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RetailLVMH

LVMH launches luxury deadstock resale site—making good on the fashion industry’s past mistakes

By
Sophie Mellor
Sophie Mellor
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By
Sophie Mellor
Sophie Mellor
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April 27, 2021, 12:31 PM ET

Luxury goods conglomerate LVMH is launching an online market platform to sell off its deadstock high-end fabrics instead of letting them pile up in warehouses, or worse, having them destroyed.

The new online marketplace called Nona Source will re-sell fabrics and leathers that were once carefully selected by designers working at one of the many fashions houses owned under the LVMH brand.

The fabrics could come from any of the LVMH-owned brands, including Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, Fendi, Givenchy, Celine, Loewe, and Marc Jacobs.

All materials on sale will be certified LVMH Maisons’ deadstock and will be sold at around 70% of the original wholesale price.

Grassroot idea

The idea began from inventory managers working at Givenchy and Kenzo and was brought to LVMH’s DARE program which is a platform within the company that allows workers to propose ideas that promote a more circular fashion economy.

Unused fabric costs the industry $120 billion per year, according to online deadstock marketplace Queen of Raw, who note wasted fabrics either end up burned or buried.

"@LVMH coming out there and publicly stating what they are doing…is extremely valuable," @queenofraw says. "Everybody's got this waste…But now…we can do better with our waste, make money, save money, have a sustainable story to tell." Https://t.co/jBvCttNKrb

— Queen of Raw (@queenofraw) April 26, 2021

However, the new market place is careful not to sell any LVMH exclusive patterns or branded fabrics so as not to devalue its brands.

LVMH is a hugely profitable business and is doing well even despite the drop in footfall at its stores.

LVMH was in hot water previously about its disposal of excess clothes to ensure they were not reused or sold on. The firm was not the only one to do this. Upmarket British fashion label Burberry burned its unsold clothes, accessories and perfume worth £28.6m in 2018 to protect its brand. LVMH rival Richemont, which owns jewelry and watch brands Cartier, Piaget, and Baume & Mercier, admitted in May 2018 that in an effort to keep its products out of the hands of unauthorized sellers, it had destroyed about $563 million worth of watches.

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About the Author
By Sophie Mellor
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