- Armor Lux. Knitwear
- Atoma. Notebook and organizing system
- August Schär. Coconut Weaving Mill
- Caran d’Ache. Ball-Point Pens
- Crown MiIl. Correspondence Paper
- Dovo. Manicure Instruments
- Guthmann. Jewellery
- Güde. Knives
- Hack Lederware. Leather Goods
- Jokipiin Pellava. Towelling
- Klar. Soaps from Heidelberg
- Knowledge Cotton Apparel. Green Fashion
- Kösen Toy Manufacture
- Kreis Leather Manufacturers
- La Rochère. Glassware
- Lapuan Kankurit. Linen Weaving
- Lindner. Porcelain Lighting
- Lotte Sievers-Hahn. Manger Figures
- Ludwig Schröder. Leather Belts
- Menard. Jewellery
- Mühle. Shaving Utensils
- Original BTC. Lamps
- Red Wing Shoe Company
- Riess. Enamelled Pots and Pans
- Robert Herder. Windmill Knives
- Seldom. Seamless Knitwear
- Sneeboer. Garden Tools
- Sonnenleder. Leather Goods
- TrueStuff. Bed Linen
- Waldmann. Writing Implements
- Werkhaus. Furnitures
- X47. Organizer System
Manufacturers
Armor lux. Maritime Style from Brittany


"Armor" is the Breton word for sea, and "lux" can only mean the light on the coast. A maritime style, in any case, is what characterises many of the garments produced by Armor lux, a company set up by a Swiss man in the Breton town of Quimper at the end of the 1930s – sweaters, shirts, dresses, trousers, hats, caps and scarves. In the 1960s, Armor lux established its own dyeing workshop so that all manufacturing processes were gathered under one roof, from fabric production to quality controls. The first major collections were introduced onto the market in 1970. Today, the company's repertoire also includes uniforms. The French police and their colleagues from the postal service are fitted out by Armor lux, as are the employees of Paris's airports and the state railway organisation SNCF. The garments in our collection are made by Armor lux exclusively from certified organically grown cotton.