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Underwear and lingerie producer Trucco Tessile buys rights to Italian homewear brand Happy People

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Nicola Mira

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January 13, 2026

Major developments are on the cards in 2026 for Trucco Tessile, the Cuneo-based Italian producer of pyjamas, underwear and loungewear. Trucco Tessile has bought, for an undisclosed amount, Italian homewear brand Happy People, renowned for its cheerful, insouciant, creative and colourful style. “The acquisition marks a new chapter in the history of [Trucco Tessile], as the group aims to continue to grow and innovate while abiding by its values of quality, creativity and care for people,” said Agostino Trucco, CEO of Trucco Tessile since January 1, speaking to FashionNetwork.com.

Happy People

Happy People was created with the goal of fostering joy and good cheer, and is well-known for its family-oriented collections and its distinctive depictions of two characters, a wolf and a sheep, that have become symbols of affection, close familiarity and good humour. “Happy People is much more than a brand, it’s a way of looking at life with joy,” said Trucco. “Welcoming [Happy People] into our family means believing in the value of emotions, in the power of a smile, and in the strength of stories that unite people. It’s a development that looks to the future with confidence, and goes hand in hand with our desire to keep innovating without losing our sense of humanity,” he added.
 
“[Happy People] is a label that has made history in its segment, so it cropped up on our radar. Let me underline that the company wasn’t going through a rough patch, business was buoyant, the owners simply decided to sell,” said Trucco. “As a result, we’re dealing with a brand (since we bought just the brand name – and only the rights relating to the apparel, pyjamas and underwear categories – we didn’t buy the company that produces Happy People) that is sound and well-established. It has an extremely strong identity, and is an interesting complement to our portfolio,” he added.

Trucco Tessile’s new acquisition is vertically integrated and has a strong product focus, complementing the Cuneo group’s nightwear know-how. The group’s portfolio also includes Julipet, a high-end men’s underwear brand, Boglietti, a women’s lingerie brand whose positioning was recently elevated from the market’s mid-range to the premium segment, and Alpina, a mid-range women’s and men’s underwear brand. “Style-wise, Happy People is entirely different from Boglietti, which targets elegant, understated and sophisticated women. Happy People’s brand narrative is fun, amusing and family-friendly,” said Trucco. “Besides, Happy People is a concept that goes beyond a mere product, pyjamas, and tells a love story – a strictly platonic one – between a wolf and a sheep.”

Happy People
Happy People

Happy People’s household linen range remains instead, as before, the property of Italian Textile Company, based in Ferno, near Varese. Trucco Tessile is planning to expand Happy People’s retail footprint both in Italy and abroad through the wholesale and e-tail channels. The brand is currently distributed via some 400 stores in Italy, Belgium, Spain, Germany and Greece.

In 2024, Trucco Tessile generated a revenue of €9 million, with e-tail sales growing and accounting for 10% of the total. “Through the new three-year business plan I have drawn up,” said Trucco, “we’ll try to align our three channels, i.e. e-commerce, the DTC channel consisting of our physical stores (we have a dozen) and the wholesale business, to become as much as possible an omni-channel company.”
 
As for Trucco Tessile’s other brands, Boglietti has developed a range that utilises natural fabrics like cotton, cotton-linen and cotton-bamboo blends, characterised by an “elegant, pared-down style consistent with the brand identity strategy we have implemented for the underwear and nightwear lines,” said Trucco.

Happy People

Julipet’s new nightwear is an ode to colour: “we’re well aware that blue is the colour of the night and of Julipet, and is synonymous with elegance, but we’re bringing alternatives to the market. Our watchwords this year are colour, colour, colour. The same goes for [Julipet] swimwear, and of course there’s a whole range of Julipet apparel, chiefly travelwear, featuring ultra-resistant, breathable, fresh and lightweight high-tech fabrics. Our new Oxford line, with a dozen SKUs, is absolutely innovative. It’s a highly streamlined range in a wide variety of colours, whose key feature is the use of high-tech  fabrics with specific functions. The garments are comfortable, extremely functional, and highly suitable for people who travel a lot,” said Trucco.
 
Alpina, which operates a handful of monobrand stores in Piedmont and is designed for everyday use, has functionality as its key feature. The brand’s hero products are its signature pyjamas, but Trucco Tessile is working to expand Alpina’s assortment to include sportswear, starting from the Fall/Winter 2026-27 season.

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Lululemon expects holiday-quarter revenue, profit to be at top end of prior forecast

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January 13, 2026

Apparel retailer Lululemon Athletica said on Monday it expects fourth-quarter revenue and profit to be toward the high end of its previous forecast range on the back of strong demand during the holiday season.

Lululemon

Shares of the company were up about 1% in premarket trading. They had fallen nearly 46% in 2025.

The positive forecast comes as Lululemon contends with challenges, including a proxy fight launched by its founder Chip Wilson, while striving to reignite demand from young and affluent shoppers amid stiff competition and pressure from activist investor Elliott Management.

The athleisure maker had previously projected fourth-quarter revenue to be between $3.50 billion and $3.59 billion, and earnings per share in the range of $4.66 to $4.76.

© Thomson Reuters 2026 All rights reserved.



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Menswear brand Seagale has ambitious 2026 plans after pivotal year

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Nicola Mira

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January 13, 2026

Eleven years after its launch, French menswear brand Seagale is still going strong. 2025 was a pivotal year for the Toulon-based brand, which worked to consolidate its commercial and operational infrastructure, and generated a revenue of €6 million. Seagale, founded in 2014 by Bertrand Durand-Gasselin and Matthieu Rivory, is hoping to grow this figure to €8 million in 2026.

Seagale was founded in Toulon, France, in 2014 – Seagale

“In 2025, we worked on several not-so-visible but crucial projects: we launched a new, better-performing website, and we deployed new POS systems for our stores, new ERP solutions for our logistics, and new CRM tools to boost customer loyalty, so as to be able to smoothly scale up the business,” said Durand-Gasselin.

Direct retail a strategic mainstay for Seagale

In 2025, Seagale also strengthened in-store customer service, placing more emphasis on the role of its retail staff as product experts, spending more time on advising customers, assisting with fittings, and promoting a free alteration service for trousers. 

In 2025, Seagale generated a revenue of €6 million
In 2025, Seagale generated a revenue of €6 million – Seagale

Seagale, distinctive for its high-performance, minimalist outfits, sells only through the direct retail channel, via its e-shop and four monobrand stores. The first store was opened in Toulon, followed by one in Paris in 2021, and by stores in Nice and Lyon in 2024. The latter two have made successful inroads with their clientèle: the Lyon store is appreciated by urban professionals who like Seagale’s versatile clothes, while the Nice clientèle is attracted by lifestyle and travel items, suited to both tourists and locals.

New stores planned in 2026

Through its own stores, Seagale is able to offer good value for money for items made with “increasingly expensive” high-tech materials, while keeping in close touch with its community. In 2026, the brand is planning to open one or two new stores, “perhaps a second one in Paris, but we’re also looking around Bordeaux and Toulouse,” said Durand-Gasselin.

A second Seagale store is likely to open in Paris in 2026
A second Seagale store is likely to open in Paris in 2026 – Seagale

“We have everything we need to make [2026] a successful year,” said Durand-Gasselin, adding that “what makes us especially proud is that we’re constantly growing while remaining a profitable, 100% self-financed company. This rare freedom allows us to build the brand exactly as we wish.” For the time being, Seagale has about 30 employees, between the headquarters and warehouse in Toulon and the stores’ staff.

Constant investment in textile innovation

Seagale has made a name for itself with clothes suitable for sporting activity, the office, and urban outings, and has always made innovation one of its bywords. The brand has developed fabrics for specific uses, like the 140g Performance Merino jersey, a blend of merino wool and Cordura, and the Active Stretch fabric, used to make wrinkle-free, elasticated shirts.

Seagale is widely relying on textile innovation
Seagale is widely relying on textile innovation – Seagale

Seagale is also expanding its collaborative efforts to develop exclusive fabrics, for example high-performance merino wool-nylon blends, Cordura, high-tech yarns, and specific knitwear, sourcing these fabrics chiefly in France, Spain and Italy. The garments are produced in Lithuania and Tunisia.

Seagale’s innovation drive extends beyond textiles. Since the end of 2024, the brand has started utilising AI solutions, notably in advertising.

“We’re using AI as a tool, not as an end in itself. We have two goals: increasing our agility, and finding ways to better illustrate technical concepts that are sometimes hard to showcase with classic [communication] formats,” said Durand-Gasselin. He indicated that Seagale is now relying on a combination of real pictures and AI-generated images.

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Scarcity and collaborations drive resale growth in 2025: StockX

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January 13, 2026

Nearly 200 brands reached all-time annual sales highs on StockX in 2025, highlighting the growing influence of the secondary market across sneakers, apparel, and accessories, according to the platform’s seventh annual “Big Facts: Current Culture Index” report, released on Monday.  

Scarcity and collaborations drive resale growth in 2025: StockX. – Ugg

“Our data shows that 2025 wasn’t defined by a single category or trend — it was shaped by a number of standout releases. Companies that moved quickly, prioritized innovation, and aligned with the right partners reaped the benefits,” said Greg Schwartz, StockX CEO. 

“Nearly 200 brands reached all-time annual sales highs on StockX last year, from legacy leaders to emerging and independent labels. As we look ahead to 2026 and beyond, the brands that will win are those that understand scarcity, storytelling, and community — not just scale.”

Legacy sneaker brands including Nike, Jordan, Adidas, New Balance and Asics remained the platform’s top sellers for the third consecutive year, with Nike and Jordan showing early signs of recovery as average resale prices rose 5 percent and 6 percent year over year. At the same time, less conventional brands posted outsized growth, led by Mizuno, which recorded a 124 percent increase in sales, followed by Maison Mihara Yasuhiro, Saucony and Salomon.

Outside of sneakers, comfort-led and creatively driven footwear gained momentum. Ugg retained its position as the top-selling non-sneaker footwear brand, while Nike emerged as the fastest-growing in the category, fueled by demand for its ReactX Rejuven8 recovery shoe. 

In apparel, Uniqlo ranked as the fastest-growing brand following collaborations with Needles and Kaws, while Skims and Adidas also posted strong gains tied to limited releases and partnerships.

Accessories continued to be shaped by scarcity. Sprayground was the only brand to rank among both the top five best-selling and fastest-growing accessories labels, with sales up 287 percent. Louis Vuitton climbed four spots to number 4, driven by strong demand for its latest Murakami collaboration. 

Looking ahead, StockX expects major global sporting events to influence fashion demand in the year ahead, with the 2026 Fifa World Cup likely to accelerate soccer’s impact on U.S. style, and the Milan Olympics presenting new opportunities for sport-fashion crossover.

Bad Bunny is also poised for a defining year, with a Super Bowl halftime performance and a fully original Adidas signature sneaker slated for release.

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