

Wholesale 70S Sunglasses Womens
Buyers who move fast on vintage-inspired eyewear know that frame curvature and temple length variance make or break in-store try-on conversion. Our 70S Sunglasses Womens assortment locks both dimensions to millimeter-precise tolerances across every style so your staff never wastes time explaining fit exceptions. We maintain three distinct bridge widths within the category—narrow, standard, and wide—to cover facial diversity without forcing retailers into custom orders. Every batch ships with pre-attached hangtags that include UV400 certification codes visible at point of sale, reducing customer hesitation during peak traffic hours. Inventory cycles refresh biweekly with no minimum line-fill requirements, letting you pull single-SKU test packs before committing to full-case allocations.
The current lineup spans eight lens tints and five acetate colorways, including two translucent options that have outperformed opaque variants by 22 percent in Q2 flash sales. All hinges use reinforced spring mechanisms rated for 10,000 open-close cycles, a detail that slashes return rates from online buyers who prioritize durability over aesthetics. We stage new arrivals in dedicated warehouse zones marked for same-day dispatch, so your reorder lead time stays under 72 hours even during holiday surges. Profit margins hold steady at 58 to 63 percent across the range because we absorb plating costs for gold-tone finishes rather than passing them as upcharges.
Boutique owners consistently pair these frames with minimalist jewelry displays to create retro-modern vignettes that lift accessory attach rates. E-commerce sellers report higher add-to-cart completion when bundling 70S styles with chain necklaces under 18 inches, leveraging shared visual language between eyewear temples and pendant drops. Distributors appreciate our pallet-level segregation by weight class—lightweight under 28g, midweight 29 to 34g, heavyweight 35g plus—which simplifies freight budgeting per shipment. This category runs on continuous replenishment logic, not seasonal clearance cycles, so discontinued SKUs get phased out only after six consecutive weeks of sub-threshold velocity.
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