Community Clothing Christmas Knitwear Pop-Up
From 5 - 15 December, Community Clothing will be popping up at the beautiful Pentreath & Hall. Offering an opportunity for customers to try before they buy, the brand’s knitwear heroes including lambswool jumpers, hats, gloves & scarves as well as the ever popular Community Clothing socks will be part of the showcase.
The pop-up opens on 5 December, with Community Clothing founder Patrick Grant in store on Wednesday 6th December to welcome visitors.
Community Clothing creates quality woollen jumpers that do not pill or lose their shape. They work with the best British lambswool, sourced from trusted farms. The yarn comes from one mill that has been spinning in Denby Dale in Yorkshire for over 200 years and it is knitted in Hawick, Scotland, in mills which make the best jumpers in the world, for some of the best known luxury brands and also Community Clothing.
Community Clothing is a British clothing brand and social enterprise founded in 2016 by award winning clothing designer and judge on BBC One’s The Great British Sewing Bee Patrick Grant. Community Clothing does good things for people and communities in the UK, creating jobs where they’re needed most.
The mission is simple; to sell great quality clothes at prices people can afford; to make these clothes in the best British factories from the finest natural materials; and by doing this to create work and support skilled jobs in regions of the UK that need them most. In short, Community Clothing sells great quality clothes, at affordable prices and consequently creates loads of fantastic jobs in places that really need them. To date Community Clothing has created 279,000 hours of work and supported 1,880 jobs. Community Clothing has a network of 42 partner factories all over the UK, located predominantly in the Northwest, Yorkshire, the East Midlands and South Wales.
Community Clothing has developed a unique business model that keeps costs super low, enabling the brand to produce clothes in the very best UK factories from the best materials, and still sell them at affordable prices. The unique business model utilises off-peak production, creates seasonless, brilliant basics, supports ultra local supply chains and promotes radical simplicity.
Text and images courtesy of Community Clothing
Find out more:
communityclothing.co.uk
@community_clothing
The pop-up opens on 5 December, with Community Clothing founder Patrick Grant in store on Wednesday 6th December to welcome visitors.
Community Clothing creates quality woollen jumpers that do not pill or lose their shape. They work with the best British lambswool, sourced from trusted farms. The yarn comes from one mill that has been spinning in Denby Dale in Yorkshire for over 200 years and it is knitted in Hawick, Scotland, in mills which make the best jumpers in the world, for some of the best known luxury brands and also Community Clothing.
Community Clothing is a British clothing brand and social enterprise founded in 2016 by award winning clothing designer and judge on BBC One’s The Great British Sewing Bee Patrick Grant. Community Clothing does good things for people and communities in the UK, creating jobs where they’re needed most.
The mission is simple; to sell great quality clothes at prices people can afford; to make these clothes in the best British factories from the finest natural materials; and by doing this to create work and support skilled jobs in regions of the UK that need them most. In short, Community Clothing sells great quality clothes, at affordable prices and consequently creates loads of fantastic jobs in places that really need them. To date Community Clothing has created 279,000 hours of work and supported 1,880 jobs. Community Clothing has a network of 42 partner factories all over the UK, located predominantly in the Northwest, Yorkshire, the East Midlands and South Wales.
Community Clothing has developed a unique business model that keeps costs super low, enabling the brand to produce clothes in the very best UK factories from the best materials, and still sell them at affordable prices. The unique business model utilises off-peak production, creates seasonless, brilliant basics, supports ultra local supply chains and promotes radical simplicity.
Text and images courtesy of Community Clothing
Find out more:
communityclothing.co.uk
@community_clothing