LGBTQ-Owned Verillas Brings Modern Renaissance Fashion to All 🏳️‍🌈

by | Oct 7, 2024 | COMMUNITY, CULTURE, FASHION, POP CULTURE, QUEER RVA

Just a quick glance through the website for Verillas and you immediately feel like you are transported into the world of somewhere fantastical such as Lord of the Rings or Game of Thrones. Truthfully, you would not be wrong as the line is partially inspired by the pastime of LARPing and cosplay.  

Founded by Alice Greenbrier, Verillas is an online retailer based in Central Virginia that specializes in kilts, boots and a style known as ModRen, which means effectively what it sounds like – a clothing style that not only can you wear to your next ren fair, or down to the Lombardy Kroger to pick up a fresh rotisserie chicken. 

Verillas-by-Ash-Griffith_RVA-Magazine-2024
Photo courtesy of Verillas

The name, Verillas, and the shop itself were born during a brainstorming session while Greenbrier was running one of the country’s largest musical instrument shops. As a side project, she had a few different clothing brands that admittedly she never intended to do much with aside from getting to sketch out designs and make small batch things for her, friends, and the occasional rock star who needed stage wear. Greenbrier has always been into fashion to some degree, although she shares that she went to business school and swears her artistic talents are limited. 

However, between this love and her love of ren fairs, it’s not a surprise that the roads ultimately led her to opening up Verillas. 

“While I was doing some like burning man stuff, some everyday like fantasy and meets regular clothes kind of stuff, I just got really into blending things. [Because] if I was gonna put all this money out, even for myself or to sell to a friend, I thought, ‘Man, it could be hundreds of dollars for a garment. Why can’t you wear it?” said Greenbrier. “Your Friday night date night look, in addition to being able to blend it into your pirate costume on the weekend or what have you. ModRen just came from the idea of modern stuff that blends with renaissance era fantasy stuff. And that’s kind of what Verillas has been about the whole time.”

Verillas-by-Ash-Griffith_RVA-Magazine-2024
Photo courtesy of Verillas

While Verillas is absolutely hitting it out of the park with functional and sustainable fashion, they are certainly not alone in their thought process. The idea of getting multi-functional wears out of your garments is something that is staying on the public’s mind even more these days, especially as inflation and the economy continue to butt heads in an ongoing battle to the death. So the idea of being able to wear your favorite fit to both the Maryland Ren Faire and then to lunch with friends on a Tuesday isn’t this smart idea, anymore. It’s survival. 

“I definitely think it has left the barn of niche and is now very mainstream to blend medieval into fashion as well as post apocalyptic and a few other things we dabble in,” said Greenbrier. “It really kind of blew up on its own. I didn’t mean to make it a trend, I think just popular movies, TV, shows, Ren Fairs, Burning Man, like a lot of stuff together [along wit]h millennials getting old enough to be the primary people that are out doing things, whether we have a lot of money or not. We are the people spending money on things like being out where you’d wear your nice clothes and go do something cool or put on a costume. We like nostalgia. We like joy. We like escapism because we have had a really tough time as a generation so far, myself included. So I love to go into the woods and dress up like a fairy barbarian and forget about my problems for a week as my vacation.”

Verillas isn’t just your next stop for cool gear that you can wear out and about, or as part of your next cosplay (I may or may not have the very Trigun-esque coat bookmarked as we speak), but they are a proudly LGBTQ owned business, and they not only have this marked throughout their website, but also with a section marked, Transcend Gender, which describes itself as “A shopping experience without gender boundaries.”

With the world growing ever more scary and uncomfortable in varying ways, Greenbrier acknowledges herself the power of fashion and how it can affect your mind set, even with something as simple as an outfit that makes you feel like a powerhouse when you walk out the door. Whether it is a pair of sturdy combat boots, or a worn graphic t-shirt, sometimes the right outfit really can make you feel safe and confident. Her go to battle outfit? 

Verillas-by-Ash-Griffith_RVA-Magazine-2024
Photo courtesy of Verillas

“Oh, for me, it’s definitely like our havoc jeans that fit like jeggings,” said Greenbrier. “They’re a little stretchy. Knee high boots. some kind of like a fitted top. I either love a thigh holster or like shoulder holsters because I’ve always just got a lot of things on me for the day. From office stuff to tools to, you know, whatever makes me feel like whatever happens, I didn’t leave my important thing at home. I’m ready, and if I’m out at night too, especially as a trans woman married to a cis woman, we want to feel safe. Whatever else I’m bringing for personal protection and stuff. It’s kind of neat to feel locked and loaded wherever I’m going. A lot of the stuff that I make that’s kind of my thought process behind it. I feel like Tomb Raider. Equally ready to party or protect myself. Whatever needs to happen.”

For more information on Verillas you can visit their website HERE.

Ash Griffith

Ash Griffith

Ash is a writer and improviser from Richmond. She has a BA in English from VCU and an associates in Theater. When she isn't writing or screaming on a stage, she can usually be found wherever the coffee is. Bill Murray is her favorite person along with her black cat, Bruce.




more in community

The Strange Afterlife of Virginia’s President Heads

Editor's Note: Reminder, the sculptures are located on private property and are not open for general visitation. Access is available only through scheduled guided tours, with Labor Day weekend currently expected to be the final tour on the calendar. Tour information...

Fourth of July 2026 in Richmond: Fireworks, Festivals, and More

The best Fourth of July celebration in Richmond probably isn't the one with the biggest fireworks. It's the one where someone forgot the hot dog buns, the cooler is running low on ice, kids are chasing each other through sprinklers, and somebody insists they know a...

IllumiNATION Tells America’s Story on a Monumental Scale

Editor’s Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with the Virginia Museum of History & Culture on coverage related to America’s 250th anniversary, including Richmond SailFest and IllumiNation. It's hard to impress people with just a building. Yet standing in front of the...

Mayo Island is Finally Whole

The acquisition of the island's last privately owned parcel clears a major hurdle for Richmond's plans to create a public park along the James River. The long-running effort to transform Mayo Island into a public park took a major step forward this week after the...

Field Trip Bikes and the Long Ride of Richmond’s Cycling Culture

I recently bought my first bicycle in more than a decade. Like most people, I started my search online, comparing models, reading reviews, and trying to figure out what kind of rider I actually wanted to be. Eventually I visited several local bike shops before...

Before Richmond Was an Arts City, There Was Best Products

Imagine pulling into a suburban shopping center to buy a toaster and finding a department store that appeared to be falling apart with corners breaking away, walls peeling open like a giant cardboard box, or facades seemingly collapsing under their own weight. For...

A Witchy Guide to the Longest Day of the Year

It's sizzling outside, but the breeze is refreshing, the birds are chirping, and summer is in full swing. The summer solstice, aka Midsummer or Litha, is the longest day of the year, and this year it falls on June 21, with the sun setting at 8:27 p.m. It's a time to...

This New Club is All About Getting Tipsy for History

Did you know that at one point Pepsi was the 6th largest navel power in the world, or that there is supposedly a box of dicks in the Vatican Museum? These were just some of the surprising history stories I heard at the first meeting of the RVA Tipsy History Club,...