The Italian down‑jacket giant Moncler returns to the Olympic Games as the official sponsor of the Brazilian Olympic Committee for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies and as the technical sponsor of the Brazilian Snow Sports Federation at the upcoming Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games.
Lucas Pinheiro Braathen and Brazil’s racing suit – Moncler
Standing alongside brand ambassador and 2023 slalom World Cup winner Lucas Pinheiro Braathen- a Norwegian alpine skiing star who, thanks to his mother’s São Paulo roots, has in the past two years chosen to compete under a Brazilian passport- Moncler returns to its roots in sporting performance.
Having outfitted the first successful mountaineering expedition to the summit of K2 in 1954 and dressed the French national ski team at the 1968 Olympic Winter Games, Moncler now returns to the Winter Olympics nearly 60 years after the brand’s last Olympic appearance in Grenoble, France. That chapter lives on today in the spirit of the Moncler Grenoble label- the brand’s line dedicated to the mountains, where performance and style meet.
Brazil’s alpine skiing racing suit, designed in collaboration with Lucas Pinheiro Braathen, brings together technical performance, Brazilian heritage, and Moncler design. True to the brand’s DNA and enriched by Lucas’s creative input, the suit features an aesthetic inspired by the Brazilian flag- a tribute to the country’s culture- and reflects the athlete’s extroverted personality. He has already helped write Brazil’s sporting history, claiming the South American nation’s first‑ever victory in winter sports with a World Cup win in November.
Moncler
The partnership was announced alongside a video titled “Beyond Performance,” directed by Mark Clinton, which follows Pinheiro Braathen as he prepares to take on the Olympic Games. The film marks the start of a new season rich with global activations and events for Moncler Grenoble, including a brand experience organised in Aspen next January and, of course, the 2026 Olympic Winter Games.
Moncler closed the first nine months of 2025 with consolidated group revenues of €1.84 billion, stable at constant exchange rates (‑1% at current exchange rates) compared with €1.86 billion in the first nine months of 2024. In the third quarter, the Americas and China drove the brand’s revenues, while EMEA and Japan slowed.
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Specialist outdoor clothing producer Dryrobe has won a trademark case against a smaller label. The win for the business, which produces waterproof towel-lined robes used by cold water swimmers, means the offending rival must now stop selling items under the D-Robe brand within a week.
Image: Dryrobe
A judge at the high court in London ruled the company was guilty of passing off its D-Robe changing robes and other goods as Dryrobe products and knew it was infringing its bigger rival’s trademark reports, The Guardian newspaper.
The company said it has rigorously defended its brand against being used generically by publications and makers of similar clothing and is expected to seek compensation from D-Robe’s owners for trademark infringement.
Dryrobe was created by the former financier Gideon Bright as an outdoor changing robe for surfers in 2010 and became the signature brand of the wild swimming craze.
Sales increased from £1.3 million in 2017 to £20.3 million in 2021 and it made profits of £8 million. However, by 2023 sales had fallen back to £18 million as the passion for outdoor sports waned and the brand faced more competition.
Bright told the newspaper the legal win was a “great result” for Dryrobe as there were “quite a lot of copycat products and [the owners] immediately try to refer to them using our brand name”.
He said the company was now expanding overseas and moving into a broader range of products, adding that sales were similar to 2023 as “a lot of competition has come in”.
On Friday, France demanded a series of measures from Shein to demonstrate that the products sold on its website comply with the law, but dropped its initial request for a total three-month suspension of the online platform, which had been based on the sale of child-like sex dolls and prohibited weapons.
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At a hearing before the Paris court, a lawyer representing the state said that Shein must implement controls on its website, including age verification and filtering, to ensure that minors cannot access pornographic content. The state asked the court to impose a suspension of Shein’s marketplace until Shein has provided proof to Arcom, the French communications regulator, that these controls have been implemented.
Shein deactivated its marketplace- where third-party sellers offer their products- in France on November 5, after authorities discovered illegal items for sale, but its site selling Shein-branded clothing remains accessible. The state invoked Article 6.3 of France’s Digital Economy Act, which empowers judges to order measures to prevent or halt harm caused by online content.
“We don’t claim to be here to replace the European Commission,” the state’s lawyer said. “We are not here today to regulate; we are here to prevent harm, in the face of things that are unacceptable.” At the time of writing, the hearing is still ongoing.
In a statement issued last week, the Paris public prosecutor’s office said that a three-month suspension could be deemed “disproportionate” in light of European Court of Human Rights case law if Shein could prove that it had ceased all sales of illegal products. However, the public prosecutor’s office said it “fully supported” the government’s request that Shein provide evidence of the measures taken to stop such sales.
France’s decision comes against a backdrop of heightened scrutiny of Chinese giants such as Shein and Temu under the EU’s Digital Services Act, reflecting concerns about consumer safety, the sale of illegal products, and unfair competition. In the US, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said on Monday that he was investigating Shein to determine whether the fast-fashion retailer had violated state law relating to unethical labour practices and the sale of dangerous consumer products.
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BasicNet’s Kappa turns back the sporting clock for its new AW25 collection, which celebrates “local heroes in football” with a community-focused campaign “honouring the places and people that inspire a lifelong love of the game”.
Image: Kappa
The campaign shines a light on local talent Tyrone Marsh in his hometown of Bedford, revisiting the streets, pitches and community spots “that shaped his football journey”.
Local photographer Simon Gill, who had pictured Marsh during many home and away games, not only “captures the Bedford Town player in the spaces that helped define his skill”, but also highlights the brand’s “rich football heritage with contemporary streetwear energy, creating visuals that pay tribute to community, culture and grassroots football”.
The journey includes Hartwell Drive, the early days of his after-school kickabouts, Hillgrounds Road, synonymous with Bedford football culture, and then onto Faraday Square, locally identified by the concrete pitches and community spirit.
To reflect that journey, the AW25 collection “offers a sense of nostalgia” with Kappa’s long-standing history in fashion and sports “seen through the Omini logo placements and 222 Banda strip”.
The campaign sees Marsh wearing Kappa styles including the Lyman and Uriah Track Tops paired with the Ulrich Track Pants in classic colourways including navy and light blue.
The wider collection includes track tops, track pants, shorts, polos, sweatshirts and T-shirts, available at select retailers across the UK including 80s Casual Classics, Terraces Menswear and RD1 Clothing.