is proposing the progressive introduction of mandatory recycled-content requirements for textile products, starting with a company-portfolio-level approach and moving to product-level targets from 2030. The proposals stipulate a minimum of 10% of recycled fibres by 2028, 15% by 2030, and 30% by 2035, with a growing share sourced from European post-consumer waste. These targets, according to RET, would send clear predictive signals to the market, creating steady demand for recycled fibres and unlocking investment in new sorting and recycling technologies.
Another mainstay of RET’s position is the need for robust and credible verification systems. The association supports a hybrid model combining chain-of-custody systems, mass-balance methodologies and greater traceability, especially at the collection and sorting stages. In this context, the EU’s Digital Product Passport is regarded as a key tool for strengthening transparency, as it requires clear information on the amount, type and origin of the recycled content incorporated into textile products.
“Mandatory recycled-content targets are among the most effective policy instruments for transforming the European textile industry. By promoting genuine fibre-to-fibre circularity, the European Union can reduce resource extraction, boost innovation and recycling capacity, and support a resilient and competitive European textile recycling sector,” concluded RET.
This article is an automatic translation.
Click here to read the original article.
-
Politics4 days agoChina’s birth-rate push sputters as couples stay child-free
-
Sports4 days agoVAR review: Why was Wirtz onside in Premier League, offside in Europe?
-
Entertainment2 days agoDoes new US food pyramid put too much steak on your plate?
-
Entertainment4 days agoMinnesota Governor Tim Walz to drop out of 2026 race, official confirmation expected soon
-
Sports5 days agoSteelers escape Ravens’ late push, win AFC North title
-
Business4 days agoAldi’s Christmas sales rise to £1.65bn
-
Sports5 days agoFACI invites applications for 2026 chess development project | The Express Tribune
-
Business4 days ago8th Pay Commission: From Policy Review, Cabinet Approval To Implementation –Key Stages Explained
