Clarks has signed an exclusive distribution agreement for Italy with Verona-based group 3A. The deal, starting with the AW25/26 season, is part of the UK footwear brand’s plan to overhaul its distribution organisation on the Italian market, and will involve various implementation stages.
Clarks
Initially, Clarks will be distributed via multibrand retailers and retail corners. The brand’s men’s and women’s collections – Originals, Premium and Essentials – will feature in-store based on a pyramidal segmentation approach.
The 3A deal has been announced at a special time for Clarks, which is celebrating its 200th anniversary this year. The company was founded in 1825, and has always retained a distinctive identity through legendary models like the Desert Boots, launched 75 years ago, and the Wallabees.
In 2023, Clarks recorded a net loss of £37.72 million, with revenue of £1.17 billion. The brand will leverage the partnership with 3A to start growing again and consolidate its position on the Italian market.
After going in receivership on December 4 2024, French footwear brand Clergerie was placed in liquidation as a going concern on Tuesday March 11 by the trade court of Romans-sur-Isère in France, local newspaper Le Dauphiné Libéré has reported.
Clergerie
The judicial liquidation procedure allows Clergerie to continue trading until April 25, and relates to SSB, Clergerie’s production company operating the brand’s factory in Romans. The factory still employs 31 workers, of whom 29 have been put in short-term unemployment, wrote Le Dauphiné Libéré. Clergerie operates a second company, JHJ, which looks after the products’ commercialisation via the retail and wholesale channels, and online. JHJ’s 15 employees are for the time being continuing their activity.
Potential Clergerie buyers have until March 18 to submit their bid, with the next hearing scheduled for April 2. According to the local press, a dozen expressions of interests have been registered.
Le Dauphiné Libéré wrote that Clergerie’s third company, which owns the trademark, has not yet been put into liquidation.
Two years ago, Clergerie was bought by US group Titan Footwear following commercial court proceedings in Paris, having filed for receivership in March 2023. However, Joe Ouaknine, businessman and owner of Titan Footwear, hasn’t been able to revive Clergerie.
The brand was founded in 1981 by Robert Clergerie, and is one of the last bastions of French footwear production. It benefits from a long-standing industrial heritage, since Romans-sur-Isère has been a shoe manufacturing hub since the end of the 19th century. A few other iconic footwear brands hail from the same area, like Stéphane Kélian – owned by the Royer group and about to be relaunched – and Charles Jourdan, also owned by Royer but currently dormant.
In the same week that Arket announced plans to debut in Ireland with its first physical store there, the brand said it would open another London store this summer.
The company will open a flagship on the King’s Road in Chelsea, joining a recent stream of openings there such as BasicNet’s K-Way label, Birkenstock (which opens on Friday this week), Penelope Chilvers, and KayaNuka. And Arket’s H&M Group stablemate, H&M, also opened on the popular shopping thoroughfare a year ago.
The Arket flagship will be the brand’s fourth store in London following previous openings on Regent Street, Covent Garden, and at Selfridges, which was the label’s very first in-store concession.
Arket MD Pernilla Wohlfahrt said London “holds a special place in our hearts after opening our very first Arket store on Regent Street in 2017. We look forward to deepening our relationship with our local customers and inviting them to explore our curated, modern-day market offering”.
As mentioned, the news comes as the brand prepares to enter Ireland and not long after it announced that it’s also to open physically in Greece for the first time this year with a debut in Athens.
H&M’s festival-ready. The global fashion brand has secured Tyla, FKA Twigs and Caroline Polachek as headline acts for its SS25 collection. With the first drop due to arrive on 20 March, the brand’s also lining up an LA festival, blending fashion and music, in April.
FKA Twigs in H&M
H&M says the new collection’s “an ode to femininity: an intriguing exploration of moods, sensibilities and identities” so the “choice of a diverse collective of inspiring female icons” to promote the line enables H&M to assert its “strong fashion vision, and its leadership in championing exceptional design and collaboration across the music and fashion fields”.
The collection will be released in two chapters, which complement each other but offer their own unique perspective and attitude, noted H&M and together “they pay homage to the multi-faceted nature of contemporary femininity”.
The first drop “conjures an air of ethereal Bohemia”, we’re told. It offers a fresh take on spring style, from festival dressing to city chic, “while paying homage to the icons of fashion history, with nods the sweeping blouses of iconic glam rock musicians and the fluidity and androgyny of New Romantic styling”.
H&M design director Eliana Masgalos said: “This season, we were inspired by different stages and moments of women’s lives and the richness of femininity. We wanted to offer exceptional pieces that bring energy and light. A sense of escape felt very relevant: we wanted to play with a beautiful bohemia, rock icons and festival freedom.”
She noted that heirloom-style pieces are updated with an urban and refined edge… 70s, 90s, and today all combine… The mood is carefree and yet sharply confident.”
The collection is rich in classic rock ‘n’ roll staples, from voluminous sheer blouses through to lace-up shirting and tunics. Textural detailing includes ornate edging on collars and cuffs, intricately crocheted dresses, mini-skirts with braiding or stitch embellishments, and laser-cut pleated ruffle skirts, tiered for maximum movement.
Structured, tougher elements add balance – from a striking studded blazer to 70s multi-pocket jackets, rendered in leather.
Accessories come with a boho spirit with slouchy shoulder bags in a variety of scales and finishes, including with lace-up seams. These can be styled with snake-print slippers and waist-belts, and festival-ready biker boots.
Jewellery includes antique-style pendant necklaces, tassel earrings, chunky bangles and chokers, and rings and cuffs in both metal and resin-style materials. Pilot-style sunglasses complete the look.
And to promote a spring “filled with a sense of freedom, vitality, spirit and light”, it will be celebrated with that festival of fashion and music in Los Angeles early next month… an event that will “pay homage to the city, celebrating its dynamic relationship to cinema, sound and style”.