Camper announces the departure of its creative director, Achilles Ion Gabriel. The designer, who has been with the Mallorcan company since 2019, will step down from the creative helm of both the main brand and its more experimental line, CamperLab. As the Balearic footwear company reported on Tuesday, the last collections developed under his leadership will be for spring/ summer 2027 and will be presented at the beginning of next December.
Camper announces the departure of its creative director, Achilles Ion Gabriel. – Camper
“Achilles has played a key role in strengthening Camper’s contemporary identity and in the evolution of CamperLab, which has gone from being a footwear brand to a fashion brand,” said Miguel Fluxà, CEO of Camper. “His vision and leadership have contributed significantly to the evolution of both brands. We are grateful for his contribution and proud of what we have achieved together, and we wish him all the best in his future endeavours,” the executive added.
The company said that, following the designer’s departure, the in-house team will assume the creative direction of the two labels, “ensuring the continued development of both brands going forward.”
“I am deeply grateful to Camper and CamperLab for the trust they have placed in me over the years. I would also like to thank our customers and consumers for their loyalty,” said Achilles Ion Gabriel. The Finnish-born designer assumed the role of creative director at CamperLab in 2019 with the mission of transforming a footwear-focused brand into a fashion label with a full catalogue; a year later, he also took on the same position at the flagship brand, Camper.
Founded in 1975 by the Fluxà family on the Balearic island of Mallorca, Camper is now a global footwear company. It operates a commercial network of around 350 of its own stores and is present in more than 2,500 multi-brand points of sale across around 50 markets. According to its latest available financial data, in the 2023 financial year it achieved a turnover of 225 million euros.
There’s a new executive at the helm of North Sails Apparel. Frenchman Cédric Georges has been appointed CEO of the Italian sportswear brand inspired by the world of sailing. It’s an additional top executive role for Georges, formerly the boss of outdoor apparel brand Odlo, who joined North Technology Group in 2024 and is currently also the CEO of Netherlands-based North Actionsports Group, a leader in kiteboarding, windsurfing and wakeboarding equipment.
North Sails’s ready-to-wear division has appointed a new CEO – North Sails
Georges has already moved to Milan to take up his new role. He replaced Victor Duran (formerly with McKinsey, Amer Sports and Intersport), who left the company in December 2025 after a two-year tenure.
“I am honoured to step into my new role as president and CEO of North Sails Apparel and North Actionsports Group,” Georges recently posted on his LinkedIn account. “Leading two companies of the North Technology Group, based in two different countries and operating in two distinct industries, will certainly be challenging – and that’s exactly what makes this journey so motivating. On a more personal note, we’ve recently relocated to Milan with my family, embracing this new chapter both professionally and personally. I am grateful for the trust placed in me and truly excited to work alongside our amazing teams to build what’s coming next,” he added.
It’s a crucial challenge for North Sails Apparel, which is distributed via several hundred stores, with Italy as its main market, and is active within as embattled a segment as ready-to-wear. Georges has the opportunity to rebuild on shared principles the two divisions he is in charge of, which together generate a revenue of nearly €150 million.
Their results were consolidated in H1 2025, and they are both subsidiaries of sailmaking giant North Sails, a company founded in California in 1957 by Lowell North. North Sails launched into the ready-to-wear business in 1989, signing a licence deal in Italy. US investment firm Oakley Capital Investments (OCI) bought North Sails in 2014, and subsequently took over the whole North Technology Group business, which in 2022 bought the apparel division operated by Italian sailing specialist Tomasoni Topsail. OCI has indicated that the revenue of the North Sails group grew by 7% in H1 2025, with EBITDA up 11%.
Meta Platforms Inc. and EssilorLuxottica SA are discussing potentially doubling production capacity for AI-powered smart glasses by the end of this year, in a bid to capture growing demand and head off rivals, according to people familiar with the matter.
The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses – Meta Platforms, Inc
With sales of Ray-Ban Meta frames taking hold, Facebook-owner Meta has suggested increasing annual capacity to 20 million units or more by the end of 2026, said the people, asking not to be named because the deliberations are private.
The partners have also discussed going further to establish the capability of producing more than 30 million units, should demand justify such a move, the people said. They cautioned that no decisions have been made.
The talks underscore Meta’s desire to extend its artificial-intelligence strategy into hardware it can control end-to-end, reducing the tech giant’s reliance on smartphones produced by competitors. A step-up in output would signal confidence that smart glasses can move beyond early adopters and reach mass-market scale.
EssilorLuxottica, which is responsible for manufacturing, is already near its current capacity target of 10 million pairs by the end of 2026, one of the people said. The world’s largest eyewear maker, with brands such as Ray-Ban and Oakley and retailers Sunglass Hut and LensCrafters, has a production footprint and customer reach giving Meta a large-scale platform to expand its smart-glasses lead.
Representatives for Meta and EssilorLuxottica declined to comment.
The talks on production reflect a deepening relationship as Meta pivots toward the augmented reality of smart glasses and lowers its commitment to fully immersive VR headsets. The tech company last year bought about a 3% stake in EssilorLuxottica, giving Meta closer access to EssilorLuxottica’s manufacturing know-how and retail network.
The two companies began working together in 2019 and launched their first Ray-Ban branded smart glasses in 2021. They have reported growing momentum in recent months, with EssilorLuxottica saying in October that Meta smart glasses helped spur revenue growth in the third quarter.
In September, Meta unveiled the latest $799 Meta Ray-Ban Display in the US, incorporating for the first time text that appears directly on the right-hand lens. At the CES expo in Las Vegas last week, Meta said it had paused an international expansion of the new frames to the UK, France, Italy, and Canada because of “unprecedented demand and limited inventory.”
The news gave EssilorLuxottica shares a 5.2% boost on January 6, after a 15% rise last year. After Bloomberg’s report on Tuesday, shares of Paris-based EssilorLuxottica reversed losses, advancing as much as 2%. Meta slipped 1% in the US.
The smart-glasses market has drawn interest from global technology groups as advances in AI, battery life and components make lighter, non-immersive wearables more practical.
Meta has the early lead with an estimated 73% global market share in the first half of 2025, according to Counterpoint. The researcher forecasts over 60% compound annual growth for the category through 2029. Yet competition is rising.
Last May, Alphabet Inc.’s Google formed a smart-glasses partnership with the eyewear division of Gucci owner Kering SA, while Apple Inc. has redirected resources toward AI-powered glasses after scaling back work on its Vision Pro headset. Chinese groups including Xiaomi Corp. and Huawei Technologies have also rolled out smart glasses as companies test consumer demand for AI-enabled wearables.
Meta sees smart glasses as a key way to deliver its AI services as it races with tech heavyweights like Alphabet and OpenAI to dominate the next generation of technology.
The tech industry’s push into smart glasses dovetails with EssilorLuxottica Chief Executive Officer Francesco Milleri’s strategy to expand in wearables and medical technology while preserving its dominance in traditional eyewear, he said in an interview in October. He foresees smart glasses potentially replacing smartphones over time.
Yet a steeper production ramp would also create challenges for EssilorLuxottica, as it balances growth with the cost of preparing its factories for the push.
Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are expected to generate substantially lower gross margins than EssilorLuxottica’s broader product line, according to analysts at RBC Capital Markets. Higher revenue and improved component costs will likely mitigate some of these strains as volume rises, they said.
Analysts are expected to ask EssilorLuxottica about its output plans with Meta when the French-Italian group reports annual results in the first half of February.
The companies have closely guarded specific figures on Ray-Ban Meta sales- EssilorLuxottica executives said in February 2025 that they had delivered about 2 million units of the Ray-Ban Meta frames since late 2023.
Chief financial officer Stefano Grassi said in an October conference call that he expected to reach the capacity goal of 10 million units earlier than the original end-of-2026 target, without specifying further. He added that EssilorLuxottica has “the capability to do it in-house or outsource.”
Premium and luxury second-hand platform Vestiaire Collective has parted ways with co-founder and president Fanny Moizant. Of the leadership trio assembled in 2019 with managing director Maximilian Bittner and fashion director Sophie Hersan, only the latter remains- the last co-founder still in post at the company. This changing of the guard raises questions about the strategy of Bernard Osta, who recently took the helm and plans to harness AI and marketing to strengthen the platform’s position.
Fanny Moizant, Sophie Hersan and Maximilian Bittner, the management trio that operated from 2019 to 2025 – Vestiaire Collective
Vestiaire Collective does not publish its figures. Its revenue was estimated at around €414 million for 2024. Operating in more than 70 countries, the platform claims 30,000 new listings per day and around 23 million members.
This shift in governance comes as the clothing sector undergoes a transition of its own. With demand slowing as consumers redirect spending to other categories, industry players are seeking to adapt. Vestiaire Collective must also contend with an online sales model which, after years of strong growth in the West, is no longer insulated from fluctuations in consumer spending.
Consumer spending, after a health crisis, an energy crisis, the invasion of Ukraine, and worsening geopolitical tensions, is now showing its limits even in the luxury market. This is a segment in which Vestiaire Collective has historically built a strong position against other second-hand fashion players, but where the ubiquitous Vinted is now seeking to compete with dedicated features.
“Vestiaire Collective has established itself as the benchmark marketplace in the highly attractive second-hand luxury fashion sector,” said Bernard Osta upon his appointment. “Together, we will continue to transform fashion by giving a second life to the most coveted pieces, in the service of a more sustainable model.”
A study by the French Federation of Circular Fashion (FMC) estimated last year that the European second-hand fashion market would grow by 8.5% per year to reach €26 billion in 2030, compared with €15.9 billion in 2024. These gains will, more than ever, have to be captured from the new-goods market, underpinned by significant investment in technology and communications.
AI and marketing
Like many marketplaces, the French company is betting heavily on artificial intelligence, both to rationalise costs- at a time when investors are closely scrutinising return on investment (ROI)- and to streamline its processes, as AI tools are now capable of purchasing on third-party sites on behalf of customers.
Bernard Osta, Managing Director of Vestiaire Collective – Vestiaire Collective
It is a pivot to AI that Vestiaire Collective has already been preparing. At the end of 2024, the company announced its first two AI-powered features, focused on search and recommendations.
But the move towards AI was marked above all by the hiring of Stacia Carr, previously vice president of Fashion Customer Experience at Zalando, where she led engineering and applied sciences. Another heavyweight, Jim Freeman, a US tech figure with stints at Amazon and Zalando, has also joined the board.
“With the rise of AI, we have an extraordinary opportunity to accelerate our product roadmap, offer a more engaging customer experience and gain market share,” says Bernard Osta, whose company now sets out a “vast product roadmap powered by AI to improve the experience of buyers and sellers at an accelerated pace.”
International campaigns
The company also intends to boost its profile, and address a relative lack of brand awareness versus other second-hand players such as Lithuania’s Vinted and France’s Leboncoin. To this end, campaigns have been announced targeting Europe and the US as well as Asia-Pacific (APAC), under the leadership of Samina Virk, who took over as marketing director last July.
On the financial side, the company last raised €178 million in 2021, followed by a €75 million debt refinancing subsequently. Around €3.5 million was also raised via crowdfunding in 2024.
Against its Lithuanian competitor, Vestiaire Collective fully intends to defend its premium and luxury positioning. And perhaps revive an IPO project which, despite the support of minority shareholder Kering, has yet to come to fruition.
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