Pepe for FIT GIRLS
FIT online clothing can now offer you Pepe Girls clothing to buy online now.... Pepe clothing believe that "everything worn with denim" is the way to go and all of their clothing reflect this. Pepe Jeans are the ideal denim trousers for the sexy woman and girls of all shapes and sizes flock for the new range of pepe designer labels. Feel free to browse this section and buy anything from Jeans to Tops, Dresses to vests, the uber cool, extremely stylish pepe clothing range is guaranteed to make any wearer look a million bucks!
Pepe Ankie White Shirt
The Ankie Loose Fit White Shirt is brought to you by the style icon, Pepe.
£49.99
Pepe Jackeline Cardigan
The Spring Pink Polka Dot Jackeline Cardigan is brought to you by Pepe.
£54.99
Pepe Kleine Leire Dress
Pepe bring you the ultimate in luxury and style with the Blue Kleine Leire Dress
£64.99
Pepe Madagascar Top
The Fuchsia Madagascar Vest Top is brought to you by Pepe, the designer label with iconic style.
£44.99
Pepe Savina Blouse
Make a bold statement with the Peach Sleeveless Savana Blouse, brought to you by Pepe.
£39.99
Pepe Olympia Jeans
Pepe would like to introduce the Worn Look, Boot Cut, Slim Fit Indigo Olympia Jeans.
£69.99
Pepe Twiggy Jeans
The seductive Slim Fit, Worn Look, Blue denim Twiggy Jeans are brought to you by the legendary Pepe.
£74.99
Pepe History
Pepe Jeans is one of the fastest growing denim and casual wear brands in Europe. The brand has a presence in several countries around the world. Pepe Jeans were launched in India in 1989 and has expanded immensely since then.
It was 1973. Jeans wear entrepreneur Shantilal Parmar spotted Nitin Shah, who worked for a petrol station, and made him a commissioned agent selling jeans. From that moment, Nitin learned from the pioneer of British denim Shantilal Parmar all about the ropes of the jeans wear business, from washes, fabrics, and stitching. After this, Nitin envisioned a denim empire and commissioned the help of his brothers Arun and Milan Shah. The Kenya-born brothers decided to set up shop: Sholemay Ltd, Pepe Jeans. The brothers thought that naming it “Pepe” was a short, cute name which was easy to write (and remember). The brothers sold their goods at a road side stall along Portobello Road Market in West London, which they rented and ran every Saturday, despite having full-time jobs at hand. As the business started to flourish, the company of Shantilal Parmar, Nitin Shah’s former employer, created jeans for the brothers which they sold at their stall. By 1975, the brothers already had four denim stalls in London. One of the stalls was stationed at Kensington Market, which was the selling place of many denim sellers who found success in the jean biz. With the expansion of their business, the brothers opened a Pepe Jeans boutique at Kings Road, London. After that, they opened another boutique at Carnaby Street and a 25,000-feet office and warehouse at the Avonmore Trading Estate. Through the 1980’s, the denim company became the center of attention of Europe’s denim-toting audience, and was consequently heralded as one of Europe’s best clothing lines. It trounced all big American denim brands.
In the 1980s the brand grew and it became one of Europe's best clothing brands. The songs "Heart And Soul" by T'Pau and How Soon is Now? by The Smiths was used to advertise the brand in 1987 and 1988 respectively.
1992 - Current Pepe jeans logo is introduced.
In a market saturated with denim brands (7 for All Mankind, Rock and Republic, J Brand, True Religion, Diesel, 18th Amendment, Current/Elliott and scads more) Pepe Jeans is a stalwart classic. This British brand has held court for more than 30 years with cool, laid-back apparel.
Time Frame
Pepe Jeans was founded in 1973, a year that saw young people flock toward denim, whether it was faded, embellished, patched or broken-in.
History
Kenyan brothers Nitin, Arun and Milan Shah founded Pepe Jeans with a small stall at London's Portobello Road market. They sold their denim wares every Saturday--and business expanded. By 1975, Pepe Jeans were sold at four market stalls around the city; they would eventually move everything to a 25,000-meter warehouse-and-office. By 1980, Pepe Jeans was regarded as the most successful UK denim brand in history.
Features
Today, Pepe Jeans offers denim - as well as shirts, pants, dresses, accessories and other casual clothing for men, women and children. Manufacturing is done solely by Pepe; denim is carded, or cleaned of additional fibers, and typically dyed with indigo- and sulphur-based dyes. Many garments feature hand-embroidery, including the signature logo.
Fun Fact
The current logo, "Pepe Jeans" is a loopy script adopted in 1992.
Famous Ties
Pepe is known for its slightly naughty ad campaigns, which have featured Bridget Hall, Ione Skye, Jason Priestley, Sienna Miller and Ashton Kutcher.
* Founded: Pepe brand jeans began on London's Portobello Road market.
* Company History: Lines have included Basic, BSCO, Hardcore, Buffalo, and Tommy Hilfiger labels; Pepe Group Plc. bought by SEL International Investments Corp. (in turn owned by Apparel International Holdings Ltd., the parent company of Tommy Hilfiger), 1993; entered U.S. market with Pepe Jeans USA, 1993; acquired license for new Tommy Hilfiger line of jeans, 1995; separate units for women's and men's Hilfiger jeans formed, 1996; signed deal to distribute Tommy Hilfiger lines in Europe, 1997; signed licensing agreement with Keystone Industries, 1997; Pepe Jeans USA unit sold to Tommy Hilfiger Corp., 1998; opened first U.S. Pepe stores, 2001.
* Company Address: Pepe House, 11 Lower Square, Old Isleworth-on-Thames, Middlesex TW7 6HN, UK.
* Company Websites:www.pepejeans.com.
In the notoriously competitive denim sales market, Pepe has been able to maintain its profile as much through witty and eclectic marketing as through design details. The company and its various casualwear lines have carved a niche by concentrating on prompting a contemporary, directional image which has enabled them to establish an identity distinct from the nostalgia-led promotional strategy of many jeans companies.
A potent mix of references has marked out Pepe and its sister ranges as fashionable and different. The attention to detailing, with double stitched seams and copper rivets, so important to serious denim wearers, has underpinned their success and enabled Pepe to prosper. The range of different denims it produces has also been significant; the firm has maintained a reputation for quality, both in its staple Basic line, which established Pepe's classic straight-cut shapes for jeans and jackets, and its production of a changing array of washes and dyes to pick up on current fashion trends for its other lines.
Having started life in London's Portobello Road market, Pepe has always had an affinity with street fashion and urban life, and it is this ability to chime in with the Zeitgeist that brought them to the fore in the 1980s. After the dip in denim's popularity at the start of the decade, the slick advertising of the market leader, Levi Strauss, dominated by retro 1950s cool, sent jeans sales rocketing, partly triggered by the obsession with so-called design classics and media hype. If Pepe was lacking the long history of the main American labels, it certainly made up for it with its originality of approach.
Pepe recognized its own strengths as a British-based name and employed strong, innovative advertising to promote its ranges. The company understood that it was just as important to generate an aura of streetwise cool about its product, as to keep up with trends in fabric washes and design details. From 1986 Pepe sidestepped the traditional American imagery associated with jeans and produced a series of ads which ultimately led to an almost complete brand awareness by the end of the decade. Pepe's advertising achieved cult status; two of its most successful campaigns produced a soundtrack of contemporary music fitted together with well-known club images for the usually-resistant younger market. The "Wears Pepe" series cut images of avant-garde nightclub figure Leigh Bowery with shots of natural-looking models in Pepe denims and increased Pepe's status as a company which could both encapsulate and define the times.
Along with the memorable "Raindance" advertising, which also brought together maverick elements, looking more like a clip from a film than a piece of marketing, and "Laughter," which simply showed a group of people smiling and talking in a park in Pepe clothes, the company created a precedent. Pepe had recognized a crucial element of the 1990s youth market, seeing that the video generation was not taken in by straightforward name-plugging, but wanted to feel in on the joke, as though they were part of the street culture which Pepe represented.
Pepe has defined its role within the denim market and built on its strengths by clever advertising and an empathy with street fashion. If never quite in the same league as the biggest names in denim, it chose to strike out in a different direction, leaning on the contemporary rather than exploiting its own history to promote its ideals, such as the now legendary SoulHole parties. This approach has since been mimicked by other British casualwear names, but never with Pepe's originality and quality of research, in marketing or design.
From the early 1990s, Pepe became inextribably linked with Tommy Hilfiger, when it was bought by SEL International Investments Corp., which in turn was owned by Apparel International Holdings Ltd., the corporate parent of Hilfiger. Then Pepe Jeans USA secured the license for the new Tommy Jeans line, which debuted amidst much fanfare. The momentum of Hilfiger did much for Pepe, long considered a European jeans brand, to break into the American market and challenge such titan Levi Strauss. By 1997 the Tommy Jeans collections were the top-selling brand in over 1,200 U.S. departments stores, many of which had in-store Hilfiger boutiques, and Pepe London had signed exclusives agreements with Tommy Hilfiger to market products throughout Europe, as well as another licensing deal with the Montreal-based Keystone Industries to produce and distribute Pepe's own jeans in Canada.
The following year, 1998, Pepe Jeans USA was bought by Tommy Hilfiger Corp., just as the division planned an expansion of its women's denim collection and added styles to Tommy Jeans for men and boys. In 2001 Pepe Group Plc., sans its American subsidiary Pepe Jeans USA, announced plans for stores to open in Los Angeles, Miami, and New York carrying Pepe denim, outerwear, and accessories for both sexes. Though the company was already established in London, elsewhere in Europe and in Latin America, these were the company's first U.S. stores. Pepe clothes were successfully sold in American specialty and department stores, but as Pepe executive Jonathan Cea told David Grant Caplan of Women's Wear Daily (19 April 2001), opening the firm's own shops was "the best form of advertising. It solidifies you as a brand."

