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  2. Her-Age - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Her-Age

    Her-Age is a platform for buying and selling authenticated second-hand luxury items, filtered by age or fashion era. The company manages authentication, pricing, and delivery, sourcing from suppliers, professional sellers, and small vintage stores. The company also became the first to offer customers the chance to own the NFTs of the items.

  3. Secoo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secoo

    [5] [6] Secoo started out with second-hand luxury as its main product. The company hired a staff of jewellery and luxury goods appraisers to verify their products were genuine. [7] By 2011, Li had 10 small shops in the provinces and opened his first flagship “Secoo” store in Beijing. [5] In January 2011, Secoo website was launched. [5]

  4. Yoshida & Co., Ltd. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshida_&_Co.,_Ltd.

    Producing "Japan Made" products, Yoshida & Co. gained popularity among young people in the 1980s for its low-key wallets, bags and backpacks. [citation needed] The company's most popular brand, PORTER, often collaborates with other fashion brands and consumer electronics companies to produce limited-edition products, examples of which have included cases and bags for Sony PSP, VAIO, and Apple ...

  5. Samantha Thavasa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samantha_Thavasa

    Samantha Thavasa is a Japanese luxury fashion house founded in 1994 by Kazumasa Terada. The label is known primarily for its handbags popular among women in their twenties. Other accessory lines such as Samantha Thavasa Deluxe, Samantha Vega, Samantha Thavasa New York were created to meet different markets.

  6. Wako (retailer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wako_(retailer)

    Wako Co., Ltd. (株式会社和光, Kabushiki-gaisha Wakō) is a department store retailer in Japan, whose best known store (commonly known as the Ginza Wako) is at the heart of the Ginza shopping district in Tokyo. This store is famous for its watches, jewellery, chocolate, porcelain, dishware, and handbags, as well as upscale foreign goods ...

  7. Muji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muji

    In 1991, Mujirushi Ryōhin opened its first international store in London. [10] In 1995, shares in “Muji Tsunan Campsite” were registered as over-the-counter shares of Japan Securities Dealers Association. In 1998, Ryōhin Keikaku listed on the second section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. From 2001 onwards, it was listed on the first section.

  8. Goldpfeil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldpfeil

    There even was a Goldpfeil Shop on the island of Guam in the Western Pacific. Since 1998 the company expanded and became part of the Egana Goldpfeil Group which included premium luxury brands such as Joop and Comtesse and Salamander Shoes, the largest shoe company in Germany. Goldpfeil was also involved in a venture into the ultra premium watch ...

  9. Fukubukuro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukubukuro

    Fukubukuro on sale outside a store on Takeshita Street Tokyo, in 2006. Fukubukuro (Japanese: 福袋, pronounced [ɸɯ̥kɯbɯꜜkɯɾo]; "lucky bag") is a Japanese New Year custom in which merchants make grab bags filled with unknown random contents and sell them for a substantial discount, usually 50% or more off the list price of the items contained within.

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