China’s health and wellness boom has driven sportswear growth to a point where it threatens to overtake luxury goods by 2020. In response, the active wear market is rapidly starting to diversify, making room for smaller brands, hoping to capture an increasingly discerning group of Chinese consumers.
This Chinese market is going to be one of the biggest, and people want to have options. The market is shifting in that consumers really want to express themselves and not have the same item as everyone else. For active wear shoppers, working out is less of an event and more of a lifestyle.
Gyms are becoming platforms for fashion and fitness experiences. The luxury and fitness markets seem to have merged. Gyms have members that include famous CEOs of big-name brands. The definition of luxury is changing for China’s rising middle class.
In the past, people bought luxury goods because they wanted to be seen carrying something that represented them and they needed the items to prove their status. But now Chinese consumers are more willing to invest in themselves, such as by traveling, going to cooking classes, or exercising. So it’s not about a bag to show that they have money but more about mental enrichment.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
The New Rules of Resale: EPR turning secondhand into fashion’s strategic growth …
The global fashion industry is facing a decisive regulatory and commercial reset. What began as a sustainability narrative around reuse... Read more
The 2027 Mandate: Why denim’s future hinges on verifiable data
For decades, the global denim industry has relied on a narrative of durability, heritage, and authenticity. That narrative is now... Read more
Europe’s textile core unravels as costs, imports and policy pressure bite
Europe’s textile and apparel sector, long seen as a benchmark for craftsmanship and industrial depth, is slipping into a prolonged... Read more
Automation, innovation, regulation are the forces shaping textiles in 2026
The global textile sector has entered a new era. Early 2026 saw the industry breach a $1.06 trillion valuation, reflecting... Read more
The new Brussels rulebook, every EU apparel order is now a balance-sheet risk
The humble export order sheet is undergoing a transformation. What was once a straightforward commercial instrument: SKU, volume, FOB price,... Read more
Why 2026-27 could be a defining cotton year for India’s farm-to-fashion economy
The global cotton economy is entering a more constrained phase, and for India, the implications run far beyond the farm... Read more
Luxury resale’s next big battle is no longer digital, it is about who controls s…
For nearly a decade, the luxury resale story was written in the language of platforms. Market leadership was measured by... Read more
Digital Arms Race: Indian apparel giants deploy AI to neutralize tariff crisis
The Indian textile and apparel sector is in a digital survival phase in 2026, shifting from traditional labor-intensive models to... Read more
Europe’s Textile Endgame: Why Project FAE is becoming fashion’s most critical in…
Europe’s apparel majors are no longer treating circularity as a branding layer. With Project FAE or Feedstock Activation Europe, the... Read more
Engineering color at source, dye-free production is cutting cost, water, and tim…
For over a century, coloring has been anchored in wet processing, an energy-intensive, chemically saturated stage that happen post spinning.... Read more












