Claiming the title of the “world’s most renowned satchel brand” Cambridge Satchel is on the expansion trail again. The made-in-Britain leather goods company has opening its fourth UK store, close to the King’s Berkshire residence, Windsor Castle. The 46.2 sq m Grade II-listed retail unit is close to tourist-busy Windsor Royal Station and Cambridge Satchel says the space is “its most ambitious store design to date”.
Following on from its London Covent Garden, Cambridge and Leeds stores, the new opening has been co-designed by CEO Carine de Koenigswarter and architects Atelier A&D to “create a bold and beautiful design, taking inspiration from the Art Deco movement”.
A double-height ceiling has been reinstated to showcase a double-sided entrance while a concealed and illuminated coffer at a higher level “creates an extra sense of lightness and height”.
A listed fireplace has been also been reinstated and offset with a large lightbox showcasing the brand’s products. Front windows feature a series of custom-built Sheffield steel cubes “applying an extra sense of luxury”.
Finally, a central circle of custom-made joinery allows customers to browse and shop small leather goods and charms.
In additional to the brand’s main collection, additional product includes an exclusively designed range tailored towards the historic royal town including a Union Jack Heart, a Crown as well as a named Windsor charm that’s part of its new ‘Swizzles Love Hearts’ collection. A Corgi and Guardsman charm completes the options in a location globally known for its royal connections.
“Known for its rich British history and tradition of education, our Windsor location reflects Cambridge Satchel’s dedication to scholarship and British craftsmanship, offering international visitors the chance to own a piece of what makes Britishness so unique,” said de Koenigswarter.
And more than hinting there’s more to come of the expansion front, she added: “Following the successful openings in Leeds and Windsor, we are continuing to expand our retail presence in key cities.”
It’s not just mainstream fashion brand collections M&S is focused on launching. The high street retail giant has linked up with UK charity YoungMinds to launch a competition for young people to create a design that will be introduced in-store linked to this year’s M&S/YoungMinds ‘Hello Yellow’ kidswear collection.
We’ll have to wait until autumn for the winners’ launch as it’s going to neatly tie into World Mental Health Day.
Spearheaded by M&S x YoungMinds partnership ambassador and mother Rochelle Humes and combining with Children’s Mental Health Week, the competition invites young people across the UK to design a sweatshirt or hoodie that will be sold in M&S stores across the UK and online. All profits will be donated to YoungMinds to help more young people feel supported with their mental health.
The designs will feature on two special pieces in the collection, reflecting the age categories for the competition – 5-11 and 12-16 year-olds – with one winner chosen from each.
The winners, along with their parents/guardians, will get exclusive behind the scenes access to see their ideas become a reality, visiting the M&S support centre in London to see their design turned into the artwork, visiting the supplier factory in the Midlands to see the products being printed, and being part of the launch.
The winners will also receive enough sweatshirts or hoodies featuring their designs for everyone in their class to wear on the annual ‘Hello Yellow’ event when teachers, pupils, parents and colleagues wear the specific colour on that day, “to show young people that they are not alone with their mental health”.
Victoria McKenzie-Gould, corporate affairs director at M&S, said: “With the incredible support of our colleagues and customers, we’re proud to have raised over £3 million in just over one year to support young people’s mental health. Together with YoungMinds, we’re building a coalition of the hopeful and showing young people they’re never alone and there is support available when they need it most.”
Fashion e-tailer In The Style has unveiled its first 2025 collaboration collection with BBC Strictly Come Dancing 2024 show winner, Dianne Buswell. The new collection has just dropped featuring looks based around a week in Buswell’s life as a professional dancer.
The concept includes matching active and comfort looks, with the brand’s best-selling sculpt and control leggings and unitards featuring alongside its split-hem leggings and flares. Also, the brand’s power mesh technology, used in its ‘sculpt and control’ collection, has been extended to include the unitards for the new release, its noted.
“Staying true to her own life and schedule”, the collection also reflects 99% of her wardrobe in a mix of active and athleisure, Buswell said: “It’s great to be able to put together an authentic collection that is full of pieces that are practical, stylish and comfortable to complement a busy and active lifestyle.”
Phoebe Russell, marketing director of In the Style, added: “We are best known for our celebrity and influencer-based collaborations, and this one to kick off 2025 is one to be excited about. When deciding on our collections, we want to lean into people who wear these wardrobe staples day in and day out, and when it comes to activewear, we really knew Dianne would be such an asset.”
French womenswear label Grace & Mila is thriving at independent retailers and department stores, while the domestic ready-to-wear market remains weak. The label was founded in 2011 by the family trio of Julie, Patricia and Patrick Chou. It’s positioned in the mid-market segment, and has changed its business model from immediately available collections to a classic commercial calendar in order to attract more retailers, especially outside France. Its international sales have grown from 7% of its revenue five years ago to 40% today.
Grace & Mila is currently distributed via nearly 2,000 retailers in 39 countries (including 600 stores in France). A few years ago, it began to attract retailers outside France, in Belgium and Spain, before gradually expanding elsewhere in Europe, notably in Scandinavia and Eastern Europe. The label recently exhibited at the CIFF trade show in Copenhagen, and has opened a shop-in-shop at the Sokos department store in Finland.
North America came next, and Grace & Mila now operates seven showrooms in the USA and Canada. The label is also present in various airport duty-free shops, after partnering with Lagardère Travel Retail. Asia is also on the map: Grace & Mila has a growing presence in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan and Thailand, and is mulling entering China, a huge market where the label has offices from where it supervises its collections’ production. In Africa, Grace & Mila recently set foot in Morocco, where it has inked a partnership deal to open a series of retail corners.
“By switching a year ago from immediately available products sold through the wholesale channel to a pre-collection model, with retailers placing their orders ahead of the season, the label has a collection rhythm and a product range that are better suited to the retail channel, enabling us to reach new clients. Also, we’ve been told in many countries that our French touch is reflected in the assortment, and is very much appreciated, after so many seasons of Scandinavian minimalism, of which some are rather weary,” said Julie Gedeon, head of domestic and international sales at Grace & Mila. In addition to trade shows, the label is relying on social media and influencer marketing to expand abroad. “We’ve signed up a retailer in Norway who spotted us on Instagram,” she added.
Grace & Mila’s strength is “value for money. The products are extremely affordable (tops at €49, dresses at €89), but we make an effort with the fabrics, which are 70% natural,” said Gedeon. The new business model has enabled Grace & Mila to broaden its range of sizes (from XS to XL rather than from S to L), and to introduce new, more sophisticated items with slightly higher prices, “without touching entry-level items.”
Thanks to its new clients and partners, the label recorded a 70% revenue rise with the winter collection, and a 30% one with summer 2025, producing an “exceptional” 50% increase in annual revenue, whose value it didn’t disclose. “Our goal for 2025 is to open our first monobrand store abroad,” said Gedeon without revealing the destination, but adding that “for sure, a first opening will then lead to others.”
In France, where the wholesale market is rather flat, the label has two objectives: Firstly, to convince retailers to open Grace & Mila corners in their shops, and secondly to consider converting into a monobrand store. “When we have room to showcase our brand image and our visuals, sales are twice as high,” said Gedeon. Retail-wise, the goal is to gradually expand the label’s monobrand fleet in France, currently comprising five addresses, including a store opened in Bayonne in 2024. “We’re already present in Paris and Lyon, and we’re targeting other cities such as Toulouse and Marseilles,” said Gedeon, adding that the label is continuing to expand in department stores too, having entered the BHV Marais last year.
Grace & Mila’s growth is going hand in hand with new hires at headquarters, in marketing, sales, and the design office. The current premises in the town of Pantin have become too small, and the label will soon move its staff of about one hundred to new offices in Paris.
In 2025, Grace & Mila is also planning to improve its brand platform and boost online sales (worth approximately 10% of revenue), with Gedeon forecasting a 30% sales growth in 2025. Indeed, there is no crisis for Grace & Mila.