Service
Turnkey clothing store development
A catalog with size and color variants, size charts, LiqPay and Fondy payments, Nova Poshta delivery, stock sync. Your first payment — in 6–8 weeks.
What's included
Sizes, returns, stock: what a clothing store can do
Why this is a separate task
- A clothing shopper online doesn't pick by SKU. They pick size M in blue, check the size chart, read how to return it, and expect a parcel status without calling support. For a clothing store, all of these mechanics are standard scope, not an "extra."
Catalog and product variants
- Size + color variants — one product page, several SKUs. The shopper picks a variant and sees the photo for that color, the stock on hand, and the variant's price. No "size L is sold out" without warning.
- Size charts — built into the product page, tied to a category or brand. Separately for adults, kids, and footwear.
- Catalog filters — by size, color, brand, material, price range, new arrivals, and discounts. No page reload.
- Multi-category structure — clothing for men / women / kids / by season / by brand — any tree structure with cross-links between categories.
Payment and delivery
- LiqPay and Fondy — Visa/Mastercard cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay, installment payments (Monobank, PrivatBank). Switched in the settings, no code changes.
- Nova Poshta API — delivery cost calculated to a branch or by courier, parcel tracking in the customer account, automatic SMS notifications.
- Return flow — a separate form in the customer account: choose the product, give a reason, upload a photo, track the request status. The statutory 14-day return window is built into the checkout flow.
Inventory and integrations
- Stock sync with 1C/CRM — updates both ways: sell on the site, minus one in 1C; receive a shipment, plus in the catalog. No keeping two databases by hand.
- Product import from Excel — if there's no 1C, we upload the first batches from a spreadsheet; we provide the template. We train your content manager to run the catalog on their own.
- Google Shopping feed and Meta Catalog — an automatic XML/JSON feed with your products, compatible with Merchant Center and the Facebook/Instagram Catalog requirements. We set up the first sync.
Customer account
- Orders, statuses, repeat purchases, delivery addresses. Saved sizes — the shopper doesn't re-enter them every time.
Case studies
Clothing stores that already sell
How we work
How we launch a clothing store in five steps
Brief and specification
30 minutes on Zoom: how many SKUs, which variants, which integrations (1C/CRM/warehouse), and the delivery and return logic. We put it all in writing. You get: a spec with a page map, a list of features and integrations, a budget range, and timelines.
Design
Wireframes for the catalog, the product page (with variants and a size chart), the cart, checkout, and the customer account. Three rounds of edits — within budget. You get: approved desktop and mobile mockups plus a fixed price for the full scope.
Development and catalog population
In parallel: we build, your content manager uploads products using our template (or we take the first batch into scope). Weekly staging deploys — you see progress in the browser. You get: a fully functional store on staging with real products and configured integrations.
Integrations and testing
We connect LiqPay/Fondy, Nova Poshta, 1C or CRM. We test with live transactions: a real payment, tracking sent, a return in the account. You get: a signed test report; every scenario (payment/decline/return) verified.
Launch and handover
We migrate from the old site (if there is one), set up redirects, connect GA4 and Google Merchant Center. You get: a live clothing store + a guide for the content manager + 30 days of free support.
Numbers
years in business
SKUs in the catalog
weeks — average time to launch a clothing store
FAQ
Questions before starting a clothing store
Let's talk
Describe your clothing store — we'll cost the launch
- 30 minutesOne-on-one online
- Flexible formatVideo or phone call
- Solution-focusedPractical answers

More detail
A turnkey clothing online store: what you really need to sell
A clothing online store is technically a more complex project than a bookstore or an electronics store, and the reason isn't the number of products. The problem is variants: one sweater can come in six sizes and four colors — that's 24 SKUs with their own stock, prices, and photos. Multiply by 500 catalog positions, and it's clear why "a regular site build" and building a clothing store are different tasks.
The key mechanic is variants on the product page. The shopper sees one URL, one page, but picks their own combination: size S, blue color. The site shows the photo for that color, checks the stock for the S+blue combination, and flags right away if it's out of stock. Without it, the shopper orders at random, then cancels or returns. That's a return, not a sale. Open the portfolio and see how this mechanic works in a live store. Portfolio →
Size charts are the second pillar of trust in the clothing niche. Sizes across different brands differ by a position or two, and a shopper who doesn't find a chart on the product page simply goes to a competitor. We build size charts right into the product page, tie them to a category or brand, and adapt them to different sizing systems (UA/EU/US/UK). The admin edits them without a developer.
Payment and delivery in Ukraine in 2026 is a settled set: LiqPay or Fondy for cards, installment payments via Monobank or PrivatBank, Nova Poshta for shipping. We connect all of this along with parcel tracking in the customer account and automatic SMS notifications. If the payment gateway on the site throws an error or a parcel "goes missing" — the shopper sees it themselves, without calling you. More on e-commerce integrations on the main service page. E-commerce →
Stock sync with 1C or CRM is standard scope for a clothing store where the goods physically sit in a warehouse. Without sync, you either keep two spreadsheets or sell what you don't have. We set up a two-way exchange: site → 1C after every order, 1C → site after every receipt or adjustment. If you don't have 1C — we pick an alternative for your volume.
A clothing store's advertising options depend directly on the quality of the product feed. Google Shopping and Meta Catalog pull product data from your site automatically — if the feed is formed correctly. We generate XML for Google Merchant Center and JSON for Facebook/Instagram and set up the first sync before launch. Ads switch on the day of release, not a month of setup later. Let's talk if that's your case — the form below or the calculator for a preliminary range. Calculator →
A clothing store online is built once and has to work through several seasons without a rebuild. So at the brief we find out not only "how many products now" but also "how you see the store in two years": new categories, entry into new markets, wholesale clients, a mobile app. The structure we lay down has to withstand that growth. Tell us the task — in 30 minutes we'll say exactly what it takes for your clothing online store to start working. Get an estimate →





