Navir
An everyday wardrobe cut and sewn in a workshop in Bobigny.
Picture an old workshop in Bobigny, just outside Paris. Rolls of fabric, a cutting table, machines that have been running for forty years. This is the place, with all of its hours of work already behind it, where the Navir brand came into being, in 2023, on the initiative of Renaud and Baptiste. The homepage states it without ceremony: "Navir didn't begin in an office. It began in a workshop."
Several trades have settled inside that workshop over the years: caps, jeans and chinos, shirts and jackets, and the warp-and-weft work that goes into sweatshirts, hoodies and t-shirts. It's that thickness of know-how that allows Navir today to put together a full wardrobe under one roof, from the first pattern line to the last stitch.
The fabrics come mainly from Italy, Portugal and Turkey, chosen for the way they hold, the way they feel, the way they age. Organic cotton runs through the offer: 210 g and 240 g for the t-shirts, denser weights for sweatshirts and hoodies. On certain accessories, French-woven cotton takes over.
And then, tucked at the hem of a t-shirt, at the centre back of a sweatshirt's collar or in the placket of a chambray shirt, a small tricolour detail, almost easy to miss. A quiet way to sign. The whole range carries the Origine France Garantie label.

Why we love this brand
A brand whose workshop predates its logo, not the other way around. Everything is cut, assembled and finished in Bobigny, on a textile site that was there before the name. The fabrics are certified, the weights honest, the coherence held from end to end. A French-made offer that's credible because it comes from inside the chain.
Featured products
Men's Fashion
The men's wardrobe rests on a handful of settled pieces, made to layer into one another without rupture. At the base, the heavy t-shirt in 240 g organic cotton jersey, dense in hand, straight in the fall, with double topstitching at the sleeves and body and a small tricolour detail at the lower left. Over it, the fleece sweatshirt in a straight cut, brushed inside, ribbing at the cuffs and hem, in six colours that run from white to fire red. Higher still, the chambray shirt in soft 100% cotton, white buttons, long sleeves, for the days that call for a collar. And the piqué knit polo for whatever sits in between.
Women's Fashion
The women's collection unfolds across fifteen references of basics, mainly in organic cotton. The t-shirt takes several forms: classic, long sleeve, V-neck, long sleeve henley. The polo too, in piqué knit, in jersey, or in a long sleeve version. On the warmer side, the fleece sweatshirt, the hoodie, the zip hoodie, the hooded sweatshirt and the French terry sweatshirt run from white to heather grey. The shirt comes in chambray. And the unisex canvas overshirt rounds off the line. Sizes available from XXS to 3XL depending on the piece.
Accessories
The accessories make up the most local corner of the catalogue. A six-panel cap in organic cotton, one-size adjustable, structured peak, in four understated colours (black, navy blue, burgundy, storm grey). A natural cotton tote bag for everyday use. A 14-inch laptop sleeve. And two shoulder or back formats, the sports duffle and the drawstring backpack. It's here, in this category, that the brand pushes its sourcing the furthest: French-woven cotton enters the composition of selected pieces, making this, in the current state of the catalogue, the most French segment of the offer.