Our Legacy says itâs attracted and rebuffed several approaches from would-be investors as the labelâSwedish fashionâs standard-bearer for low-key menswear coolâgrew into a global business in recent years. None seemed like the right fit, co-founder Jockum Hallin said, until LVMH Luxury Ventures came calling.
The luxury conglomerateâs venture armâdedicated to investing in small creative companiesâhas taken an undisclosed minority stake in the brand, The Business of Fashion can reveal. Itâs the fundâs latest investment in a cult menswear label in recent years after it took a minority stake in New York-based streetwear label Aimé Leon Dore in 2022. It has also previously invested in luxury brand Gabriela Hearst, mystery-box start-up Heat and sneaker and streetwear retailer Stadium Goods.
The investment in Our Legacy comes as the brand plots the next phase of development after growing its revenues five-fold over the past three years.
Our Legacy generated sales of â¬40 million ($43.6 million) in the fiscal year ended 30 June 2024, up from â¬30 million the year prior and â¬8 million in 2021, the company told BoF.
âItâs not like we needed the investment from a cash-flow perspective â our revenue figures doubled three years in a row and we achieved really healthy profitability,â Hallin said. âItâs more to look to the future as we build the next era.â
Already stocked at around 250 luxury retailers from Dover Street Market to Kith, the brand is now looking to bolster its direct-to-consumer business, eyeing store openings in key cities such as Paris, New York, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Shanghai and Hong Kong, said Richardos Klarén, the brandâs co-founder chief executive. It currently has two stores in Stockholm, one in London and Berlin, and three in South Korea operated by local distribution partner Handsome Corp. A Paris flagship is slated for late 2025. Its largest markets include South Korea, the UK and North America.
Our Legacyâs reputation has grown steadily since its origins in 2005 as a line of graphic T-shirts by Stockholm-based founders Hallin, Cristopher Nying and Richardos Klarén. But growth has soared in recent years, becoming a menswear cult favourite and reaching mainstream consumers via coveted collaborations with streetwear label Stüssy and Emporio Armani.
As luxury consumers steadily gravitated away from streetwear, Our Legacyâs minimalist assortment of denim, soft tailoring and knitwear was a major beneficiary of the âquiet luxuryâ trend where shoppers valued a more elevated, logo-free style of dressing. Top-selling SKUs today include its $600 Camion leather boot, along with its trompe lâoiel distressed jeans made with its signature âdigital denimâ print technique. The brand also has a nascent womenswear business, which launched back in 2018.
âI think the customer saw our value at a time when people were shifting away from limited edition sneakers and wanting a more subtle, mature attitude to dressing,â said Hallin.
âOur Legacy is the epitome of the âquiet coolâ movement, featuring a unique blend of contemporary minimalism and creative subversion,â Julie Bercovy, chief executive of LVMH Luxury Ventures said in a statement. âI am resolutely convinced by its ability to push the boundaries of menâs fashion beyond its community of fans, while remaining true to its roots and identity.â
The brand doesnât expect its core product offerings to change following the investment.
â[LVMH Luxury Ventures] donât want us to change anything. Some of our best sellers today are products we introduced five or six years ago,â Hallin said, adding that the brand will have more capital to fund special projects, storytelling efforts and attract key hires.
âI think the reason why we partnered with them [over other interested parties] was because they understood our vision and DNA, and want to protect that,â Klarén added.