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#Athleisure manufacturers
noname234567890 · 2 months
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missroy33 · 10 months
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Get the workout apparel you need from the best fitness clothing manufacturer near you! Our wholesale unbranded athletic clothes collection includes custom-designed pieces for any fitness level. Shop the latest in fitness fashion today!
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A Quick Look at the Activewear Trends For This Year
As we move into 2023, the activewear industry is once again undergoing a major transformation. The latest trends are all about performance, sustainability, and style. If you are a business owner in need of revamping your stock with the latest activewear trends for 2023, then get in touch with one of the best activewear manufacturers acting as the backbone for business owners for long. 1.…
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scrappyapparel · 25 days
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fitness-clothing · 3 months
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Fitness Fashion: Staying Ahead of the Curve for Apparel Clothing Manufacturers
The fitness industry is a dynamic beast, constantly evolving with new trends and innovations. As an apparel clothing manufacturer catering to this dynamic market
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sharonallen246 · 1 year
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List of Travel Friendly Pants That You’ll Need This Year – Alanic Clothing
These pant styles are highly utilitarian as well. Therefore, if you want to include such pants in your store.
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kenresearch111 · 1 year
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Global Athleisure Market-Ken Research
Global Athleisure Market by Distribution Channel
The Global Athleisure Market is segmented by Distribution Channel into Hypermarket/Supermarket, Specialty Stores, Online Sales Channel, Others.
The online sales distribution channel segment held the largest share of the Global Athleisure Market in 2021.
With a dominant market share, the online distribution channel is likely to grow rapidly throughout the forecast period. The market's growth can be attributed to consumers buying more apparel through online distribution channels. Furthermore, the demand for athleisure is being fueled by the expansion of online e-commerce platforms. Additionally, the use of internet distribution platforms has expanded as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Competition Scenario in Global Athleisure Market
The Global Athleisure Market is highly competitive with ~300 players, including globally diversified players, regional players, and many country-niche players. Most of the country-niche players are the manufacturers of raw materials for Thermoplastic Polyurethane used in various end-user industries.
Regional players constitute ~30% of the total number of competitors, while country-niche players dominate representing ~50% of total competitors. Some of the major players in the market include 3M, BASF SE, Coim Group, Covestro AG, Huntsman International LLC, KURARAY CO., LTD., Tosoh among others.
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What is the Expected Future Outlook for the Overall Global Athleisure Market Across the globe?
The Global Athleisure Market was valued at USD ~billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach USD ~billion by the end of 2028F, witnessing a CAGR of ~% during the forecast period 2022-2028F. The realistic growth scenario represents the most likely scenario as per current market conditions. This scenario assumes that there will be no overall impact on the market due to any potential COVID-19 waves in the future.
Global Athleisure Market is largely driven by an increase in consumer fitness and health consciousness, which is fueling the desire for stylish yet comfortable clothing.
In March 2022, Puma invented Nitro Foam, a lighter-weight, responsive foam created by using nitrogen. It also created a brand-new rubber outsole technology. The company launched five new models which include eternity, deviate, deviate elite, liberate, and velocity.
In March 2021, Kohl's introduced FLX, a private label athleisure range to increase sales of athletic and casual clothing from 20% to 30% of its overall company. FLX is size-inclusive and environmentally conscious, and it can be found in more than 300 Kohl's stores and online at Kohls.com.
In October 2022, footwear retail chain, Metro Brands saw its share price rise by 20% after signing a share purchase agreement to buy Cravatex Brands. The purchase was carried out to increase its footprint in the sports and athleisure market in India. Metro Brands will obtain Proline's exclusive rights through this acquisition, as well as FILA's sales and distribution rights in India across all formats, including Airport Stores, Distribution, Online Marketplaces, Exclusive Brand Stores, Multi Brand Stores, and Webstores.
The Global Athleisure Market is forecasted to continue a gradual growth that is witnessed during the forecast period. Key trends driving market expansion include an increase in consumer fitness and health consciousness, which is fueling the desire for stylish yet comfortable clothing. The market is highly competitive with ~400 participants concentrating on expansion strategies through product innovations as well as acquisitions and mergers.
For more insights on the market intelligence, refer to the link below
Global Athleisure Market
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marathonclothes · 2 years
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How To Suit Up For Your Marathon Day!
Anything from chafing to nagging blister will trigger big issues when you’re counting down the miles. Don’t be woefully underprepared use our suggestions below to make sure that you remain confident and concentrated on your results during your run.
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plumbob-pudding · 7 months
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The 1960s, particularly towards the end of the decade, were all about funky colours and patterns. Stripes, plaids and contrasting colours were common in infant clothing.
Plaids remained in fashion through to the 1970s, though the neon like colours of the 60s started to fall out of favour, being replaced by browns, oranges and greens. Knit and crochet handmade pieces also grew in popularity as a counterculture response to the mass manufacturing of synthetic clothing.
As a result of this mass manufacturing, the popularity of clothing embroidered with characters from children's media such as "Sesame Street" grew and continued to grow through to the 1980s. During the 1980s, perhaps due to the rise of athleisure, infant clothing also became much more casual with t-shirts and polos instead of button down shirts for instance.
The 1990s continued many trends from previous decades. Clothing was casual and colourful; onesies, vests, baby grows all were more commonplace. Denim also became increasingly popular, reflecting adult styles. This stayed very similar during the 2000s, along with newer trends like logomania, miniskirts, flares etc.
By the 2010s, "casual" had been replaced with "business casual" and even babies weren't spared. Collared shirts , trousers or knee length shorts was common for baby boys and for baby girls, dresses with leggings as well as leggings and a top were in fashion. Helmet therapy to reduce head flattening also became more common.
The 2020s began with a global pandemic leading to the rise in a preference for handmade and natural clothing as well as beige-mania. Infants are usually dressed comfortably in stretchy and simple two piece matching sets or onesies. Clothing itself is normally gender neutral, though "pink for girls;blue for boys" still remains common place and hair bows for baby girls remain popular.
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dokidokitsuna · 4 months
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The Happy Family
Finally did a basic ref sheet for these three…I wanted a new alt design for Elfy in the next episode, and I figured, while I’m at it I might as well bring back his parents’ classic designs and get those down too.
So, clearly, the next installment of The Dream Discoveries Tour is going to feature another “family discussion”-- the final one in the story. And the only one that Forgo gets to join in on (kinda)! ^^ We’ll finally have all 4 major characters speaking in the same chapter, and I’m really looking forward to it~.
While I’m here, let me hit you with some final family fun facts:
Carol and Leon are not romantically involved, just FYI. They’re just a couple of besties who decided to co-parent a genetically-modified alien child. ^^ Y’know, as one does.
Everyone in Lab Discovera dresses from a standardized set of ‘athleisure’ clothes manufactured for its live-in staff, Elfilin included. However, a few of Elfilin’s clothes (like this T-shirt, and his trademark blue hoodie) are direct hand-me-downs from Leon-- clothes he used to wear when he was younger and a little less muscular.
Obviously, Elfilin is closer with Leon than he is with Carol (and vice versa). But he actually gets more of his personality from Carol, and thinks of her as the technically “safer” guardian.
^This is mostly because she’s the more consistent parent, having better control over her emotions and being more straightforward with Elfilin during stressful times. Meanwhile, Leon usually just pretends to be happy, oversells it, and eventually becomes distant when he can’t pretend anymore. Basically, he wears his heart on his sleeve, and as Elfilin gets older he notices more of these emotional “hiccups”, and they make him nervous and distrusting. He loves his dad to hell and back, but deep down he doesn’t think he’s reliable.
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maretriarch · 14 days
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🔥 fashion also let's hear your thoughts
not really an unpopular opinion more of a conspiracy theory that the reason why athleisure is such an enduring trend is bcs its completely astroturfed by big brands and celebrities who want to sell you extremely cheap to manufacturer pieces of clothing. that are made of increasingly smaller (if not in size, length re:croptops) and thinner cuts of fabric, and the reason why its always stretch material is so they can get away with shitty seams. uhh and also those extremely flat to the scalp middle parts r almost universally unappealing and high rise pants are not flattering like people think they are. also its always so apparent when someones dressing like the front page of pinterest and it looks like shit. that stupid star bag and raglan tee
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missroy33 · 11 months
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Whatever your fitness style is, the team at Fitness Clothing Manufacturer has you covered with custom-made workout apparel and yoga clothes. Check out our collection of gym outfits now!
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Follow These Three Ways To Style Activewear For Work
It is very much possible to style activewear for work. How? Get the ideas in this blog!, click on https://www.activewearmanufacturer.com/follow-these-three-ways-to-style-activewear-for-work/
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revcleo · 2 years
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on washing clothes from Mend! A refashioning manual and manifesto by Kate Sekules
(please buy the book, or rent it from a library, or order it through a library to rent from them, or rent it through a library ebook collection etc. etc.)
Wash Less
Washing is killing your clothes. Every laundering shortens a garment’s life by, oh, a month (see endnote 8*). I bet the source of the one-wear wash idea was Procter & Gamble’s Mad Men–era marketing team: overwashing sells more Tide (it can also redeposit soil on clothes and set stains permanently). Not washing is getting awfully trendy now, for green reasons, but the main mend-related reasons are that less washing—and definitely less tumble drying—paradoxically saves your favorite clothes, and probably time, too.
There are three reasons to wash a clothe: removal of stain, or of germ, or of smell. I daresay smell (or fear of) is what propels us fastest to the washing machine. But listen up.
Less Laundering ≠ More Stinking To overgeneralize, but not really, because athleisure, clothes get stinky when they’re made of synthetic fiber. Ridiculously, the clothes manufactured expressly for sweating into are the most petrochemical of the lot.
Yes your performance fiber top wicks your sweat, but then it hugs it to its bosom, maybe refusing to let it go, ever, in a phenomenon scientifically named perma-stink. Synthetics are hydrophobic but oleophilic—they hate water, but love oil—so they cling jealously to body odor compounds, but refuse the advances of your washing machine.
The more you fight your running tights, the more they resist—dryer sheets and extra detergent and heat drive the smell-causing bacteria deeper into the fibers, where they take up residence. Antimicrobial finishes such as silver chloride don’t deter them at all. It is gross.
I’m not here to lecture on eco-water-saving detergent-minimizing, though this is a happy side effect of many old-new methods. I’m here to keep good clothes alive and mendable. I confess I’m a bit conflicted about stains. Set-in stains invite mending, and mends invite conversation, and then you can tell everyone about the bacteria partying in their pants.
So I’ll ignore stains, aside from the kind that attack and degrade fabric or can’t be mended or spoil the overall beauty of a thing.
Speaking of ignoring, follow only the bits that sound appealing: the last thing we want is the return of washday labor and guilt. I’ve been around the laundry block—never owned a washer-dryer till I was a mom; been a student, a traveler, dirt poor, addicted to wash-dry-fold service—and after all this, I’ve discovered that tending clothes is actually fun.
Anyway, decide for yourself. Here are assorted old-school and costume specialist hacks to mend your cleaning routine and keep your favorite garments alive:
Gym stink. Sweat is odorless. The smell is bacteria breaking down proteins into acids. Left in a swampy pile, these reproduce like a horror film. Arrest the breeding! Rinse gym things out in plain water and hang to dry right after committing the sweat.
Or switch to all-cotton workout wear. It’s hydrophilic and oleophobic, the opposite of synthetics, so absorbs and holds or wicks sweat, but resists oils and smells.
Aromatic pits and the crotchal region. Sorry to be graphic, but you know what I’m talking about. Try these professional theater costume department and vintage dealer nowash fixes:
Give it a drink. Spritz generously with pure (cheap) vodka; let dry. No alcohol smell!
Connect to earth. Sprinkle fuller’s earth on the bits overnight. Vacuum up, with stink.
Acidulate. For allover smell, steam garment over a hot bath of white vinegar solution.
A paste of baking soda and water is much cheaper than Febreze and often works better.
SOS: Save Our Sweaters. Handwashing in cool water is the only way. You don’t need to do it often. Invest in perfume-priced cleansers or use baby shampoo. Rinse thoroughly, squeeze gently, then . . .
Reshape (it’s called blocking) the wet sweater on a fluffy towel, Swiss roll it, and kneel on the roll to squish out water. Never wring knitwear. Dry on a fresh towel, turning it periodically.
Air dry whatever you can, especially vintage, most of which should never go in the dryer. Your hand mends last longer when air dried, too. Use ordinary hangers if you lack line or frame.
Add a few drops of lavender essential oil to water in a spray bottle to spritz on while ironing.
Yellowed cotton might have gotten that way from dry-cleaning. Add borax to the wash. And hang out in the sun—which is mostly terrible and verboten for fabrics, because of this bleaching effect.
Care labels are often as generic as the website cookie disclaimer that you never read and fulfill a similar legal function. Nearly everything can be gently handwashed.
Exceptions are: velvet, satin, taffeta, brocade, some silks, anything tailored or structured, and everything under Special Concerns in the chart on pages 144–45 (Historic fabrics, weighted silk, embellished fabrics, real lace, metallics, 3d effect fabrics, fur real/fake, net/mesh, hand painted, leather, suede*). Beware rayon: very tricky and variable.
Spot clean and steam fancy clothes—or, in fact, most clothes. Vintage dealers do.
For embellished items, borrow the museum conservator method: vacuum on low with open vent and flat nozzle through a gauze screen edged with tape.
Forget wasteful sticky-sausage lint cleaners. Use an old-school clothes brush or the kind that picks up lint one direction and deposits it on the reverse journey.
Mildew. Omnipresent fungal spores that feast on your damp natural fibers. It’s serious and contagious. Dry, vacuum, dry-clean, revacuum. It may be too late for this poor garment.
A final little trick. Scribble all over metal zippers with graphite pencil: nonstick magic. endnote 8*
Unreliable statistic that I made up. This is an experiment in misinformation. Because nobody’s done this math, I wonder if the figure I just invented will get quoted and thereby eventually become true? Other notes:
No, really, perma-stink was coined by human ecology professor Rachel McQueen et al., “Odor Intensity in Apparel Fabrics and the Link with Bacterial Populations,” Textile Research Journal 77, no. 7 (2007): 449–56.
The no wash and the dry (or raw) denim movements are ecologically motivated but are also having the effect of bringing more natural fibers and finishes to market. They sell at a high price point for the most part, but this is beginning to trickle down—though such clothes can’t and shouldn’t be sold too cheap; they’re investments. Also, PS, infusing with peppermint oil or whatever does nothing long term to decrease the need for washing: all natural, untreated fibers are resistant to microbes.
Ulterior motive: as a lifelong devotee of pure cotton sweats, I prefer its wicking, slightly baggy, nonstinking qualities, and wish it would catch on.
I could go on and on about detergents, which are often foul in so many ways. For an up-todate and reliable breakdown of their relative merits, see the rated reviews by the 501(c)(3) nonprofit Environmental Working Group, https://www.ewg.org/guides/categories/9-Laundry/. You may find your go-to wash solution has earned a solid “F” grade.
Extra credit: invest in a horizontal drying rack or make one out of window screen gauze.
A steamer is a wise investment—they’re effective, gentle, and far more fun than ironing.
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fitness-clothing · 5 months
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bathingsuitscanada0 · 9 months
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Current Trends in One-Piece Bathing Suits: A Global Dive with a Canadian Touch
The world of swimwear is ever-evolving, with designs that cater to a myriad of tastes, body types, and cultural influences. Among the vast array of options, one-piece bathing suits have made a significant comeback in recent years, merging both vintage vibes with modern aesthetics. As we dive into the current trends in one-piece bathing suits, we'll also touch upon the unique flair added by "one piece bathing suits Canada" to the global fashion scene.
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1. Cut-Out Designs
One of the most prominent trends in one-piece bathing suits is the cut-out design. These suits offer the best of both worlds: the coverage of a one-piece and the allure of a bikini. Strategically placed cut-outs, whether on the sides, back, or front, add a playful and edgy touch to the traditional one-piece.
2. Deep V-Necks
Deep V-neck designs are making waves in the one-piece category. This design elongates the torso and offers a touch of sophistication. Paired with high-cut legs, it's a style that's both flattering and bold.
3. Sporty Styles
Athleisure has influenced more than just gym wear. One-piece bathing suits with sporty designs, including racerbacks, zip fronts, and bold stripes, are gaining popularity. They're not only stylish but also functional for those who love water sports.
4. Textured Fabrics
Ribbed and smocked fabrics are adding texture to the world of one-piece bathing suits. These materials offer a tactile appeal and often provide a more snug and flattering fit, contouring the body beautifully.
5. Vintage Revival
High-cut legs and belted waists are reminiscent of the 80s and 90s swimwear. These vintage-inspired designs are making a comeback, offering a nostalgic touch to modern swimwear collections.
6. Sustainable Materials
With growing environmental consciousness, many brands worldwide, including those in Canada, are opting for sustainable materials. Recycled ocean plastics, eco-friendly dyes, and sustainable manufacturing practices are becoming the norm in swimwear production.
7. Bold Prints and Patterns
From tropical motifs to geometric patterns, one-piece bathing suits are embracing bold prints. These designs stand out and are perfect for those looking to make a statement at the beach or pool.
Conclusion
The world of one-piece bathing suits is rich and diverse, with designs that cater to every individual's style and comfort preferences. Canada, with its unique blend of cultures and landscapes, adds its distinctive touch to this global trend, offering designs that resonate with both its natural beauty and urban sophistication. Whether you're lounging by the shores of Lake Ontario or basking in the sun on a Mediterranean beach, a one-piece bathing suit is a timeless choice that combines elegance, comfort, and style.
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