logo
Royal Enfield Apparel expands rider-focused apparel offering with 'Conscious' line

Royal Enfield Apparel expands rider-focused apparel offering with 'Conscious' line

Fashion Network06-06-2025
Royal Enfield has expanded its sustainable apparel offering with the Conscious Collection, a clothing range designed under its Green Pursuit initiative. The new line is made with natural materials, furthering the brand's commitment to responsible craftsmanship and its ethos of 'Ride Green. Ride Pure.'
The Conscious Collection is made using recycled materials, Himalayan grass, natural dyes and organic cotton, the brand announced in a press release. Available in four tones- beige from tea leaves, green from pomegranate rind, off-white from natural bio, and mauve from acacia catechu, the collection is built to reflect the colours of nature. Labels, tags, and packaging are crafted for reuse, with the latter doubling as travel pouches.
'The Green Pursuit is an initiative that focuses on giving back to the environment while continuing our pursuit of 'Pure Motorcycling',' said Royal Enfield's chief commercial officer Yadvinder Singh in a press release. 'With the Conscious Collection, we embrace intentional, purpose-driven craftsmanship… by reimagining [waste] into something new.'
The collection features three fabric blends: a cotton and recycled cotton jersey knit, a recycled cotton-polyester pique, and a HimGra-based woven fabric. HimGra, a patented Himalayan grass fibre, is waterless and low-impact in production. Priced from Rs 1,600, the line is designed to reinforce Royal Enfield's approach to combining sustainability, function and style, while extending the brand's lifestyle offering beyond motorbikes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rixo launches UK resale platform with generous terms
Rixo launches UK resale platform with generous terms

Fashion Network

timean hour ago

  • Fashion Network

Rixo launches UK resale platform with generous terms

Ten years after the business launched and with plenty of its pieces now in circulation, vintage-inspired contemporary womenswear brand Rixo has launched a resale operation called Rixo Pre-Loved. The company said of this: 'Since launching in 2015, we've been committed to creating future vintage that people cherish and pass down through generations. Rixo Pre-Loved is our new official resale platform only available to UK customers, that further cements our commitment to creating timeless treasures and breathes new life into your past loves.' Customers are able to both buy and sell Rixo pieces — whether pre-owned by them or sourced directly from the company. The platform will include 'rare gems and one-of-a-kind styles, including exclusive, hand-picked pieces from our founders' Henrietta and Orlagh's own wardrobes'. To sell their items, shoppers need to take photos of their piece(s) and answer 'a few quick questions before submitting for review'. Once an item has been approved and sold, the seller will be emailed a pre-paid shipping label. The terms seem quite generous and payment will happen after the item has been received, coming either as the resale value or 110% in-store credit to shop new Rixo pieces. The development comes after a busy period for the company. The London-based firm set foot in Ireland physically for the first time in May with the label opening its first store there in upmarket outlet destination Kildare Village. And last autumn it released its debut homewares collection, 'Casa Rixo', aiming to 'bring the Rixo aesthetic to the home'. Just under a year ago, it made the New York City Prince Street pop-up it had launched a few months earlier into a permanent retail store 'in response to the tremendous success and positive feedback from the local community and visitors since the store's opening'. The positive impact of the pop-up had contributed to an increase of 43% in direct sales (both store and e-commerce) in the US since it opened. But while it has been very active on the store opening front generally, the investment required has dented its profits. Its latest set of accounts — for 2023/24 — were filed this spring and showed revenue dipping marginally in an 'uncertain market with subdued consumer spending in a period of difficult trading conditions'. But operating profit was down to just over £303,000 from £2.3 million a year earlier. Profit before tax also dropped sharply to £391,000 from £2.3 million and net income fell to £251,000, down from £1.8 million. The company's administrative expenses increased from £9.2 million in the previous financial year to £11.2 million as it continued to build brand awareness by investment in digital and brand marketing alongside opening stores.

Farfetch UK subsidiary accounts show challenging times ahead of Coupang takeover
Farfetch UK subsidiary accounts show challenging times ahead of Coupang takeover

Fashion Network

timean hour ago

  • Fashion Network

Farfetch UK subsidiary accounts show challenging times ahead of Coupang takeover

It's a source of ongoing frustration in the UK that privately-held company accounts can be quite out of date by the time they're filed. And while Farfetch as a New York Stock Exchange-listed business used to file in the US quarterly and promptly, now that it's owned by South Korea's Coupang, we only get to see its results as part of a much wider Coupang division that doesn't really tell us how Farfetch is doing. Yet the company — or to be precise Farfetch UK Limited — still files its accounts at the UK's Companies House and has just done so for full-year 2023. OK, that's quite a bit out of date but it was the year in which the business came close to failure and its 2024 results are due by the end of September, so we may get a more up to date picture soon. But what do those 2023 figures tell us? Well, as we said, the results are for a UK-based wholly-owned subsidiary of Farfetch Limited, and its principal territories are the UK and other non-EU countries, excluding the US. Reporting in US dollars, it said its revenue increased to $1.568 billion from $1.541 billion. The cost of sales also increased to $941.5 million from $916.6 million. Gross profit rose to $626.7 million from $625 million. Also on the plus side, the average order value on the marketplace rose to $592 from $549. The operating loss was huge but narrowed to $519.4 million from $574.7 million although the loss before tax widened to $602.4 million from $455.9 million. The company received a $4 million+ income tax credit during the year as opposed to a $19+ million income tax expense the year before, but the net loss for the period was $598 million compared to a loss of just under $475 million a year earlier. The e-tailer said the second half of 2023 (during which time the business hit crisis mode and was eventually taken over by Coupang) saw the retail market for luxury goods suffering a 'significant downturn' and this along with other macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges had a 'material adverse impact' on the results of Farfetch Limited Group. While it added that the directors 'anticipate the business environment will remain competitive', it said that 'with careful focus on appropriate diversification as well as continuous review of… the activities of the group, the directors are confident in the group's ability to continue to operate'. So there we are, not exactly up to date but showing just how challenging the year in which Farfetch was taken over was. Coming more up to date, its owner Coupang reported its own Q1 2025 results back in May and they showed that in its Developing Offerings segment (which actually includes International, Eats, Play, and Fintech as well as Farfetch) net revenues were $1 billion. That was up 67% year on year on a reported basis and 78% on a currency-neutral basis. We don't know any details of just what went on to cause that revenue leap. The Developing Offerings segment's adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $168 million, but that was an improvement of $18 million year on year. There were only three mentions of Farfetch in the entire quarterly results release so it doesn't seem likely that we'll get any more information in future Coupang results reports. Fingers crossed that the Farfetch UK results for 2024 do arrive by late September as scheduled.

Farfetch UK subsidiary accounts show challenging times ahead of Coupang takeover
Farfetch UK subsidiary accounts show challenging times ahead of Coupang takeover

Fashion Network

timean hour ago

  • Fashion Network

Farfetch UK subsidiary accounts show challenging times ahead of Coupang takeover

It's a source of ongoing frustration in the UK that privately-held company accounts can be quite out of date by the time they're filed. And while Farfetch as a New York Stock Exchange-listed business used to file in the US quarterly and promptly, now that it's owned by South Korea's Coupang, we only get to see its results as part of a much wider Coupang division that doesn't really tell us how Farfetch is doing. Yet the company — or to be precise Farfetch UK Limited — still files its accounts at the UK's Companies House and has just done so for full-year 2023. OK, that's quite a bit out of date but it was the year in which the business came close to failure and its 2024 results are due by the end of September, so we may get a more up to date picture soon. But what do those 2023 figures tell us? Well, as we said, the results are for a UK-based wholly-owned subsidiary of Farfetch Limited, and its principal territories are the UK and other non-EU countries, excluding the US. Reporting in US dollars, it said its revenue increased to $1.568 billion from $1.541 billion. The cost of sales also increased to $941.5 million from $916.6 million. Gross profit rose to $626.7 million from $625 million. Also on the plus side, the average order value on the marketplace rose to $592 from $549. The operating loss was huge but narrowed to $519.4 million from $574.7 million although the loss before tax widened to $602.4 million from $455.9 million. The company received a $4 million+ income tax credit during the year as opposed to a $19+ million income tax expense the year before, but the net loss for the period was $598 million compared to a loss of just under $475 million a year earlier. The e-tailer said the second half of 2023 (during which time the business hit crisis mode and was eventually taken over by Coupang) saw the retail market for luxury goods suffering a 'significant downturn' and this along with other macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges had a 'material adverse impact' on the results of Farfetch Limited Group. While it added that the directors 'anticipate the business environment will remain competitive', it said that 'with careful focus on appropriate diversification as well as continuous review of… the activities of the group, the directors are confident in the group's ability to continue to operate'. So there we are, not exactly up to date but showing just how challenging the year in which Farfetch was taken over was. Coming more up to date, its owner Coupang reported its own Q1 2025 results back in May and they showed that in its Developing Offerings segment (which actually includes International, Eats, Play, and Fintech as well as Farfetch) net revenues were $1 billion. That was up 67% year on year on a reported basis and 78% on a currency-neutral basis. We don't know any details of just what went on to cause that revenue leap. The Developing Offerings segment's adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $168 million, but that was an improvement of $18 million year on year. There were only three mentions of Farfetch in the entire quarterly results release so it doesn't seem likely that we'll get any more information in future Coupang results reports. Fingers crossed that the Farfetch UK results for 2024 do arrive by late September as scheduled.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store