UNIQLO is proud to offer the excellent services of its first RE.UNIQLO STUDIO in Antwerp. The studio is managed by a team of committed people who have worked at UNIQLO for years and have a lot of experience in alteration.

UNIQLO just opened its RE.UNIQLO STUDIO in Antwerp, marking the 36th of its kind worldwide. With this relatively new project, the brand wants to create something positive for the future by keeping its items in circulation longer. UNIQLO is doing this by repairing, remaking, reusing, and recycling your beloved clothes to give them a next chapter.
UNIQLO is proud to offer the excellent services of its first RE.UNIQLO STUDIO in Antwerp. The studio is managed by a team of committed people who have worked at UNIQLO for years and have a lot of experience in alteration.
The RE.UNIQLO STUDIO in Antwerp is situated on the first floor of the Uniqlo store
It’s UNIQLO’s goal to increase the value of LifeWear. The first way to do this is to repair garments and perform CPR on damaged clothing. No matter how damaged your garments are, UNIQLO tries to always extend or give new life to your clothing. From placing visible or invisible patches to replacing buttons, they can do it all. Prices for the repair of your UNIQLO clothing start at 2 euros.
At the RE.UNIQLO STUDIO, they also remake and customize your UNIQLO clothes however you like by using patches, a special Sashiko stitching technique, and more. At the studio, there’s a catalog with different themes, colors, fonts, and more to choose from. You can also do this to new items that you bought at UNIQLO.
For example, when we went to test out the RE.UNIQLO STUDIO, we customized a wool turtle neck with an embroidered seahorse that is wearing a bow tie. Because what’s better than a UNIQLO wool turtle neck? That’s right; a UNIQLO wool turtle neck with an embroidered seahorse that is wearing a bow tie.
However, if you’re really sick of certain clothes, you can drop them off at a UNIQLO store near you, where they collect and donate them to people in the community who need them. In Belgium, UNIQLO has been working with Solidarité Grands Froids for over five years.
As a last resort, when there is no hope for your clothing, unwearable clothes are collected and used as raw materials or recycled into materials for new clothing and energy sources.
A closer look at the UNIQLO wool turtle neck with an embroidered seahorse that is wearing a bow tie
For the RE.UNIQLO STUDIO in Antwerp, UNIQLO is collaborating with Belgium-based Japanese clothing maker Studio Masachuka. As a part of this ongoing collaboration, Studio Masachuka customizes UNIQLO garments that will be sold exclusively at the Antwerp store.
The garments that they use are mainly pieces that have small defects. Studio Masachuka repairs the products in a creative way by adding patches, painting, or other ways to make them into a unique item.
The RE.UNIQLO STUDIO is located on the first floor of the UNIQLO store in Antwerp (Meir 67/69) and it is open during the normal opening hours. If you’re spending more than 100 euros at UNIQLO Antwerp from 1 to 3 December, you can win some epic RE.UNIQLO STUDIO prices.

Customized clothing by Studio Masachuka


Photos: UNIQLO
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