F A L L / W I N T E R 17/ 1 8 M A R I A A N D J Ö R G K O C H A N D 0 3 2 C C R O W D , A N D R É M A E D E R , A N G E L A M I S S O N I , FA S H I O N C O U N C I L G E R M A N Y, M U M I H A I AT I , B LAKE MYCOSKIE , #FASHIONTECH, THE GREAT OUTDOORS, FASHION EVENTS
Berlin Fashion Week Magazine #23
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WELCOME
The Governing Mayor of Berlin, Michael Müller
the conference on the future of fashion
JANUARY 18, 2017 Kühlhaus station-berlin www.fashiontech.berlin
Seeing tomorrow’s trends today – this year, too, Berlin Fashion Week will be offering countless opportunities to discover what the future of fashion has in store. Between 17 and 20 January 2017, Berlin will again be transformed into a vast marketplace for designers, retailers, brands, the media and inquisitive fashion lovers from across the globe.
and-coming Berlin labels as well. Berlin Fashion Week gives them the chance to showcase their designs to an international audience and to catch the eye of potential new buyers. But Berlin’s fashion labels are also ambassadors for our city. They show just what Berlin has to offer as a creative, diverse and innovative place.
Creativity, diversity and innovation are the trademarks of Berlin Fashion Week, an event that continues to attract hundreds of thousands of visitors to our capital. I am particularly pleased that this week will see not just famous fashion houses presenting their collections, but up-
With this in mind, I would like to wish all of the fashion designers, fashion lovers and visitors to our city a thrilling four days, many lasting impressions and some exciting encounters.
Imprint PUBLISHER
CONTRIBUTORS
COVER
ADVERTISING
Anita Tillmann | Dr. Florian Bachelin
Tina Molin | Janine Dudenhöffer
Photographer Lukas Wassmann
Advertising Director | Marco Gröning
Jörg Arntz
Berit Großwendt | Adriano Sack
Total Management
Junior Advertising Manager | Xenia Suworova
Till Schröder | Verena Dauerer
Alexandrinstrasse 118–121
PREMIUM E XHIBITIONS GMBH
Julia Mönnich | Chris Danforth
10969 Berlin
PRINTING
Luckenwalder Strasse 4–6 | 10963 Berlin
Gerlind Hector
www.totalworld.us
Wagemann Medien GmbH
Models: 032c crowd
Leuschnerdamm 31 | 10999 Berlin
+49 (0)30 62 90 850 magazine@berlinfashionweek.com
TR ANSL ATION
www.berlinfashionweek.com
Nivene Raafat
+49 (0)30 62 73 52 30 ART DIRECTION
info@wagemann-medien.de
Sonnenstaub – Büro für Gestaltung
www.wagemann-medien.de
EDITORIAL
CIT Y GUIDE
und Illustration
Editor-in-Chief | Christine Zeine
Fenia Moskou
Sonja Marterner | Peter Großöhme
Managing Editor | Sophie Templin
Greifswalder Strasse 29 | 10405 Berlin +49 (0)30 55 57 79 290 | hallo@sonnenstaub.com www.sonnenstaub.com
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RADAR
Ikebana Albums – Ana Kraš Illustrator, artist, model and designer: newcomer Ana Kraš is the ‘Design Star of the Moment’ accor ding to the New York Times. In ‘Ikebana Albums’ the Belgrade-born self-taught photographer offers up a photo diary of the last ten years. The 200-page book catalogues moments in a series of striking and candid photographs (some in colour, others in black and white) with a snapshot aesthetic. www.randomhouse.de, price 39.95 Euro
R ADAR
Smart DHL
Let your car become your pick–up point In future Smart owners will be able to collect packages from their car. A specially designed app has been developed for use by both DHL and Smart drivers. If the customer’s vehicle is located close to their home address when a package is being delivered, the app displays the exact location to the DHL delivery agent, who is then granted access to the car for a specified period. The driver is then informed via push messaging that the package has been successfully delivered. www.paket.de
Unplanned – bespoke surprise holidays Head off on a last-minute trip with no set itinerary: with the help of travel agency Unplanned, the dream of a journey into the unknown is now reali ty. A traveller’s preferences are first collected via questionnaire and a weather forecast is sent two days before the travel date. The final destination is only revealed as you set off. Whether it’s a culture holiday, a yoga retreat or a wilderness adventure, everything is individually tailored. Unforgettable moments guaranteed.
only the best out west
www.unplanned.de
Foldimate – a dream come true Hate folding? Here’s an invention for you: an engineering team from the US took on the time-consuming task of folding laundry and found a solution. From now on, you can leave the job to the ‘Foldimate’. Simply clip your clothes to the device and it gets straight to work, leaving a neatly folded pile of laundry in its tray. As if that wasn’t enough, as it folds, ‘Foldi’ (as we’ve lovingly dubbed the device) also perfumes, softens and treats clothes. A relative of Wall-E perhaps? www.foldimate.com
CONTEMPORARY FASHION, FABULOUS FOOD AND GREAT DESIGN
Adddress Gallery | AM+ | American Vintage | Artek | Azizi | Bensimon | Closed | Labo.Art | Mykita | Odeeh P.a.r.o.s.h. | Premiata | Samsøe & Samsøe | Studio 183 | Teufel/Raumfeld … and many more exceptional stores and pop up boxes.
wonderful to wander bikini berlin
Budapester Str 42 – 50 10787 Berlin www.bikiniberlin.de
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FASHION + TECH
DATE 18 January 2017
LOCATION Kühlhaus, 4th & 5 th floor Luckenwalder Straße 3 10963 Berlin VISITORS Trade visitors + public SCOPE International Entry is free of charge for trade visitors with PREMIUM GROUP visitor badge.
Valerie Lamontage
Ready for a digital upgrade? Berlin’s #FASHIONTECH conference, Europe’s largest showcase for wearable designs, is set to take place on 18 January on floors four and five of Kühlhaus, presenting the latest in 3D printing technology, virtual reality, issues relating to e-commerce and digital solutions as well as innovations from 20 fashion-tech designers hailing from ten different countries and four continents. Fashion-tech pioneers and high-calibre fashion and marketing experts will also be on hand to discuss innovations and business concepts. Light-up LED patterns that turn designer bags into smart screens, elegant accessories that reflect different emotions and impressive sci-fi outfits that change according to the wearer’s mood: the fashion trends of the future dissolve the boundaries between high-tech and design, with couture turning fashion into an experience that expands the senses. From jewellery that can alert you to calls or act as a calorie tracker to smart clothing – at #FASHIONTECH, guests can discover creations by designers such as rising star Anouk Wipprecht. The Dutch designer’s futuristic garments are wearable works of art kitted out with sensors and artificial intelligence that allow them to react to their surroundings. Electronically illuminated crystals add emphasis to the works of new media artist Melissa Coleman and British leather specia list Rachel Freire. Style icon Iris Apfel and the bracelets featured in the ‘Socialite Collection’ by tech company WiseWear prove that wearables can be both stylish and functional. And even the most unusual of materials (step forth mycelia and micro-bacteria) are being employed in fashion to innovative effect. Lusi Ajonjoli will be busy demonstrating bioscience experiments in fashion-tech agency ElektroCouture’s new biochemistry lab. World-class experts will take the stage in various panel discussions and talks to shed light on current trends. Jury members judging Deutsche Telekom’s ‘Fashion Fusion’ innovation contest and representing Wired, Gala, Deutsche Telekom, Adidas Sport Style Division, ElektroCouture and PREMIUM will form a panel discussing what the next level of fashion-tech might have in
by SONJA PETERANDERL
© Offenblende
# FA SHIONTECH
The nex t level: Tech Couture
OPENING HOURS 10.00 – 19.00
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FASHION + TECH
Pankaj & Nidhi
store as well as showcasing innovations. Twelve young talents have spent the last six months in the Berlin-based ‘Fashion Fusion Lab’ designing new products with the support of fashion-tech pioneers such as Lisa Lang, founder of fashion-tech agency ElektroCouture, and Dr Paul Lukowicz, professor of artificial intelligence and a smart textile researcher. The mission to combine design and technological added value has brought fashion groups, tech companies, scientists, designers and programmers together in search of innovation. But how can these new partnerships at the intersection between fashion and tech guarantee success? In a presentation, Trina Watt, founder of consultancy firm Watt Knowledge, will demonstrate how technical know-how can be better shared. “We need a common language for tech experts and fashion designers. Only then can we unleash the full innovative potential of wearables,” explains the tech marketing expert. Insiders will offer unique insights into the corporate culture of digital business, e-commerce strategies and the potential of augmented and virtual reality for the fashion industry. Digital expert Philipp Friesen from Fond of Bags explains how the bag manufacturer has enhanced its internal digital capacity in order to establish seven strong ‘love brands’. Thorsten Höllger, Managing Director at e-commerce agency Gute Marken Online, and Andreas Graf from accessories manufacturer Codello explain how e-commerce solutions can help ease the workload for fashion brands. Florian Schiffer from label Mavi outlines the success factors that can help companies improve customer management and boost brand loyalty. #FASHIONTECH’s start-up area is a showcase for digital solutions. Innovations such as digital price labels are revolutionising sales. Agata Sadowska shows how EllaFashion can help quickly and flexibly adapt prices across all channels – from online stores to boutiques. With its visionary concepts, trend analyses, practical knowledge and creative inspiration, #FASHIONTECH offers visitors an interdisciplinary platform for the fashion of tomorrow that brings together experts and creatives from every field. Melissa Coleman
www.fashiontech.berlin
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TRIPPING THE LIGHT The aesthetic symbiosis of fashion and technology by VERENA DAUERER
Take her ‘Ambience Skirt’, a piece made of a dark material similar to neoprene and embedded with tiny LED lights that light up randomly, giving the skirt an aura of grace as both ornaments and accessories. Lina solders the 27 LEDs together and connects them to a microcontroller, a sort of minicomputer that controls the individual LEDs, instructing them to light up in a specific order. It’s all powered by a small coin battery, which lasts ten hours. All the electronic components are discreetly hidden, sewn in between the outer fabric and the lining of the skirt. Here the technology is so small it’s almost imperceptible. The microcontroller will also survive a hand wash. “You wear it like any other skirt,” says Lina Wassong. This element is crucial in the designer’s eyes: “You should be able to buy an item of clothing and put it on without needing a manual. Once this happens, smart textiles and wearables will finally take off,” she explains. “Technology adds function to design”, Wassong argues. In the exciting creations that she herself designs, she works with light, plays with the materials’ movement and integrates sensors that interact with the surroundings. Wassong completed courses in design at Pasadena City College in Los Angeles, studied garment technology at Hamburg’s University of Applied Sciences (HAW) and completed an internship at a fashion company in San Francisco. Today the designer lives in Berlin. She recently spent three months teaching light design and microcontroller technology to twelve teams of up-and-coming designers in the Fashion Fusion Lab as part of Deutsche Telekom and PREMIUM’s Fashion Fusion Challenge. Her latest creation explores the interaction between 3D printing and light and is being showcased at #FASHIONTECH Berlin. The ‘Symbioses Dress’ presents the communication between the item and its wearer as a highly aestheticised symbiosis. Here too, light has been effectively fused with design.
www.linawassong.com
© Christopher Santos, Lina Wassong/ Vanessa@ViVa Models
Designer Lina Wassong takes fashion to the next level exploring the intersection of fashion and technology and showing us how to seamlessly connect to the world via apparel.
Lina
Wassong
FOOD + TECH
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Berlin’s first interactive eatery Data Kitchen shows how digital eating can become a total work of art
As you enter Data Kitchen via one of Hackescher Markt’s rear courtyards in Berlin’s Mitte district, what immediately catches your eye is its impressive Food Wall, a state-of-the-art digitised vending machine made of 20 compartments. Fine cuisine from an automatic dispenser? Can it be true? Digital eating has gone from fantasy to reality. Today the whole process, from ordering to serving food, can be done digitally. The city’s new digital Slow Food restaurant is the brainchild of none other than Berlin’s cult restaurateur Heinz ‘Cookie’ Gindullis, a man who in recent years has become one of the hottest restaurant owners around with his famed establishments Cookies Cream, Chipps and Crackers. His latest concept restaurant was realised together with SAP, Europe’s largest software company. At Data Kitchen, guests order via app. The unique feature? Whether from home or the office, customers can choose their food and drink and pay on their smartphone all using the Data Kitchen app. As soon as the requested order time rolls around, diners head to the restaurant where they will see their name flash up on the Food Wall. Their order sits ready behind a compartment door, which is unlocked via the app. One of the screens opens and a freshly prepared meal, created under the supervision of head chef Alexander Brosin, is revealed. It isn’t surprising that Cookie teamed up with SAP to realise this innovative concept. After all, Berlin has evolved into a start-up magnet; even Google and Apple have opened offices here. And the Food Wall itself is truly exceptional: its 20 screens and compartments create a stunning data visualisation. A computer program takes anonymised order data and generates animated patterns that wind their way across the screens. The result is a digital artwork. The system was developed by international media festival Ars Electronica from Linz in co-operation with SAP. When discussing the collaboration, Kamila Joanna Laures, Media Relations Director at SAP SE, explains: “Media art is always looking for aesthetic and interactive ways to illustrate what is technically possible.”
© Data Kitchen
by Verena Dauerer
It’s also fitting that Data Kitchen’s opening in December practically coincided with a visit to the capital by the world’s first restaurant to serve 3D-printed food. Over four evenings, Food Ink conjured up 3D-printed culinary creations for guests at wearable agency ElektroCouture’s studio. Where else but in Berlin?
www.datakitchen.berlin
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BERLIN FASHION
Christiane Arp Vogue
Roel de Cooman Adidas
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BERLIN FASHION
BEYOND BORDERS
A boost for fashion designed in Germany
Nicola Knels Vogue
Daniel Wingate Escada
Lisa Lang ElektroCouture
Melissa Drier Fashion Journalist
Angela Missoni Missoni
Christian Ender Bogner
Dirk Schönberger Adidas
Phil Gaedicke BAM & Soto Store
by SOPHIE TEMPLIN
Floriane de Saint Pierre & Associés
Angela Gallenz H&M
Inga Griese ICON
Claudia Hofmann Fashion Stylist
Leadership & Self Discovery, Theoretical Skills/Supply Chain and From Idea to Real ization. The winners are also given the fantastic opportunity to be included in the ‘Eyes on Talents’ portal, where they can showcase their work to a global network of fashion professionals,” explains Claudia Hofmann, FCG deputy chairwoman and the Council’s head of education.
Since 2015, the Fashion Council Germany (FCG) has been tasked with bringing practices to Germany that are already de rigueur on the international fashion scene. Its credo is to increase the visibility of German fashion design at a social, cultural and political level with the aim of helping it gain both national and international recognition. “We want to entice people to take a look. Many of the projects that we at the FCG have initiated in the past twelve months were an invitation – in some cases, a request – to give designs a closer inspection,” explains Christiane Arp, Editor in Chief at Vogue Germany and president of the Fashion Council Germany.
Internationality
The notion put forward by fashion critic Peter Bäldle in an interview he gave to Spiegel Online a few years ago – that fashion was everything, just not in Germany – should from now on be consigned to the past. What has long been good practice in the fashion worlds of Milan, Paris and Great Britain is now also an integral part of Germany’s overall plan for its fashion industry. “Joining forces at the FCG allowed us to combine our efforts to promote Germany as a fashion hub and to speak with one voice that is loud enough to be heard beyond our own borders,” explains Christiane Arp.
Jörg Arntz PREMIUM GROUP
Lena Bremer H&M
Ann-Sofie Johansson H&M
Alexandra Grahé H&M
The other arm of the FCG’s activities features a joint project with fashion company H&M, the Fellowship Programme, which was created last year. Its aim? To provide advice and support to up-and-coming designers over a period of two years. “The Fellowship Programme by the FCG & H&M sees the Fashion Council Germany and H&M offer designers the opportunity to discuss ideas with the most renowned experts in the field. It allows young designers to take part in a range of job postings and workshops at H&M over the course of 50 days within the two-year scheme, as well as individual workshops offered by the Council itself which help them set their business up for successful long-term growth. Scheme participants will be able to gain hands-on experience in areas such as merchandising, buying office activities, production, media training, social media and sustainability. The key is to provide newcomers with access to international expertise as well as knowledge about professional practices in order to give them the skills they need to create and expand their own brands. Knowledge is acquired over three individual learning modules:
Christiane Arp © RalphMecke; Dirk Schönberger © Collier Schorr
The Fashion Council Germany offers two different kinds of support for designers. The first is its Mentoring Programme. Here talented young designers are selected and sponsored in a co-operation between the FCG and the Berlin Senate Department for Economics, Technology and Research. The list of mentees chosen for the scheme includes Nobi Talai, Marina Hoermanseder and William Fan.
Jörg Arntz © Toni Passig; Melissa Drier © Sabrina Theissen; Lisa Lang © ElektroCouture
Initiatives
In order to further emphasise the FCG’s expertise and internationality, international jurors were brought on board, including Angela Missoni, Creative Director at Missoni, Ann-Sofie Johannson, Creative Advisor at H&M, Daniel Wingate, Fashion Director at Escada and Floriane de Saint Pierre, founder of Floriane de Saint Pierre et Associés and Eyes on Talents. “The reality and the potential of German fashion is very interesting and involving. I have learnt something more about my endless attention and passion for evolving talents, ideas and visions of the future,” says Angela Missoni, Creative Director at Missoni. The winners in the four different categories (Womenswear, Menswear, Womenswear & Menswear as well as Accessories) will be announced on 17 January 2017 as part of Berlin Fashion Week. Some of the names on the list of the final ten designers have already been revealed, including Steinrohner, Rianna + Nina, Tim Labenda, Goetze and Benu Berlin.
Konstantin Spachis Madame
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INTERVIEW
INTERVIEW
The Future of Retail
Rem Koolhaas was undoubtedly top of our list when it came to choosing some one for the KaDeWe revamp. He has managed projects globally which have not only combined architecture with modernism, but also brought people together.
Compared to similar projects globally, what level of innovation will the new floors feature? We can proudly state that with the newly opened 16,000 m 2 space (across all three KaDeWe Group sites) in autumn, we are up there with the very best international department stores. Led by Rem Koolhaas, we have completely revamped the KaDeWe’s ten display windows whilst recapturing a look reminiscent of 1907. Both the new, cathedral-inspired front entrance and the redesigned display windows give the KaDeWe a brand new facade. What’s more, the architect’s overall concept will see each of the store’s floors divided into four quadrants, which, in future, will all be accessed by their own escalator. The first quadrant on the men’s floor was opened in mid-November 2016 and offers 2,000 m 2 of the most modern and generous space for men’s footwear and accessories to be found in Europe. We are thrilled that in addition to global players such as Bottega Veneta, Fendi and Valentino, our floor designed by Storage Milano will also feature one of only six existing Louis Vuitton menswear pop-up stores. The launch also saw the opening of a further quadrant on the second floor. The Women’s Designer floor was designed by India Mahdavi and offers names that include Céline, Dolce & Gabbana, Moncler, Chloé, Stella McCartney and Balenciaga. We aim to continue the pace, opening the Modern Women quadrant in autumn 2017 on floor two and further extending the menswear floor with the Classic Menswear quadrant, featuring brands such as Zegna, Brioni, Canali and Hugo Boss. As the project continues, we will also redesign the quadrants on the food floor and the ground floor over the coming years.
India Mahdavi is responsible for the design of the womenswear quadrant. What makes her designs so unique?
KADEWE’S NEW CALLING CARD
India Mahdavi is known for her extraordinary design language as well as her magnificent colour arrangements, which guests can discover in the KaDeWe. After our initial discussions, it was already clear that she was the right person to give a new, state-of-the-art look to our women’s designer quadrant.
Are similar upgrades also planned for the Alsterhaus or Oberpollinger stores?
Anita Tillmann, PREMIUM GROUP Managing Partner, interviews the CEO
A. Maeder: With an eye to the future, it’s important that department stores of our calibre focus more on evolving into immersive experiences and create spaces where visitors can spend time, meet friends and find inspiration. That is why it was particularly important to us to find a mastermind who could bring this overall concept to life.
© Franziska Krug / Getty Images
of The KaDeWe Group, André Maeder
A. Tillmann: We’re increasingly seeing international architects designing world-class fashion stores. How did you end up commissioning Rem Koolhaas to redesign the entire department store?
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Of course there are plans to carry out refurbishments at the Group’s two other sites. Led by architect Jan Kleihues, a completely metamorphosed, impressive acces sories world, covering roughly 2,500 m 2 , was created in the Alsterhaus. In this grand hall you can discover new labels such as Céline, Fendi, Saint Laurent, Jimmy Choo and Bucherer. In the middle range there are labels such as Longchamp, MCM und Hugo Boss. The next stage will follow in spring 2017 with the creation of an over 1,000 m 2 beauty department that will provide a comprehensive range of products to our Hamburg clientele. The rebuilding of our Oberpollinger store in Munich will be overseen by renowned architect John Pawson, who launched straight into the project by creating a superlative home and living floor. An equally exclusive product range awaits in the extraordinary stationary section. We collaborated with Berlin based architect studio Gonzalez Haase to create a brand new urban lifestyle world on the lower ground floor. The result is ‘The Storey’ concept store. 2017 will see the redesign of the ground floor, which will also be led by John Pawson.
Which other European locations are you also planning to develop? In the coming years we will be mainly focused on renovating our three main stores and boosting their international status. But we remain open to exploring other interesting locations that would be right for The KaDeWe Group.
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P.E. NATION
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BERLIN FASHION
© Cora Wöllenstein
ULTRA Contemporary Berlin
PREMIUM Young Designer
SADAK Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Berlin
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BERLIN FASHION
BOULEZAR Andreas Murkudis
FOMME Vogue Salon
PETAR PETROV Vogue Salon
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BERLIN FASHION
MILANO 140 PREMIUM Young Designer
DOROTHEE SCHUMACHER Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Berlin
TWINS FLORENCE PREMIUM Young Designer
MANFREDI MANARA PREMIUM Young Designer
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BERLIN FASHION
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BERLIN FASHION
HORROR VACUI Der Berliner Mode Salon
RITA IN PALMA SHOW & ORDER
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FASHION
It may be the norm for fashion followers in Paris, London or New York to share their local designers’ creations with the wider world, but it is still a rare occurrence in Germany. Who will support German designers if not us, the consumers? Here the New Faces Award funded by Burda is doing its bit, as are the Fashion Council Germany and the Berliner Mode Salon. But there is another way, as shown by a group of ambitious small shops such as the pop up boxes on the ground floor of Bikini Berlin, Edda Mann’s Konk Berlin and Melodie Michelberger’s eponymous PR agency. All of them support their local heroes with slick marketing and sales. “It feels like a paradox to me when I see a chorus of praise being sung for some local designers whose businesses are hanging by a thread,” says Katrin Schlotterhose, fashion blogger and founder of Metropolitan Circus. That is why she wants to use the blog’s online shop to make German design accessible to a wider audience. She set it up single-handedly, brought designers on board and took the photos herself. Another smart move: making the most of her role as blogger by posing in the clothes. It took two months to set up and costs were kept to a minimum. The same can also be said about the range currently on offer. She began when her son was just five months old and initially could only devote three hours a day to the project. As soon as the test phase has been completed, the plan is to take it to the next level. Her label wish-list features names such as William Fan, Louise Friedlaender, Allude, A Kind of Guise, Lili Radu and Bree. In addition to products that impress with their quality and zeitgeist, Schlotterhose is also looking for a team, an office and investors. The target group isn’t the bargain-driven masses but fashion-conscious individualists. “Many German designers work with high-quality fabrics and techniques, and produce locally in small quantities. They thus have high manufacturing costs, which is reflected in the retail price.” Realistically speaking, this shop isn’t going to make Schlotterhose millions. Is the limited demand due to a missing coolness factor or a lack of visibility? “The issue is not that designers don’t understand their craft. It’s most of the stores who, sadly, keep selling almost the same boring looks that they know will bring in revenue,” summarises Schlotterhose. “Ergo, you need to awaken people’s desires by showing them all the amazing things that are available in this country and thus create an awareness for their own market.”
www.metropolitan-circus.de
LOCAL BR ANDS? HERE IS YO U R D E A L E R !
© Tim Labenda
© Steffen Roth
by Janine Dudenhöffer
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PORTRAIT
DANNY REINKE
A PIECE OF TULLE
by Berit Großwendt
Elegance meets coolness, tulle blends with tweed, Mary Poppins dances arm-in-arm with Cinderella down the runway. Flamboyant? You bet. A fantastically modern collection from the mind of Danny Reinke, an emerging German design talent. The 24-year-old Berlin resident manages to combine avant-garde streetwear with opulent haute couture; to fuse the artistic with the commercial. His Casual Couture is imbued with traditional craftsmanship, a hint of nostalgia and devotion to sophisticated details. Elaborate beadwork, lavish flounces, exuberant silhouettes and surprise layering define the pieces. Not forgetting the designer’s favoured material: tulle. “I love working with tulle,” explains Danny Reinke. “It allows me to create volume and to bring my fantasies to life.” In his latest collection for the 2017/18 Fall/ Winter season, ‘Secret Desire’, the theme is inner longing, and this is reflected in various shades of red and an incongruous mix of wearable urban looks and an almost magical elegance. Tightly fitting suits are juxtaposed with exaggerated ribbons, virgin wool with duchess satin, and delicate embroidery motifs with brash flap pockets. Danny Reinke developed his love of fashion while still at school. “I completed a course at art college, and afterwards realised that I absolutely wanted to work in fashion,” says the designer, who grew up in a small fishing village in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. After completing his studies at the FahModa academy for art and design in Hannover, he won the European Fashion Award in 2014 with his final-year collection titled ‘MÖN 10’ and with it the chance to showcase his winning pieces at the Berlin and Vancouver fashion weeks. Danny Reinke is now embarking on the challenging task of establishing his own label both nationally and internationally. Eschewing fast fashion, the focus is clearly on high-quality and perfectly crafted items designed for the modern, style-conscious woman and currently made to measure in his Berlin studio. “Fashion is my life. My goal is to be able to make a living from it.”
www.dannyreinke.de
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BERLIN
A strong man with a brilliant voice: Mumi Haiati is someone who describes himself as loyal, sensitive and playful. As founder of creative agency Bureau Haiati, he works to build creative bridges between New York and Berlin. “They feel like parallel universes. It allows for creative freedom and self-expression.” Haiati is always on the move; always connecting the right people. It’s one of the many keys to his success. Authenticity is another crucial credo, but it’s also something he demands of his clients. A keen eye for substance and a unique perspective – anyone with these qualities stands a good chance of being added to his portfolio. “If you look at my brand portfolio, each designer has a distinctive aesthetic or technique.” The list includes names such as Made and Ottolinger. “I like to work with designers and brands with a strong point of view that are relevant, open to communicate their vision and that I can get along with. I am definitely intrigued in terms of innovation.” One client that arguably embodies this idea of being both different but above all ‘real’ most convin cingly is Swiss label Ottolinger. Their designs allow them to capture subculture at every level. But what makes them so different? “Ottolinger approaches clothes and style in such a refreshing way. They have mastered the art of the low-engineering of garments,
H A I A T I
which makes them exceptionally unique and exciting to work with.” Alongside bases in Barcelona, London and Paris, this softly spoken gentleman now also has a home in Berlin. “Berlin is so many things. It’s the gate to the east but it also is and always was a place that celebrates the rebellious character.” In order to further strengthen creative ties between New York and Berlin, Ottolinger, who usually only showcase at New York platform Made, organised a dinner in the German capital: “The dinner during Made’s launch in Berlin allowed the girls to curate an evening the way they envisioned it – from the menu, to the decor, to the music. It was definitely a new format to the existing Berlin fashion territory.” When it comes to maintaining the right balance bet ween office work, networking and countless events, Haiati, who is of Persian heritage, has a trick up his sleeve: "I have recently taken up meditation. I’ve even meditated in unexpected, noisy places during fashion weeks just to keep me sane and my routine going!”
www.bureauhaiati.com
Mumi Haiati © Jonas Lindstroem; interior © Maxime Ballesteros
by SOPHIE TEMPLIN
B U R E A U
BERLIN
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PORTRAIT
Max Beutler’s bags need only two things: neoprene and climbing rope. Surfing, diving, mountain climbing – the material alone cries “adventure”. And that’s precisely what Embee Studios is: an adventure. em-be-e, the company founder cheerfully explains, is the transliterated initials of his name “with an added ‘e’ for the aesthetics”. Launched following a degree at the Academy for Fashion and Design in Berlin, the 26-year-old Berliner’s bags can already be found at Lala Berlin and in N5 in Vienna. Beutler has a sense for trends and a clear vision: sales online and in selected shops, market launches in the USA and in Asia, a crossover between his designs and the tech sector under the new Embee Lab label, as well as plans for an eventual clothing collection. His minimalist designs are made in Berlin with a small team led by his mother. Another office will also soon be opening in the Czech Republic. Sounds ambitious, and like a lot of work. “True,” laughs Beutler, “but as long as I can say ‘I’m not working, I’m realising my dream,’ it all feels easy.”
DRESDEN 2017 500 JAHRE REFORMATION
www.embee-studios.de
AUF DEM WEG ZUR KURFÜRSTENMACHT
MACHT & MODE DIE KURFÜRSTLICHE GARDEROBE
by Till Schröder
The young adventure of Embee Studios
ZWEI NEUE DAUERAUSSTELLUNGEN IM RENAISSANCEFLÜGEL RESIDENZSCHLOSS DRESDEN · AB 9. APRIL 2017 · www.skd.museum
www.032c.com
“Step by step and stitch by stitch, the whole set-up will become more elaborate,” explains Maria Koch, discussing their upcoming products as she runs her hand over one of the prototypes for 2017. Her feet are surrounded by half-empty cardboard boxes; between her fingers, nothing but pure excitement.
“We will become the largest fashion label operating from Berlin,” claims Jörg Koch, a man who has embraced his own unique style of communication: making brash announcements that he then brings to life. His wife Maria studied fashion design before working at Prada and Jil Sander, as well as teaching at the renowned private school Esmod. She has also been a fashion consultant for Kanye West.
been crafted with the precision of a master tailor: every cut, collar size and thread is carefully checked and calculated. A collection of erotic drawings by Jean Cocteau, something motocross related and a second collaboration with Carhartt are set to appear in the coming months. Since July 2016, the magazine’s eclectic and style-conscious range has been made available not only through their own website but also via Canadian online supers tore ssense where Jörg Koch also works as editorial director. Pop-up stores in Milan, Moscow, Seoul, Hong Kong and Tokyo are planned for the coming year.
MAKING IT MAKING IT
Photo Lukas Wassmann
A quick glance at the list of available products reveals a Gosha Rubchinskiy long-sleeved T-shirt, a woven merino intarsia blanket featuring the gap-toothed face of Lara Stone (from an old 032c cover), a Romy Schneider memorial sweatshirt by Californian artist Cali Thornhill DeWitt, and sports socks bearing the message ‘Remove before Sex’. As well as unleashing a whirlwind of aesthetic and cultural references, these are products that have
Jörg and Maria Koch have also spent most of the last year developing a product line that goes beyond what the rest of us would term ‘merchandising’. The concept is more akin to an exchange of merchandise and information with readers and fans. It doesn’t follow the same rhythm and rules as a comparatively slow biannual print magazine. It also aims to answer the question of how to produce and sell fashion in the digital age.
As is always the case with this pair of quick-witted minds, it’s hard to know where to begin. Should I start by discussing their new lambskin coat in silver-grey? Or perhaps the inventory management system that needs to be urgently installed because their jointly owned company, 032c, is producing, publicising and selling items at such a fast pace that their DIY set-up is struggling to keep up? The project is run from the former parish hall in St Agnes Church where 032c magazine’s editorial team is based. In December a store was also opened on the ground floor. The product range is as concise as it is distinct, featuring past and present editions of a magazine that is highly praised around the globe.
by ADRIANO SACK
Fashion expansion: Maria and Jörg Koch take 032c to the next level
Nothing but pure e x c i t e m e n t
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BUSINESS
T H E
F A M I L Y
BUSINESS A family feud involving three generations, disputes, disinheritance and spells in prison: when a Florentine family fought over the family business and the right to use their grandfather’s precious initials, there was no end of drama. All that is history now. Years have passed since that furore birthed an internationally successful company. But the story serves to illustrate the elemental forces unleashed when family meets business. It not only has the capacity to tear open old wounds and cause old rifts to resurface, the exact opposite is possible too: it can also drive the business towards success. But how? Missoni, a Lombardy-based company that has been in the family for decades, is leading the way: “Missoni is one of the few ‘made in Italy’ families left which remains in total control of its brand and its business,” says Creative Director Angela Missoni. Along with her mother (and company founder) Rosita, brother Luca and nephews Ottavio Jr. and Giacomo, Angela and her ‘Zig Zag’ family run the international luxury label. According to its creative director, the family is precisely what makes Missoni strong and competitive: “A fashion brand like Missoni could not otherwise compete with the luxury brands' era, a market ruled by international mega-enterprises.” But what is the implication of having to share your workplace with family? “I can certainly say that a family-run
business offers the possibility of talking, discussing, taking decisions and making plans together with partners that know you very well, relatives that have shared with you the public and the private, the past and the present, the good and the bad, that you can definitely trust, that are more empathic and sympathetic with you,” says Missoni. No strategy or PowerPoint presentation can recreate this bond. It is both the vehicle and the driving force and creates a dynamic energy that powers not only the Missonis: family-owned businesses are many and can be found in almost every sector, be it pharmaceuticals, consumer goods, technology or retail, as shown by statistics portal Statista. Minotti is one of them. Founded by Alberto Minotti in 1948, this furniture factory also employs Roberto and Renato Minotti, who have been at the company since the '80s. From their father’s workshop, the two brothers have built an international business with over 30 stores in cities such as Berlin, New York and Los Angeles. “The biggest challenge is to evolve without betraying your heritage,” says Roberto Minotti. Wilhelm Rüschenbeck is another example, who, together with his uncle Gerhard, manages the family jewellery business founded in 1793. Today the company sells original collections at over ten branches. “Tradition shouldn’t get in the way of modernity. It can slow a company’s progress or even hold it back.” Rüschenbeck, who never considered any
The Minotti Family
B U S I N E S S by JULIA MÖNNICH Angela Missoni
Missoni Spring/Summer 2017
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BUSINESS career other than the family business, adds: “In today’s brings us closer together,” says Rüschenbeck. And when globally competitive marketplace, some feel a family-run the situation escalates? According to Missoni, you just business is not always a good thing. You don’t have ac- have to wait until things have calmed down: “Take time then see what happens. In cess to international capithe end it all passes.” Thetal, you have to self-fund re is another element that your growth and yet hold sets family-run companies your own against competiapart from other businestors across the globe. The ses: it’s all consuming. “Of strength of an owner-macourse, we switch from fanaged family business lies shion design to my daughin being able to strongly ters' phone calls ... life identify with the comparegularly interferes with ny: a feeling instilled in our work. It’s impossible each employee.” Another to keep it separate from crucial factor: “A mathe business,” says Missojor plus with family-run ni. The topic of business businesses is that their is also never far from the shorter transport routes Rüschenbecks’ lips. “The often make them faster.” company is like our third This is essential in today’s Gerhard and Wilhelm Rüschenbeck child.” And it’s great when world. Relationships are also founded on a joint mission. “We know each other this child stays in the family, explains Minotti: “The comso well, we don’t need to be careful with words. When we pany is now led by the second and third generations wordisagree, it’s more fraught with emotion, more noticeab- king together in harmony. We hope that the next generale, but ultimately we have the same goal and that’s what tion will still fly the banner.” Rüschenbeck Cologne
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TOPIC OF THE SEASON
TOPIC OF THE SEASON
THE
GREAT
OUTDOORS by CHRIS DANFORTH
Over the past few years, we’ve sustained an increasing thirst for functional clothing. As technology and fashion grow closer together, we are able to overcome design obstacles, creating smarter apparel that works in our favour. We demand footwear that is more lightweight and comfortable than ever before, and outerwear that is both breathable and well insulated. The palette is still separated between fashion and core outerwear still exists, but the two colours are being mixed. It’s the nature of clothing designers to elect a theme then design around it. While there is give-and-take both ways, fashion has recently been drawing heavily and deriving cues from foreign areas, and traditionally unfashionable ones, including but not limited to hiking and yoga (even fishing and kayaking), thereby allowing outerwear brands to break into the fashion market. The pattern partly ties into health and wellness. Never has an active lifestyle been more in vogue, with the rise of running clubs, Pilates, cycling and other ways to get your blood flowing, as well as trainers and fitness ambassadors on Instagram to motivate us.
C.P. COMPANY see at PREMIUM
Where names like winter sports brand Salomon, Japanese camping outfitter Snow Peak or American classic Timberland would have previously catered more to outdoor enthusiasts, now these utility-based brands are aligning with new consumers, and items like hiking boots or down jackets are becoming cool in a way they never have been in the past. More importantly, fashion brands are creating their own versions of outerwear products that harness functionality while remaining aesthetically pleasing.
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TOPIC OF THE SEASON
TOPIC OF THE SEASON
PEUTEREY see at PREMIUM –––––– HEIMPLANET see at BRIGHT –––––– ELKA see at SEEK
In 2017, this trend is more pronounced than ever before, and we're reminded by labels across the fashion spectrum like Isabel Marant and Acne Studios, the latter of which channelled a certain New England workwear look to create its own rugged trail boots named the Telde and Tinne. Raf Simons issued a number of oversized down puffers for Fall/ Winter 2016 that quickly became street style staples, Nike reinvigorated its ACG range with the help of Acronym’s Errolson Hugh and adidas debuted a new collection with technical brand White Mountaineering, also delving into trail-inspired footwear like the Trail Response, among other examples. Not long ago, Christopher Shannon took the wraps off his third footwear collection alongside a name you’ve probably read on the side of a bulldozer: Caterpillar Inc., better known as CAT. The all-terrain boot melded hiking laces, fluorescent accents and mega-chunky rubber soles in a reworking of CAT’s Walking Machine model first released in 2000. In short, outerwear is becoming a fashion statement via new, imaginative interpretations. Consumers are certainly enjoying the choice, but on the other side of the equation, the market is broadening and opportunities are being created for brands to leverage experience on the slopes or in the mountains, and impress us with the best, lightest, most packable, warmest jacket that can also be worn out to dinner.
MOOSE KNUCKLES see at PREMIUM
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FASHION
left
HALLY HANSEN see at SEEK –––––– middle ECOALF see at SEEK –––––– right G-LAB see at PREMIUM
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FASHION
right
left NOBIS see at PREMIUM SNOW PEAK see at BRIGHT
FASHION
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FASHION
left right
WOLFSKIN TECH LAB see at PREMIUM PARAJUMPERS see at PREMIUM
FASHION
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A year with … Blake Mycoskie 1
1 How many people in need have you already been able to help? 70 million pairs of shoes, restored sight to over 445,000 people, provided over 400,000 weeks of safe water and supported 70,000 safe births. 2 What is your vision? To create new opportunities to change lives through our business. 3 Which regions do you actively support? Over 70 countries around the world with the help of our more than 100 Giving Partners.
DIGITAL... IN PROGRESS STARTING FROM 10TH OF JANUARY 2017
4 At what point are you satisfied? As long as there are needs to be filled, we still have a lot of work to do.
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2
5 Your partnership with Charlize Theron (Africa Outreach Project) is about …? It’s about supporting its programmes that educate and empower young people to keep themselves safe from HIV/AIDS. 6 Safe birth – how do you offer support here? With every TOMS bag you purchase, we will help provide a safe birth for a mother and baby in need. 7 How many shoes has TOMS donated so far? Over 70 million new pairs of shoes to children in need. 8 Safe sight – how do you offer support here? With every pair of eyewear you purchase, TOMS will help give sight to a person in need.
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9 Cannes LionHeart Award – honoured you because of? Because our movement has influenced so many and continues to inspire others to make a difference.
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THINK FIRST, THEN WRITE! 4
6
www.style-in-progress.com
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ROOMS
A t ravel - ins pire d workout by TILL SCHRÖDER Globetrotters can work up a sweat at the John Reed Fitness Music Club. Heavy carpets, Asianinspired interior design, weighty chandeliers, sprawling leather armchairs – at two locations in the city (Gesundbrunnen and Prenzlauer Berg) Berlin residents can pump iron to club beats in the middle of a softly lit lounge. “There’s a party in my sweatpants” is the gym’s ambiguous slogan. And visitors don’t have to listen to run-of-the-mill fitness playlists: live DJs are on hand twice a week to mix beats in the gym. Names include Beathoavenz, DJ Binichnich aka Harris and Channel X. The man behind the music stylings of this innovative McFit offshoot is Marcus Adams, a founding member of VIVA, whilst McFit founder Rainer Schaller, with his keen eye for iconic travel imagery, is responsible for the eclectic interior design, which is as varied as the list of classes, combining street art with ethnic chic: a copy of ‘Story of O’ can be glimpsed from the barbell rack in the whipdecorated boudoir. The unnerving gaze of a row of welding masks greets those heaving away at the Battle Ropes and Vietnamese paper lanterns overlook visitors blasting out the k’s on the cardio machines. Cyberobics rooms offer video courses where you are whisked away to Malibu Beach or greeted by Barbara Becker and the Miami skyline. And in the spinning room you can rush past Nevada’s red sandstone peaks in the ‘Valley Of Fire Cycling Challenge’. A sweat-inducing, pulsating thrill for all the senses. Sounds like a night in Berghain, but at least at John Reed you’re sure to get in.
www.johnreed.fitness
SPORTSWEAR INTERNATIONAL
IT’S ALL IN THE MIX! MAGAZINE | DIGITAL | SPECIALS
ONE MEDIA BRAND – ONE UNIQUE PORTFOLIO Reach our readers – international decision makers – with our comprehensive cross media portfolio.
THREE CHANNELS – ONE MAGAZINE
SI A MEDIA BRAND OF
sportswear-international.com
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FASHION EVENTS
#berlinfashionweek www.fashion-week-berlin.com
FA SHION FORWARD – A L W AY S I N MOTION by Gerlind Hector
BRIGHT Street Credibility und Competence
Inspiration and innovation – competence and knowledge. The secret behind Berlin Fashion Week’s success is that it always stays in motion. This is true not only of its carefully curated, perfectly balanced tradeshow portfolio, but also of the optimised services it provides. The PREMIUM GROUP APP is a professional compass connecting Berlin’s fashion hotspots, and our JOINT TICKETING offer allows industry guests to gain efficient access to all the tradeshow platforms connected by our SHUTTLE SYSTEM. Ready for take-off?
As the leading tradeshow for street and urbanwear, as well as all boardsports, BRIGHT guarantees plenty of good vibes and expert knowledge all in one place. Established players and up-and-coming brands from the scene showcase the latest developments and popular lifestyle trends. The main place to discover the latest happenings is in the urban fashion & hip hop zone located in the ‘Glashaus’. Innovative segments such as outdoor aestethics, which combines techwear, performance and streetwear, along with an additional zone for accessories complete the vibrant tradeshow concept. Extra events including skateboarding competitions, as well as art and music performances ensure added street cred and endless fun. For a unique tradeshow experience, there are also walkways connecting this event to the nearby SEEK.
FA S H I O NT EC H
G R E E N S H OW ROO M & E T H I C A L FA S H I O N S H OW B E R LI N
The Future of Fashion
Ethical Expansion Since premiering in January 2015, #FASHIONTECH has been the platform for the future of the fashion industry. In Berlin’s Kühlhaus at Gleisdreieck, retailers, designers as well as start-up and marketing strategists meet to present and discuss the latest developments taking place at the intersection between fashion and technology. Alongside future predictions for retail and digital marketing themes, the main focus of this event will be wearable designs, which combine maximum functionality with high aesthetic standards. The scene’s top designers and representatives of global companies will also be on hand to present their ideas and projects and provide plenty of food for thought. The show is widely considered visionary thanks to its interdisciplinary dialogue featuring a programme of talks and workshops.
Sustainability, ecology and fairness – now taking place over a larger area, eco-friendly tradeshow duo GREENSHOWROOM (showcasing high-quality labels with contemporary styles) and the ETHICAL FASHION SHOW BERLIN (casual and streetwear) continue to be a top draw for visitors. The neighbouring Energie Forum has also been booked as an additional location for the fashion show segments. Ergo, the club situated in the former railway station (Postbahnhof) can now be used by the growing number of national and international exhibitors. This time the main theme will be ‘Active Slow’ where design and performance are combined with an efficient use of resources and recyclability, true to the motto: ‘If you do it right, it will last forever.’
17–20 JANUARY 2017
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MERCEDES-BENZ FASHION WEEK BERLIN
PR E M I U M
Historical Habitat
Inspiration and Information
IMG Fashion, a leading global producer, marketer and partner to the international fashion community for almost 50 years, is turning to the past for inspiration: Kaufhaus Jandorf in Berlin’s Mitte district has been chosen as the new location for Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Berlin. Before reunification, the now over 100-year-old building housed the GDR’s ‘House of Fashion’. It has since been renovated and will provide the backdrop for the 2017 Fall/ Winter shows. Catherine Bennett, Senior Vice President & Marketing Director for IMG Fashion Events & Properties, is thrilled about the new choice of site: “The new location offers designers many new opportunities to realise their creative vision.”
This event is considered the most important business platform for advanced contemporary fashion. Over an area covering roughly 33,000 m2, visitors can find women's, men's, denim and sportswear collections from high fashion labels, alongside footwear and accessories. After shining the spotlight on athleisure trends, January 2017 will see ‘outdoor’ taken to the next level. Under the title ‘Sport Function goes Fashion’, functional outdoor wear will be transformed into highly fashionable items for everyday wear and seamlessly integrated into the latest urban looks. Representatives of the most intriguing outdoor styles will be setting up stalls in almost every hall, offering a carefully curated collection featuring inspiration and information of the highest order.
SEEK
S H OW & O R D E R
Super Selection
New Trend Trio
Maximum coolness awaits buyers and influencers at SEEK. This exclusive selection of contemporary fashion, which presents not only menswear but a growing collection of selected womenswear, lifestyle products and high-tech gadgets, is all about longevity. Instead of normcore, here the main focus is individuality. This is also enhanced by exciting concepts such as neutral sex, a trend that eschews gender-specific boundaries, as well as the SEEK super market, which offers buyers a plethora of product information. In typical SEEK fashion, the outdoor theme is explored with clean Scandinavian looks and rough workwear styles; denim is mainly represented by top brands picked from the premium segment.
Berlin’s only tradeshow to exclusively present women’s fashion right at the start of the season has been recently revamped and is now in the hands of the PREMIUM GROUP. Feminine womenswear, accessories and, for the first time, footwear form the perfect trio, focusing on global fashion trends. Meti culously curated collections deliver an unmistakable brand experience – feminine, sensual and modest – with a content and price strategy that compliments Berlin’s existing tradeshow portfolio. Interior themes are also included to inspire national and international retailers, and the overall composition of global fashion trends is the core focus, with storylines and emotions being explored within a business platform, thus ensuring fresh, new ideas both online and offline.
Kauf haus Jandorf © Berlinshots
FASHION EVENTS
C E H
E R F
O
R M A
H P I G
7L
No other outdoor brand is able to blend the military’s sevenlayer clothing system with stylish designs as perfectly as this Manchester-based men fashion label. 7L, a much-lauded newcomer, places special emphasis on protection, comfort and style. Be it undergarments or jackets, materials are combined so that designs can stand up to all weather conditions. Their smartwear is currently state-of-the-art among fashionistas from New York to London thanks to 7L’s skilful fusion of highend fabrics, which are breathable, water-resistant and ultralight, with clever details and a good dollop of coolness.
www.7lsystem.cc
ANS
OM
RE ND ST
Brand Profiles
EAR W
www.obeyclothing.com
W
A
www.obeygiant.com
EAR W
ANS
As Shepard Fairey, artist and founder of OBEY says, “Debbie Harry will always be the epitome of ‘cool’ with a lasting aesthetic, genre-bending music, and cultural relevancy that has and remains to be completely effortless. Her punk rock attitude and look will never go out of style, and Debbie's lasting legacy goes beyond boundaries and definitions and stays at that delicate tip of coolness.”
W
OM
Proud to present one of its largest women’s projects to date, OBEY Womens teamed up with none other than the iconic legend, Debbie Harry for its major collaboration for Fall/Winter 2017. Amidst its innovative printables line of Debbie Harry graphics with artwork by Shepard Fairey, OBEY Womens worked alongside Debbie herself to create a full cut & sew line inspired by her own street photography which has yet to be done. Key styles include the oversized denim jacket, a fire red suede moto, and a textured bomber inspired by one of the photos.
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In the eyes of Dorothee Schumacher, a woman’s true strength lies in her femininity. That is why her Spring/Summer 2017 collection is dominated by romantic frills. XL flounces add a rock ‘n’ roll look to straight-cut trousers. A menswear classic with a feminine touch is Schumacher’s calling card. For the first time, the label will be offering ‘See now, buy now’ at its Fall/Winter 2017 collection showcase. The ‘Zeitgeist Edit’ capsule collection features twelve pieces that will be available as soon as the show starts at 10 am on 17 January.
www.dorothee-schumacher.com
Dorothee Schumacher
AN
Debbie Harry
BRANDS
R U RB
ETW
EA
LIT Y S
Rhumaa
TA I N A
US
LIT Y S
BI
BI
CURATED TO INSPIRE
US
TA I N A
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Dutch label Rhumaa is on a cultural and social mission. Foun der Daniel Beernink offers sustainable clothes with a true vision. Rhumaa works with artists from South African townships. The upcoming collection, which is characterised by ideas of ‘wholeness’, was designed by South African artist Sthenjwa. “I am more taken by natural shapes. For me, they represent life and all our connections to this earth,” he explains. His arabesque patterns enhance designs made from merino wool, denim and hand-spun yarn.
www.rhumaa.com
17 – 19 JAN 2017 bERlIN
17 – 19 January 2017 Berlin Postbahnhof
17 – 19 January 2017 Berlin Postbahnhof
18 JAN 2017 bERlIN
10 – 12 fEb 2017 mUNICh
w w w . p r e m i u m g r o u p . b e r l i n
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63 AM ANDREAS MURKUDIS
A7
Potsdamer Strasse 81 E
Almstadtstrasse 7
Tiergarten
Mitte
www.andreasmurkudis.com
www.a7berlin.de
FELICIOUS
MARSANO
Schröderstrasse 14
Charlottenstrasse 75
Mitte
Mitte
www.felicious.com
www.marsano-berlin.com
SHOPPING
ITCOULDBEMINE
For information on all other stores, see www.berlinfashion week.com
AESOP
KADEWE
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 48
NEW!
THE CORNER
Lychener Strasse 11
Französische Strasse 40
Prenzlauer Berg
Mitte
www.fb.me/itcouldbemine
www.thecornerberlin.de
AMERICAN VINTAGE
PAULA IMMICH
Budapester Strasse 38 – 50
Nürnberger Strasse 17
Charlottenburg
Charlottenburg
www.americanvintage-store.com
www.paulaimmich.de
BAERCK
ZADIG & VOLTAIRE
Mulackstrasse 12
Kurfürstendamm 195 – 196
Mitte
Charlottenburg
www.baerck.net
www.zadig-et-voltaire.com
GALERIES LAFAYETTE
CITY JEANS
Friedrichstrasse 76 – 78
Meinekestrasse 25
ANNETTE GÖRTZ
QUADRAT Gormannstrasse 23
Mitte
An impressive new main en-
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Timeless, puristic and uniquely
Mitte
www.aesop.com
trance is now the gate to one of
www.galerieslafayette.de
www.hans-berlin.com
detailed – these are the words
www.quadratshop.com
conjured up by ANNETTE
the biggest department stores,
GÖRTZ’s avant garde designs.
allowing you to enter a world
THE STORE
full of both fashion and possi-
BENSIMON
BRUNELLO CUCINELLI
The internationally successful
R.S.V.P.
Torstrasse 1
bilities. The 2nd floor offers a
Budapester Strasse 38 – 50
Kurfürstendamm 194
label’s Berlin store bears all
Mulackstrasse 14 & 26
Mitte
new ‘cultural experience’ in the
Charlottenburg
Tiergarten
the hallmarks of its eponymous
Mitte
www.thestore-berlin.com
sophisticated Women’s Fashion
www.bensimon.com
www.brunellocucinelli.com
designer. Muted non-colours,
www.rsvp-berlin.de
the collection’s signature fea-
Department designed by India Mahdavi. The floor is character-
ture, define the colour scheme
A.P.C.
ised by Bauhaus-style graphic
MICHAEL SONTAG
0039 ITALY
used in the store at Gendarmen-
SOUL OBJECTS
Mulackstrasse 35
lines and a colour scheme rang-
Muskauer Strasse 41
Schlüterstrasse 51
markt. Art and industrial de-
Prenzlauer Allee 24
sign are featured alongside
Mitte
the current collection and offer
www.soulobjects.de
Mitte
ing from earthy to rich gold
Kreuzberg
Charlottenburg
www.apc.fr
tones. Brands such as Chloé,
www.michaelsontag.com
www.0039italy.com
Céline and Balenciaga under-
customers a glimpse into the designer’s world.
line the new price segment.
HOME ON EARTH Rosenthaler Strasse 40 – 41
Tauentzienstrasse 21 – 24
Budapester Strasse 38 – 50
COMME DES GARÇONS BLACK SHOP & POCKET SHOP
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Charlottenburg
Linienstrasse 115 | Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
www.homeonearth.com
www.kadewe.de
www.bikiniberlin.de
www.comme-des-garcons.com
www.annettegoertz.com
www.closed.de
LUI BAN PAPETERIE
ESCADA
KONK
MOTTO
CHROME STORE
REBECCA
Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse 28
Kurfürstendamm 195
Kleine Hamburger Strasse 15
Skalitzer Strasse 68
Lenaustrasse 10
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 41
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Neukölln
Mitte
www.shop.luiban.com
www.escada.com
www.konk-berlin.de
www.mottodistribution.com
www.chrome-store.com
www.rebecca-berlin.de
FIONA BENNETT
ALL SAINTS
SNEAKERSNSTUFF
DEAR
KNIT KNIT
HANNES ROETHER HERREN
Potsdamer Strasse 81–83
Friedrichstrasse 140
Schönhauser Allee 6–7
Stargarder Strasse 9
Linienstrasse 154
Brunnenstrasse 6–7
Schöneberg
Mitte
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
Mitte
Mitte
www.allsaints.com
www.sneakersnstuff.com
www.fb.me/dear.berlin
www.knitknit.de
www.hannesroether.de
www.fionabennett.de
BIKINI BERLIN
NEW!
CLOSED Markgrafenstrasse 42
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 32 B
SHOPPING
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SHOPPING
TIGER OF SWEDEN
NEW!
OUKAN
SCHWARZER REITER
BAZAR NOIR
SING BLACKBIRD
PRADA
Kurfürstendamm 29
Kronenstrasse 71
Torstrasse 3
Kreuzbergstrasse 78
Sanderstrasse 11
Kurfürstendamm 186
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Neukölln
Charlottenburg
www.tigerofsweden.com
www.oukan71.com
www.schwarzer-reiter.com
www.shop.bazar-noir.com
www.singblackbird.com
www.prada.com
SCHEE
APARTMENT BERLIN
VOO STORE
DARKLANDS
BLESS BERLIN
STRENESSE
Rosenthaler Strasse 15
Memhardstrasse 8
Oranienstrasse 24
Heidestrasse 46 – 52
Oderberger Strasse 60
Leipziger Platz 12
Mitte
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Tiergarten
Prenzlauer Berg
Charlottenburg
www.schee.net
www.apartmentberlin.de
www.vooberlin.com
www.darklandsberlin.com
www.blessberlin.com
www.strenesse.com
QUARTIER 206
FOUND
DODO’S BLOW DRY BAR
STUDIO OPPERMANN
PEUTEREY
Wilmersdorfer Strasse 52
Friedrichstrasse 71
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 32B
Rosenthaler Strasse 66
Manteuffelstrasse 73
Kurfürstendamm 54 – 55
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Charlottenburg
www.crossjeans.com
www.dsq206berlin.de
www.foundeyewear.com
www.dominic-keller.de
www.studio-oppermann.de
www.peuterey.it
HOTEL ULTRA
THE GOLDEN CIRCUS
WERTVOLL
OLIVEDA
FIRMAMENT
ACNE/KADEWE
Torstrasse 155
Rosenthaler Strasse 7
Marienburger Strasse 39
Neue Schönhauser Strasse 11
Linienstrasse 40
Kurfürstendamm 21 – 24
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Charlottenburg
www.hotelultra.de
www.thegoldencircus.com
www.wertvoll-berlin.com
www.oliveda.com
www.firmamentberlin.com
www.acnestudios.com
CROSS JEANS
NEW!
65
SHOPPING
NEW!
VOLKER LANG
SUNSPEL
SCHWARZHOGERZEIL
LINIERIE
ACNE STUDIOS
DAS BERLINERZIMMER
WOOD WOOD ANNEX
TYPE HYPE
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 41
Torstrasse 173
Linienstrasse 75
Weinmeisterstrasse 2
Steifensandstrasse 7
Rochstrasse 3 – 4
Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse 9 – 13
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
Designer VOLKER LANG is
www.sunspel.de
www.schwarzhogerzeil.de
www.linierie.de
www.acnestudios.com
www.berlinerzimmer-shop.de
www.woodwood.dk
www.typehype.com
renowned for his colourful leather accessories and he has been an institution in Ham-
RENÉ TALMON L'ARMÉE
ETRO
KENNEL & SCHMENGER
SUPER CONCEPT SPACE
L'ÉPHÉMÈRE
HALLESCHES HAUS
YOUR LOCAL DEALER
burg since 1983 thanks to the
Linienstrasse 109
Friedrichstrasse 71
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 33
Budapester Strasse 50
Knesebeckstrasse 27
Tempelhofer Ufer 1
Tucholskystrasse 26
Kaufrausch design store. Sea-
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Charlottenburg
Kreuzberg
Mitte
son after season, his collec-
www.renetalmonlarmee.com
www.etro.com
www.ksshoes.de
www.super-space.de
www.lephemere.de
www.hallescheshaus.com
www.yourlocaldealer.de
tions never fail to impress: distinct shapes, a functional look – puristic but with play-
VILLAIN-BERLIN
MIENTUS
UNIQLO
APRIL FIRST
ABURY
DAS NEUE SCHWARZ
SCHUMACHER
ful details. Bags, purses and
Gormannstrasse 23
Wilmersdorfer Strasse 73
Rosenthaler Strasse 42
Auguststrasse 77
Kastanienallee 42
Mulackstrasse 38
Friedrichstrasse 71
accessories are available in a
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
Mitte
Mitte
range of colours. The Volker
www.villain-berlin.com
www.mientus.com
www.uniqlo.com
www.aprilfirst.de
www.abury.net
www.dasneueschwarz.de
www.dorothee-schumacher.com
Lang Store and Showroom is located right at the heart of Berlin’s fashion district in
RUNG.NAPA
FRAGMENT
MYKITA
WHEADON
DSTM
EDWIN
MAISONNOÉE
Knesebeckstrasse 27
Almstadtstrasse 5
Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse 6
Steinstrasse 17
Torstrasse 161
Rochstrasse 18
Potsdamer Strasse 91
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Tiergarten
Mulackstrasse 37
www.rungnapa-berlin.com
www.fragment.berlin
www.mykita.com
www.wheadon.de
www.dstm.co
www.edwin-europe.com
www.maisonnoee.com
Mitte
Mulackstrasse.
www.volker-langaccessoires.de
WELCOME BERLIN
SOTO
PARKHAUS BERLIN
AURA
LIL SHOP
CIVILIST
MVSCHI KREUZBERG
Linienstrasse 111
Torstrasse 72
Schröderstrasse 13
Sanderstrasse 13
Brunnenstrasse 185
Brunnenstrasse 13
Skalitzer Strasse 104
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Neukölln
Mitte
Mitte
Kreuzberg
www.welcome-berlin.com
www.sotostore.com
www.parkhausberlin.de
www.auraberlin.com
www.lil-shop.com
www.civilistberlin.com
www.muschikreuzberg-shop.de
SALVATORE FERRAGAMO
DIPTYQUE
VIU
NO 74
RIANNA UND NINA
MULBERRY
RAU BERLIN
BY ANNE
Kurfürstendamm 194
Kurfürstendamm 193
Potsdamer Strasse 77 – 79
Torstrasse 74
Torstrasse 62
Kurfürstendamm 184
Gormannstrasse 7
Rosenthaler Strasse 31
Charlottenburg
Charlottenburg
Tiergarten
Mitte
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
www.ferragamo.com
www.diptyqueparis.eu
www.shopviu.com/de
www.no74-berlin.com
www.riannaandnina.com
www.mulberry.com
www.rauberlin.com
www.byanne.de
NEW!
67
EATING
66
DATA KITCHEN
NEW!
European
SCHLOMOS
International
Kosher
NEW!
Rosenthalerstrasse 38
Kollwitzstrasse 44
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
www.fb.me/datakitchenberlin
Max Kochen, a Start-Up Ex-
THE BUTCHER NEW! Burger Bar
AKEMI Asian Fusion
DUDU 31 Asian Traditional Cuisine
First came Amsterdam, and
We at AKEMI have made
Traditional Vietnamese
pert & Andreas Tuffentsam-
now, since June 2016, juicy
it our mission to create
cuisine prepared in a m odern
mer, a Michelin star chef saw
Aberdeen Angus beef steaks
delicious, healthy Asian
interpretation of Western
can also be heard sizzling on
dishes that please both the
culture. Since 2008, the
www.schlomosbagels.com
NEW!
AL CONTADINO SOTTO LE STELLE
a gap in the fast food business
GLORIA EMPANADAS
Italian
and so came their exciting
Argentinian
the grill of THE BUTCHER
body and the soul. Guests can
family owned business has
Auguststrasse 36
multi channel concept BEETS
Danziger Strasse 17
Berlin in Kantstrasse. What’s
embark on a culinary voyage
successfully served extrava-
Mitte
& ROOTS – A crosso ver bet-
Prenzlauer Berg
special about this burger bar
through the Far East, par-
gant sushi dishes alongside
www.alcontadino.eu
ween their personal food de-
www.gloriaempanadas.de
is that its exquisite fast food
ticularly with our Chinese,
typical, traditional cuisine.
sires and restaurant love. Big
is not only served in the res-
Japanese and Vietnamese
Combining a unique love for
bowls, fresh salads, wraps,
taurant but across the entire
tapas, and our menu show-
Chilean culture, it’s not
ACHT&DREISSIG
NEW!
soups, juices as well as season
BORCHARDT
ground floor of the Sir Savig-
cases the finest cuisine from
unusual to have Salsa Roja
International
appropriate dishes will inspire
International
ny Hotel, complete with a
each country. Some of our
and Guacamole as compan-
Oranienburger Strasse 38
your taste. So regardless if its
Französische Strasse 47
library, winter garden and
most popular delicacies
ions to their exotic menu.
Mitte
a to go dish, a catered office
Mitte
lounge. Not to be missed:
include crispy prawns with
www.restaurant38berlin.de
lunch, and so on, BEETS &
www.borchardt-restaurant.de
the Butcher with cheese, the
avocado tartare, sesame
Bleibtreustrasse 31
spare ribs and fries with
seaweed salad and grilled
Charlottenburg
poached egg and truffle sauce.
honey-glazed BBQ ribs.
www.dudu31.de
ROOTS has you covered! !
NEONTOASTER
Große Hamburger Strasse 38
BRUT
Italian
Mitte
German Cuisine
Kantstrasse 144
Rykestrasse 39
Seestrasse 106
www.beetsandroots.de
Torstrasse 68
Charlottenburg
Prenzlauer Berg
Wedding
Mitte
www.the-butcher.com
www.akemi-berlin.
www.neontoaster.de
www.brut-berlin.com
squarespace.com
3 MINUTES SUR MER
LES VALSEUSES
CECCONI'S
KOCHU KARU
YUMCHA MANUFAKTUR
Healthy
French
French
Italian
Korean
Chinese
Neue Promenade 8
Torstrasse 167
Eberswalderstrasse 28
Torstrasse 1
Eberswalder Strasse 35
Dunkerstrasse 60
Mitte
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
Prenzlauer Berg
www.flakes-corner.com
www.3minutessurmer.de
www.lesvalseuses.de
www.cecconisberlin.com
www.kochukaru.de
www.yumchaheroes.com
FLAKES CORNER
For information on all other restaurants, see www.berlinfashion week.com
BEETS AND ROOTS NEW!
NEW!
68
69
DOTTIR
GRACE
ROYALS AND RICE
TOBEEFORNOTTOBEEF
BUN BAO
DUDU
SAGE RESTAURANT
MONDO PAZZO
International
International
Vietnamese
Italian
Asian
Asian
International
Italian
Kollwitzstrasse 84
Traditional Kitchen
Mittelstrasse 41 Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg GRACE Restaurant/Bar.
Located on Torstrasse,
One of the world’s best but-
DUDU opened in the sum-
SAGE Restaurant is located
Connoisseurs and lovers of
Guests will be taken as much
ROYALS & RICE is very much
chers, Dario Cecchini, pro-
mer of 2008. The young
in an old brick building in
sophisticated cuisine can find
by the interior (created by
an institution in Berlin Mitte,
vides us with hand-picked
ambitious family enter-
Kreuzberg that was turned
an authentic slice of Italy at
RYONG
American designer Dayna
and has been for many years.
speciality meats, which we
MAÎTRE PHILIPPE & FILLES
prise, comprised of mother
into an artistic, urban res-
the MONDO PAZZO
International
Lee) as by the Asian and Eu-
Here diners can indulge in
then prepare to the highest
French
Tuyen Dang Thi, son Nam
taurant with creative cui-
restaurant near Ku’damm.
Torstrasse 59
ropean fusion food conjured
fresh Vietnamese delicacies
standards. From an original
Emser Strasse 42
and daughter Chi, has
sine and a colourful mix of
Stand out dishes on the
Mitte
up by the GRACE Restaurant
and sushi. Music, art and
bistecca fiorentina, Chianina
Charlottenburg
made it their mission to
guests. Open every day from
constantly updated lunch and
www.ryong.de
and the exquisite drinks served
fashion aficionados meet here
beef and bistecca di panza-
www.maitrephilippe.de
create a place where gener-
6 pm, you can choose from a
evening menus include vitello
at the GRACE Bar. The lively
to enjoy their food against a
nese to a starters menu
ations meet and that repre-
constantly updated menu of
tonnato, loup de mer, grilled
atmosphere brings the spirit
backdrop of live music and
featuring exceptional clas-
sents the family. It’s all
meat, fish and vegetarian
veal loin and fedelini on
GRILL ROYAL
of the 1920s back to life. DJs
exhibited artwork. It even
sics, some of them with a
PAULY SAAL
about shar ing with guests
dishes from all over the world,
truffles and porcini mush-
Grill
are on hand to deliver a subtle
boasts the crown of Berlin’s
contemporary twist, along
Fine Dining
what the family stands for
complemented by pizza and
rooms. The carefully chosen
Friedrichstrasse 105 B
club feel. Alongside classics
Best Burger, despite not being
with primi piatti and exqui-
Auguststrasse 11 – 13
and what they love: healthy
antipasti. The owners of
wine list and firstclass service
Mitte
with a contemporary twist,
a burger bar. The bar and its
site meatless dishes – here
Mitte
food, good drinks and
SAGE Restaurant are also
are also sure to impress the
www.grillroyal.com
GRACE also offers exotic inter-
well-mixed cocktails are parti-
you will find the very best that
www.paulysaal.com
beautiful ambience!
running the famous SAGE
illustrious clientele: in this
national cocktails.
cularly popular among Berlin’s
Italian cuisine has to offer.
Club at the Heinrich-Heine-
casual yet sophisticated
Torstrasse 134
Strasse subway station in
dining setting, it’s all about
Berlin Mitte.
seeing and being seen.
www.dottirberlin.com
www.bao-burger.de
creative types. Booking ahead
ZULA
Kurfürstendamm 25
International
Charlottenburg
Husemannstrasse 10
www.grace-berlin.com
advised.
Akazienstrasse 3
EINSUNTERNULL
Mitte
Schöneberg
Fine Dining
www.dudu-berlin.de
www.tobeefornottobeef.berlin
Hannoversche Strasse 1
Köpenicker Strasse 18 – 20
Schlüterstrasse 52
Prenzlauer Berg
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Charlottenburg
www.zulaberlin.com
bln.royalsandrice.com
www.einsunternull.com
www.sage-restaurant.de
www.mondopazzo.de
PANTRY
MEIEREI
OLIV EAT
Torstrasse 164
RIVA FISH & WINE
NEW!
PETROCELLI
CEVICHERIA
CRACKERS
THE TREE
NEW!
NEW!
Italian
Italian
Peruvian
Fusion
Chinese
International
Deli
International
Rosenthaler Strasse 3
Torstrasse 169 – 171
Dresdener Strasse 120
Friedrichstrasse 158
Brunnenstrasse 167
Friedrichstrasse 120
Kollwitzstrasse 42
Potsdamer Strasse 91 | Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
www.facebook.com/OLIV-
www.rivafishandwine.com
www.petrocelli-restaurant.de
www.cevicheria-berlin.com
www.crackersberlin.com
www.fb.me/thetree.berlin
www.pantry-berlin.com
www.meierei.net
EAT-1655991824719520
70
71
EATING
E ATING
HOKEY POKEY
RAWTASTIC
TXOKOA
Pâtisserie
Healthy
Spanish
Stargarder Strasse 73
Danziger Strasse 16
Weserstrasse 6
Prenzlauer Berg
Prenzlauer Berg
Neukölln
www.hokey-pokey.de
www.rawtastic.de
www.txokoa.de
893
SALAMI SOCIAL CLUB
CHARLOTTE 1
Japanese
Italian
Italian
Kantstrasse 135
Frankfurter Allee 43
Charlottenstrasse 1 | Mitte
Charlottenburg
Friedrichshain
www.facebook.com/pages/
www.893ryotei.de
www.salamisocialclub.de
Charlotte-1/271316736311517
SEOULKITCHEN
RESTAURANT LE FAUBOURG
FECHTNER
SALUMERIA LAMURI
Korean
French
Deli
Italian Deli
Warschauer Strasse 46
Augsburger Strasse 41
Torstrasse 114
Köpenicker Strasse 183
Friedrichshain
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Kreuzberg
www.seoulkitchen.de
www.lefaubourg.berlin
www.fechtner-delikatessen.de
www.lasalumeria.wordpress.com
NALU
JOLESCH
BRASSERIE DESBROSSES
WEINSCHENKE WEINSTEIN
American
Austrian
French
International
Dunckerstrasse 80A
Muskauer Strasse 1
Potsdamer Platz 3
Lychener Strasse 33
Prenzlauer Berg
Kreuzberg
Tiergarten
Prenzlauer Berg
www.nalu-diner.de
www.jolesch.de
www.ritzcarlton.com
www.weinstein.eu
REINSTOFF
QUA PHE
BENEDICT NEW!
MAISON HAN
GON GAN
JUBEL
RIEHMERS
STELLA
Fine Dining
Vietnamese
International
Vietnamese
Korean
Pâtisserie
German
Café & Deli
Schwedter Strasse 2
Hufelandstrasse 10
Hagelbergerstrasse 9
Weserstrasse 166
Prenzlauer Berg
Prenzlauer Berg
Kreuzberg
Neukölln
www.fb.me/Cafe-Gong-Gan
www.jubel-berlin.de
www.riehmers-restaurant.de
www.fb.me/Stella-1561313447449241
Breakfast Food
Schlegelstrasse 26 C Mitte www.reinstoff.eu
From rice crêpes to steamed
Although eggs Benedict is
In MAISON HAN guests
Banh Bao – located a mere
now a firm fixture on many
will find a wide selection
runway’s distance from
of Berlin’s breakfast menus,
featuring traditional
SCHNEEWEISS
Hackescher Markt, we at
this hollandaise-drenched
Vietnamese breakfast,
CHEZ MICHEL
NENI BERLIN
LOS ANGELES COLD PRESS
CALIGARI
European
QUÀ PHÊ treat guests to
dish is usually nowhere to
Vietnamese coffee and the
French
Fusion
Clean Eating
Bistro
Simplonstrasse 16
the most delectable Viet-
be seen come dinner time.
‘Han Coffee Roasters’. We
Adalbertstrasse 83
Budapester Strasse 40
Friedrichstrasse 70
Kienitzer Strasse 110
Friedrichshain
namese cuisine. Sit back,
Not so at BENEDICT. Here
promise an unforgettable
Kreuzberg
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Neukölln
www.schneeweiss-berlin.de
enjoy the hip-hop beats and
breakfast is more a state of
experience: a relaxed at-
www.chezmichel-berlin.de
www.neniberlin.de
www.lacoldpress.com
www.caligariberlin.de
take a culinary journey
mind than a meal time. The
mosphere where you can
through the streets of Viet-
menu offers a culinary jour-
discover a new breakfast
NITHAN THAI
NEW!
nam in a relaxed setting.
ney around the breakfast
culture. The layout was
ZAZIE
SASAYA
RUBY'S
TOMMI'S BURGER JOINT
Thai
And to ensure no one nods
tables of the world and is
created by interior designer
French
Japanese
Italian
American
Chausseestrasse 5
off along the way, our strong
open 24 hours a day, 7 days
Janis Nachtigall from the
Lychener Strasse 24
Lychener Strasse 50
Skalitzer Strasse 81
Invalidenstrasse 160
Mitte
Vietnamese drip coffee is
a week. Each breakfast comes
‘Studio Aisslinger’ team,
Prenzlauer Berg
Prenzlauer Berg
Kreuzberg
Mitte
www.nithanthai.de
brewed and ready to go!
with a hot or cold drink and
who were also responsible
www.zazie-restaurant.com
www.sasaya-berlin.de
www.rubys-bar.com
www.burgerjoint.de
crisp baked goods are made
for the Neni restaurant in
fresh on site.
Bikini Berlin.
SPINDLER
CANTINA BY DAE MON
CRACKERS
ROSE GARDEN
Max-Beer-Strasse 37
STANDARD
Mitte
Italian
www.fb.me/atquaphe
NEW!
Uhlandstrasse 49
Pannierstrasse 40
International
Asian & Ibero-American
International
International
Templiner Strasse 7
Charlottenburg
Kreuzkölln
Paul-Lincke-Ufer 42 | 43
Schiffbauerdamm 11
Friedrichstrasse 158
Alte Schönhauser Strasse 61
Prenzlauer Berg
www.benedict-breakfast.de
www.maison-han.de
Kreuzberg
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
www.spindler-berlin.net
www.tausendberlin.com
www.crackersberlin.com
www.rosegarden.de
www.standard-berlin.de
MOGG
DONATH
GROSZ
BOSCO
ALT LUXEMBURG
THE BROOKLYN
SALT N BONE
USHIDO
Deli
Italian
International
Italian
Fine Dining
American
Gastrobar
Japanese BBQ
Auguststrasse 11 – 13
Schwedter Stasse 13
Kurfürstendamm 193/194
Wrangelstrasse 42
Windscheidstrasse 31
Köpenicker Strasse 92
Schliemannstrasse 31
Lychener Strasse 18
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
Charlottenburg
Kreuzberg
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Prenzlauer Berg
Prenzlauer Berg
www.moggmogg.com
www.fb.me/Donath
www.grosz-berlin.de
www.boscoberlin.com
www.alt-luxemburg.de
www.thebrooklyn.de
www.saltnbone.de
www.ushido-bbq.com
72
73
HOUSE OF GIN Budapester Strasse 44 Charlottenburg www.palace.de
AUSTER CLUB Pücklerstrasse 34 Kreuzberg www.auster-club.com
RAUMKLANG Libauer Strasse 1 Friedrichshain www.raumklang.berlin
GRETCHEN Obentrautstrasse 19 – 21 Kreuzberg www.gretchen-club.de
SODOM & GOMORRA Torstrasse 164 Mitte
DRINKING
www.bar-sodomundgomorra.de
MY JUNE BAR NEW!
TIGER BAR NEW!
Sredzkistrasse 65
8MM
PAULY SAAL BAR
Schönhauser Allee 177b
Auguststrasse 11 – 13
BRICKS
AVENUE
Prenzlauer Berg
After Panama’s opening,
Mitte
Mitte
In November 2015 a club was
From a restaurant serving
www.my-june-bar.de
the restaurant now welcomes
www.8mmbar.de
www.paulysaal.com
opened beneath the luxurious
Russian speciality dishes to
TIGER BAR – a bar that im-
Hilton Hotel at the historical
one of the capital’s hottest
plements an extraordinary
Gendarmenmarkt. A pretty
clubs: here you'll find fifty
HDR
highball cocktail concept, as
THE BLACK LODGE
KLUNKERKRANICH
normal occurrence for a city
years of Berlin history in one
Auguststrasse 2
well as carefully selected craft
Sanderstrasse 6
Karl-Marx-Strasse 66
with as many contrasts as
building. At the turn of the
Mitte
beers and natural wines. Its
Kreuzberg
Neukölln
Berlin. Its name? BRICKS.
century, Berlin’s emerging
www.hrdbar.com
main theme? Mother Earth. A
www.fb.me/TheBlackLodgeBerlin
www.klunkerkranich.de
Designed and realised by
party scene rediscovered the
unique, sustainable approach
internationally renowned
premises, setting the course
that ranges from the kitchen’s
architects ‘studio karhard’,
for this unique location to
SOHO HOUSE BERLIN
leftovers to working conditi
THE LIBERATE
BAR 204
here a puristic urban setting
be repurposed for contem-
Torstrasse 1
ons for the bar team. Ferments
Kleine Präsidentenstrasse 4
Panoramastrasse 1 A
meets industrial design
porary use. With its mix of
Mitte
are turned into different infu-
Mitte
Mitte
details in a progressive yet
simple elegance and timeless
www.sohohouseberlin.com
sions and various kinds of soil
www.theliberate.com
www.tv-turm.de
casual atmosphere. This is
design elements, AVENUE
and stone into unique bitters.
where Berlin’s history comes
is now considered one of
The food, created by head chef
face to face with its zeitgeist.
Berlin’s top clubs.
AUNT BENNY
Sophia Rudolph, plays with
ANITA BERBER
CRACKERS
Oderstrasse 7
pres ervation techniques and is
Pankstrasse 17 | Mitte
Friedrichstrasse 158
Mohrenstrasse 30
Karl-Marx-Allee 34
Friedrichshain
perfectly in tune with the
www.facebook.com/Anita-Ber-
Mitte
Mitte
Mitte
www.auntbenny.com
earthy aromas of the TIGER
ber-105564142987901
www.crackersberlin.com
www.bricks-berlin.club
www.avenue-berlin.com
BAR’S drinks menu.
For information on all other bars, see www.berlinfashion week.com
PRINCE CHARLES
Potsdamer Strasse 91
BACKYARD
RUM TRADER
JOHN MUIR
MINIMAL BAR
Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse 41
Schöneberg
Gitschiner Strasse 22
Fasanenstrasse 40 | Wilmersdorf
Skalitzer Strasse 51
Rigaer Strsse 30
Mitte
www.oh-panama.com/de/
Kreuzberg
www.facebook.com/pages/
Kreuzberg
Friedrichshain
www.belushis.com/bars/berlin
tiger_bar
www.backyardberlin.com
Rum-Trader/137919616259946
www.johnmuirberlin.com
www.minimal-berlin.de
BAR 3
FRAGRANCES
HONOLULU BAR
ICON
BAR SAINT JEAN
NOT ONLY RIESLING
Weydinger Strasse 20 | Mitte
Potsdamer Platz 3
Warschauer Strasse 39
Cantianstrasse 15
Steinstrasse 21
Schleiermacherstrasse 25
www.facebook.com/pages/
Mitte
Friedrichshain
Prenzlauer Berg
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Bar3/166266463390597
www.ritzcarlton.com
www.michelbergerhotel.com
www.iconberlin.de
www.barsaintjean.com
www.not-only-riesling.de
74
DRINKING
BAR ZENTRAL
KANTINE KOHLMANN
SALUT
Lotte-Lenya-Bogen 551
Skalitzer Strasse 64
Goltzstrasse 7
Charlottenburg
Kreuzberg
Schöneberg
www.barzentral.de
www.kantine-kohlmann.de
www.salut-berlin.de
ZUM SCHMUTZIGEN HOBBY
LAGER LAGER
SOLAR
Revaler Strasse 99
Pflügerstrasse 68
Stresemannstrasse 76
Friedrichshain
Neukölln
Kreuzberg
www.fb.me/zumschmutzigenhobby
www.lagerlagerberlin.de
www.solarberlin.com
G&T BAR
PERRO LOCO
SORSI E MORSI
Grosse Präsidentenstrasse 7
Sonntagstrasse 5
Marienburger Strasse 10
Mitte | www.amanogroup.de/
Friedrichshain
Prenzlauer Berg
eat-drink/g-t-bar
www.perroloco-berlin.de
www.fb.me/Sorsi-e-Morsi
WOHNZIMMER BAR
CAFÉ KRANZLER – THE BARN NEW!
ANNA HIRSCH BAR
Lettestrasse 6
Kurfürstendamm 18
Torstrasse 221
Prenzlauer Berg
Charlottenburg
Mitte
www.wohnzimmer-bar.de
www.thebarn.de
www.annahirsch.de
AMANO BAR
STUE BAR
BOURBON DOGS
Auguststrasse 43
Drakestrasse 1
Spreewaldplatz 14
Mitte
Tiergarten
Kreuzberg
Since its opening, the
www.bar.hotel-amano.com
www.www.das-stue.com
www.bourbon-dogs.com
SHARLIE CHEEN bar on
SHARLIE CHEEN
GERARD BUTLER’S CHOICE
Rosenthaler Platz has been a crowd magnet. The inter-
BUCK & BRECK
DRAYTON BAR
CSA BAR
national clientele are bowled
Brunnenstrasse 177
Behrenstrasse 55
Karl-Marx-Allee 96
over by the quality drinks
Mitte
Mitte
Friedrichshain
on offer. Clean lines with
www.buckandbreck.com
www.draytonberlin.com
www.csa-bar.de
extravagant elements, such as a ceiling construction found nowhere else in the
CHEZ JACKI
BAR FAHIMI
THE GRAND
world and a back bar that
An der Schillingbrücke
Skalitzer Strasse 133
Hirtenstrasse 4
beautifully frames 250
Kreuzberg
Kreuzberg
Mitte
spirits, complete the venue's
www.chezjacki.com
www.fahimibar.de
www.the-grand-berlin.com
interior look. The Berliner Klebebande art collective
KATER BLAU
L24 – LE VIN QUATRE
walls with a permanent tape
Grosse Hamburger Strasse 32
Holzmarktstrasse 25
Lychener Strasse 24
mapping installation that is
Mitte
Friedrichshain
Prenzlauer Berg
unique in Berlin.
www.cordobar.net
www.katerblau.de
www.l24-berlin.com
OLYMP.COM/SIGNATURE
has even embellished the
CORDOBAR
Brunnenstrasse 196 Mitte
DEAN
BEUSTER BAR
BECKETT'S KOPF
Rosenthaler Strasse 9
Weserstrasse 32
Pappelallee 64
Mitte
Neukölln
Prenzlauer Berg
www.amanogroup.de/eat-drink/dean
www.beusterbar.com
www.becketts-kopf.de
GAINSBOURG
LA BANCA
JOHN MUIR
DIE BAR
Jeanne-Mammen-Bogen 576 – 577
Behrenstrasse 37
Skalitzer Strasse 51
Greifenhagener Strasse 54
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Kreuzberg
Prenzlauer Berg | www.facebook.com/
www.gainsbourg.de
www.hotelderome.de
www.johnmuirberlin.com
pages/Die-Bar/102272436506657
www.sharliecheenbar.berlin
· OLYMP SIGNATURE SHOWROOM LUCKENWALDER STRASSE 15 · BERLIN · STANDNR.: SR-SR 07
SLEEPING
77
FRIEDRICHSTRASSE 76 – 78 U-BAHN WWW
FRANZÖSISCHE STR./STADTMITTE GALERIESLAFAYETTE.DE OPEN
S-BAHN
FRIEDRICHSTRASSE
GALERIESLAFAYETTEBERLIN
MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY FROM
10 AM TO 8 PM
For information on all other hotels, see www.berlinfashion week.com
PROVOCATEUR BERLIN NEW
SOHO HOUSE BERLIN Torstrasse 1 Mitte
Cutting-edge design, unique style,
www.sohohouseberlin.com
deep colours and rich fabrics – an interior love affair between todays
VIENNA HOUSE EASY
playful Berlin and 1920’s sensual
NEW!
Paris, designed by Saar Zafrir.
Storkower Strasse 162
PROVOCATEUR’s seductive hos-
Prenzlauer Berg
pitality, will not only be a trave-
www.viennahouse.com
ler's hub, but also a meeting point as it will please all food and mixology obsessed locals and visitors.
DAS STUE
The Indochine-inspired restau-
Drakestrasse 1
rant by Duc Ngo, will become a
Tiergarten
new favourite alongside their bar
www.das-stue.com
pleasing all cocktail obsessives!
MOXY BERLIN OSTBAHNHOF Andreasstrasse 76 – 78
NEW!
Brandenburgische Strasse 21 Wilmersdorf www.provocateur-hotel.com
Friedrichshain www.moxy-hotels.marriott.com
THE REGENT BERLIN
MICHELBERGER HOTEL
Charlottenstrasse 49
Warschauer Strasse 39 – 40
Mitte
Friedrichshain
www.regenthotels.com/berlin
www.michelbergerhotel.com
HOTEL DE ROME
AMANO HOME
Behrenstrasse 37
Torstrasse 52 | Mitte
Mitte
www.amanogroup.de/hotels/
www.roccofortehotels.com
amano-home/
NEW
78
NOVUM SELECT
MAX BROWN KU'DAMM
SIR SAVIGNY
Mitte
NOVUM SELECT HOTEL
Never a dull moment on the
Suave and cosmopolitan with
www.hilton.de/berlin
BERLIN THE WALL is
western front: MAX BROWN
a dandy touch – the west of
situated at one of Europe’s
KU’DAMM in Uhlandstrasse
Berlin has just gained itself
most famous locations:
offers basic comfort and inno-
another modern gentleman:
MANI
Checkpoint Charlie. Guests
vative design with lovingly craf-
SIR SAVIGNY. The hotel fea-
Torstrasse 136
can choose from 170 modern
ted details, ranging from record
tures 41 rooms and three
Mitte
and generously furnished
players to basketball nets. Things
suites, a library, a lounge, a
www.amanogroup.de
rooms as well as four-star
are even louder and more colour-
winter garden with an open
apartments. In Berlin’s his-
ful in the large ‘Social Spaces’
fireplace and a view out onto
toric centre, which boasts a
on the ground floor: here jungle
the garden. SIR SAVIGNY is
25HOURS HOTELS
unique mix of creativity, cul-
wallpaper and velvet sofas greet
your host, a modern aristo-
Budapester Strasse 40
ture and business, a night at
guests as they meet for a drink, a
crat whose story and pas-
Charlottenburg
the new NOVUM Hotel is sure
round of pool or even for a games
sions, which range from liter-
www.25hours-hotels.com
to be an experience you will
or film evening. No need to worry
ature to art and music, have
never forget.
about the essentials: at MAX
been subtly woven into the
BROWN, breakfast and Wi-Fi
hotel’s design and service.
HILTON BERLIN Mohrenstrasse 30
MONBIJOU HOTEL
Zimmerstrasse 88
Monbijouplatz 1
Mitte
Mitte
www.novum-hotels.de
www.monbijouhotel.com
are always included. Kantstrasse 144 Uhlandstrasse 49
Charlottenburg
Wilmersdorf
www.sirsavignyhotel.com/de
www.maxbrownhotels.com
HONIGMOND GARDEN HOTEL
WALDORF ASTORIA BERLIN
TITANIC CHAUSSEE BERLIN
SANKT OBERHOLZ APARTMENTS
Invalidenstrasse 122
Hardenbergstrasse 28
Chausseestrasse 30
Zehdenicker Strasse 1
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Mitte
Mitte
www.honigmond.de
www.waldorfastoriaberlin.com
www.titanic.com
www.sanktoberholz.de
COSMO HOTEL
HOTEL ZOO
KEMPINSKI HOTEL BRISTOL
HOTEL Q
Spittelmarkt 13
Kurfürstendamm 25
Kurfürstendamm 27
Knesebeckstrasse 67
Mitte
Charlottenburg
Charlottenburg
Charlottenburg
www.cosmo-hotel.de
www.hotelzoo.de
www.kempinski.com
www.hotel-q.com
Burlington • P.O. Box 1109 • D-57376 Schmallenberg/Germany