Accessories

On this Accessories category page, you’re browsing smaller add-ons that shift from everyday basics to occasion pieces, pulled from multiple partner retailers for side-by-side browsing. The range runs from belts, sunglasses and hats through to jewellery, hair pieces and scarves, with partners grouping items differently: one retailer splits by colour variants (black, tortoiseshell, gold-tone), another publishes the same style as separate sizes or pack formats. Some items sit in overlapping places, like a coin purse that appears under wallets and also under small bags. It’s not a tidy category. Stock and shades move around as partners update listings, so a size run or finish can look complete one day and broken the next.

Read on for how Accessories listings are grouped, sized, and described

Core groupings you’ll run into

Most partners publish clear clusters: designer sunglasses (polarised vs non-polarised lenses, 52–58mm lens width), belts (pin-buckle vs plaque-buckle, S–XL sizing), and hats like beanies and caps (one-size vs adjustable strap). Some sunglasses appear as one listing with multiple lens shades; others are split into separate entries per frame finish. Small pieces dominate the scroll. Accessorize is a frequent anchor for hair clips, hoop earrings and scarf lines, where the same pattern is repeated across different widths and metal tones.

Sets, multipacks, and how variants get published

In accessories, formats vary sharply: earrings can be single pairs or 3–6 pair multipacks, hair grips can be 20–40 piece packs, and scarf listings might bundle two prints as a set. It changes fast. One partner groups colour options under one product with a dropdown; another posts each shade as its own entry, so “cream” and “stone” look like different items even when the fabric and length match. Claire’s appears regularly for multipack hair elastics and stud sets, where pack count and metal finish (silver-tone vs gold-tone) are the key differences.

Sizing and spec details that aren’t consistent

Specs get uneven treatment across partners, so it helps to read the line-level details: belt size might be given as waist inches (30–38) or as S/M/L, and sunglasses can show bridge width (16–20mm) on one listing but only “standard fit” on another. Measurements matter. Scarves are another example—some publish 180 x 70cm, others only say “oversized” even when the weave and hem look similar. For mens leather belts, watch for exact length, hole spacing, and whether the listing states cut-to-size construction or fixed sizing.

Materials, build, and functional features

Construction details separate lookalikes: sunglasses might be acetate vs metal frames, with spring hinges noted on one listing but absent on the next; belts can be full-grain leather vs bonded leather, with stitched edges or painted edges changing how they wear. Hardware tells a story. For wallets and purses, check zip-around vs popper closure, plus RFID lining and the number of card slots (6–12) if it’s stated—sometimes it’s buried in the description. Zara is an anchor you’ll see for metal-finish sunglasses and structured belts, where buckle shape and frame weight shift by colour and season.

Quick checks people make while scanning

Shoppers tend to sanity-check three things: the exact size (cm length, lens width, or belt inches), the material line (leather vs faux leather, acrylic vs metal), and the closure or fastening (lobster clasp, stud back, pinch clip, buckle type). Details decide whether it works. For womens hair accessories, also check whether it’s a single claw clip or a set, and whether the finish is matte, glossy, or pearl-effect—those variants get split across listings. Shade names drift, so “tan” and “camel” can be near-identical.

How discount codes are used to save on Accessories

Discount codes are one way to reduce cost when buying Accessories through partner retailers, and Discount Promo Codes provides access to discount codes for those retailers as part of the platform. The product area itself stays varied—winter scarves may be listed as 180cm blanket styles or tighter-knit 150cm lengths, and partners rotate colours like charcoal, oatmeal, and burgundy at different times. Links to retailers’ discount code pages can appear alongside product listings, separate from the product details. There’s also a fixed operational note: 20% of profits are donated to charity each month, which sits alongside the retail linking model rather than changing how any individual item is listed.