Jack & Jones will soon be carving its first turns on the ski slopes. The budget retailer owned by Danish group Bestseller has entered the market for mountain sports performance apparel, presenting to buyers its first Fall/Winter 2025-26 skiwear collection. An initiative that has been driven by Jack & Jones’s French subsidiary.
Jack & Jones
“For the last five years, we have been collaborating in France with the high-altitude restaurants of the La Folie Douce chain, creating an apparel range for their employees. They asked us to design a ski suit for them, and we also offered it to Jack & Jones retailers in several countries, where it has worked very well. This led me to urge our parent company to develop a real skiwear line,” said Jara, head of sales on the French market for Jack & Jones. Jara was involved in defining the style codes with the group’s design office in Denmark, as well as testing the products on the slopes.
The Jack & Jones Ski line is extensive, and consists of some 50 items, including the various colourways. It features five pairs of trousers, six jackets, performance underwear, sweatshirts, fleeces and t-shirts, as well as accessories like hats, gloves, skiing goggles etc. “We’ve positioned the line at entry level, with aggressive prices (from €89 for jackets and €59 for trousers), and a medium performance level (a 10,000 index for waterproofing, and 5,000 for breathability),” said Jara.
The line features Velcro fastenings – Jack & Jones
“The idea isn’t to compete with the private label brands by the likes of Decathlon or Intersport, which are well-established and more classic in design. We’re going for more directional, eye-catching looks and motifs,” he added. For example, orange and black high-altitude prints, marbled effects, bright colours like yellow and sage green.
The line has a 2.8 margin coefficient and is intended for Jack & Jones’s traditional retail network, especially major chains like Intersport or Sport 2000, but also for independent retailers in cities and resorts. The collection is being presented to retailers throughout February for delivery in October 2025, and was recently showcased at the Sport Achat trade show in Grenoble, in the French Alps. “It was the first time we attended [the show], and we made good contacts. Many were amazed at the prices we quoted. We’re targeting occasional consumers, for whom going skiing is already quite a spend (transport, accommodation, etc.) and who therefore don’t want to go bust buying their outfits,” said Jara.
Jack & Jones
Bestseller is commercialising this France-driven skiwear collection in 15 markets, including Italy, Spain and Greece. Next winter, it will also be available at Jack & Jones monobrand stores. In France, the brand is distributed via 1,200 independent retailers and some 50 monobrand stores. The latter’s number is growing, and the plan is to have 80 addresses in France by the end of 2025.
The U.S. Postal Service said it would temporarily suspend parcels from China and Hong Kong, after President Donald Trump shut a trade loophole this week used by retailers including Temu and Shein to ship low-value packages duty-free to the U.S.
Reuters
The Trump administration imposed an additional 10% tariff on Chinese goods that came into effect on Tuesday and moved to close the “de minimis” loophole that allows importers and U.S. shoppers to avoid paying tariffs for packages worth less than $800.
USPS said the change will not impact the flow of letters and ‘flats’ from China and Hong Kong. It did not immediately comment on whether this was tied to Trump’s change to ending de minimis shipments from China and other countries.
Fast-fashion retailer Shein and online dollar-store Temu, both of which sell products ranging from toys to smartphones, have grown rapidly in the U.S. thanks in part to the de minimis exemption.
The two firms together likely accounted for more than 30% of all packages shipped to the United States each day under the de minimis provision, the U.S. congressional committee on China said in a June 2023 report.
Nearly half of all packages shipped under de minimis come from China, according to the report.
Shein and Temu did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
“In our view, the USPS would require some time to sort out how to execute the new taxes before allowing Chinese packages to arrive in the U.S. again,” said Chelsey Tam, senior equity analyst, Morningstar. “This is a significant challenge for them because there were 4 million de minimis package per day in 2024, and it is difficult to check all the packages – so it will take time.”
Trump’s crackdown on de minimis would make the products sold by the likes of Shein and Temu more expensive but is unlikely to dramatically impact shipment volumes, experts said.
“E-commerce volumes out of China grew 20-30% last year, so it’s going to take a sledgehammer to crack that level of consumer demand and I’m not sure de minimis alone is enough,” said Niall van de Wouw, Chief Airfreight Officer at freight platform Xeneta.
“They will still be cheaper than buying through retailers in the U.S. Delays in receiving the goods due to operational disruptions could have a bigger impact than price.”
Shein has previously said it supports reform of the de minimis provision.
Both Temu, a subsidiary of Chinese e-commerce giant PDD Holdings, and Singapore-headquartered Shein, which plans to list in London this year, have taken measures such as sourcing more products from outside China, opening U.S. warehouses and bringing more U.S. sellers on board, to mitigate the impact.
But the vast majority of their products are still made in China.
Trump imposed the extra tariff on Chinese goods after repeatedly warning Beijing it was not doing enough to halt the flow of fentanyl, a dangerous synthetic opioid, into the U.S.
Ukrainian fashion house Litkovska has launched a capsule collection with British image-maker Nick Knight, dubbed The Flowers Know Better.
Litkovska launches capsule collection with Nick Knight. – Litkovska
First unveiled as part of Litkovska’s Spring-Summer 2025 collection, the capsule merges Knight’s visionary floral imagery with Lilia Litkovska’s signature craftsmanship. The collection symbolizes resilience, renewal, and the enduring power of beauty amid adversity.
Inspired by the Ukrainian concept of Zhynyva (the harvest), the capsule introduces cotton bandanas, tailored jackets, voluminous shirts, open-back vests, denim ensembles, and a statement T-shirt inscribed with Flowers Know Better. Exclusive floral prints designed for the collection will also be available for purchase.
“While in peacetime flowers decorate and bring comfort to us in our homes, the flowers that grow through the rubble or on the battlefield provide hope and demonstrate the power of beauty and nature” said Lilia.
“The goal of our collaboration is to support children of Ukraine who are suffering from this terrible war and to warm the souls of people around the world by bringing these flowers closer to their hearts.”
The collection launches with a campaign featuring Ukrainian actress Solomiia Kyrylova, known for her role in “Pamfir”, reinforcing the collection’s connection to Ukrainian culture and storytelling.
All profits from the capsule will be donated to City of Goodness, a Ukrainian humanitarian initiative. The collaboration was facilitated by Be an Angel e.V., an international humanitarian organization led by Holger Homann.
“I abhor violence and brutality of all kinds where-ever and however it happens. If within this collaboration my work can bring any relief from, or shine a light on the cruel and inhuman suffering that this dreadful war is causing, then I will be delighted,” added Knight.
Capri Holdings forecast revenue well below Wall Street estimates for its fiscal 2026 on Wednesday, as the Michael Kors owner grappled with slowing demand for luxury goods and persistent declines in the Americas and Asia.
Shares of the company, which also projected fiscal 2025 revenue below expectations, were down about 6% in premarket trading.
The global luxury goods sector has been grappling with its slowest sales in years, with a 2% fall in 2024, according to Bain & Co. estimates, hit by a property crisis in China.
Meanwhile, Capri is looking for a reset after its $8.5 billion deal with Coach-owner Tapestry to create a U.S. luxury conglomerate collapsed following opposition from the Federal Trade Commission.
Capri expects fiscal 2026 net revenue of $4.1 billion, compared with analysts’ estimates of $4.52 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. It sees fiscal 2025 revenue of $4.4 billion, below analysts’ expectations of $4.51 billion.