Showing posts with label Shops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shops. Show all posts

28 BRUTON STREET




If you are in London and you want some French allure, then sign this Mayfair address. A week ago the Parisian brand Paul&Joe, to celebrate its 20th birthday, opened the first UK flagship store. The store includes the main womenswear and menswear line, as well their second line "Sister".

THE ROW MERLOSE PLACE, L.A.



On Tuesday May 14th, the brand's first flagship shop, a 3,800-square-foot space located at 8440 Melrose Place in Los Angeles, will officially open.
To create the mid-century-like modern space Mary-Kate and Ashley worked with designers Courtney Applebaum and David Montalba in combination with local furniture and antiques vendors including JF Chen, Thomas Hayes Gallery, Blackman Cruz and Galerie Half. For two sisters is important that the store rapresents Los Angeles.

They refer to the spaces on either side of the pool courtyard as the west and east galleries, the west staged to resemble a dining area and the east a living room, while a third, smaller space in the front of the building is referred to as the library. “Ultimately, for us, it was about setting it up like a home and just having the apparel be a part of the space,” said Ashley.
"We have all 170 pieces in our collection represented here. A lot of stores obviously don't buy the whole collection, maybe 20 percent, so this is really the place where we can present it like a showroom," Mary-Kate said to WWD.

/ click on "Read more" too take a look of the shop interior design /

LN-CC


Who doesn´t know yet the LN-CC shop, here is a great opportunity to find out. The occasion came across due their last fantastic campaign, the S/S 2014, with a best-ever possible surrounding – marble quarry in Carrara, Tuscany. The near to sterile-white rocks with contrasting cracks, are making this place full of endless beauty.
The shop is my favourite-ever one in Europe; they always have plenty, plenty amount of really great (and some rare) pieces, you mind to wish for. The store space acts as an ever changing platform of creative ideas that encompasses menswear, womenswear, music, and books. The store consists of four individual product rooms, a library, a record store, gallery and a club space for private events with custom built, vintage sound system (yes, you read it right…cool, right?). Check this video to get the idea.

If you are in London or have plans to come, you need to make an appointment, before visiting the shop. At the moment they are closed, until September 01. 2014 (to know more, click here); But not panic, here is their super-fab webshop…reachable from any part of the world.






/ Original photos courtesy of LN-CC /

New Folk Store Opens in Shoreditch

Folk have just opened up their second store in that new menswear mecca, Shoreditch. Taking over the space Butcher of Distinction occupied (which, whilst stocking a great selection of Rushmoor pieces, had started to resemble a ghost town) giving it a lick of paint and a good makeover.

They’ve made good use of the space too; adding gym horses, milk churns and shoe storage is packed from floor to ceiling of the 12 ft high building. Our female readers (we know you’re out there) will be glad to know that their women’s range is stocked at the store as well.

























© by Folk

via

Camper by Yoshioka and Grcic

Camper is fast building a heritage of collaborators that reads like a list of Wallpaper* leading lights. Over in Tokyo, Konstantin Grcic has taken his first foray into retail interiors, injecting a dose of industrial luxe to the Daikanyama district store. He has peppered the store with his concrete-based Chair One, constructed a 'Camper Brick' display on which to show the shoes and direct the flow of traffic in the store and, the most intriguing element, posted a giant map of the area on the far wall. The map is interactive, pinpointing customers' current location and allowing them to post their own local highlights and recommendations.

Meanwhile over in London, Tokujin Yoshioka has applied his ethereal vision across the new Camper store on London’s Regent Street. Taking an altogether more natural approach, he's decked out the store in his now trademark material petals, finishing the theme off with his Bouqet chairs for Moroso. We grabbed some time with the Japanese maverick to find out a bit more about his latest project.

How did the collaboration with Camper come about?
In July, 2008, I was commissioned to design both a store and a pair of shoes for the 'Camper to&ether' collaboration project, designed by Camper with various creators around the world.

Why did you decide to use your Bouquet chair for Moroso as a starting point?
The idea incorporating principles of nature was in fact derived from the installation presented in New York in 2007, where approximately 30,000 sheets of tissues covered the entire space creating a scene reminiscent of snowscape. The store shares the similar world-view of the Bouquet Chair and brings elation to the viewers.

You’ve been using the same folding technique for a couple of years now – what is it about the effect that you like so much?
In recent years, I have been presenting designs, which incorporate the law of nature or a phenomenon. With Camper, I tried to express the elements existing in nature such as plants and flowers. Gathering each flower petal of different appearances has created the ever-changing expression in scenery of the store.

Does it take on a specific significance when applied to the Camper brand?
Folding technique may not take on a specific significance for Camper. But the colour used in the material signifies the corporate colour of Camper and also the images of the brand, which is positive and energetic.

Camper has a heritage of working with the world’s leading creatives in their store designs – is it important to make your own stamp and create an interior that people instantly recognise as yours?
I think the principle of this project is to bring a new value to Camper through each creator's design method. Therefore, I pondered on a new design, which embraces Camper's brand identity and my originality. However, I don’t think all the customers recognize that I designed the store. The most important thing is whether the customers enjoy being in the space and the design helps with that.

Since you won a Wallpaper* design award as best furniture designer in 2008, the design world has changed quite radically. Have events in the past year and a half changed your approach to design?
The Wallpaper* award gave me an opportunity to communicate with more and more people through my works. More generally, in these years, I’ve wondered how people understand my work in relation to the things that are happening in the world. This is how I’ve come to notice that my work is close to the principles of nature and natural beauty. However, my attitude to design has never changed. The reason I continue to design is to make people happy.

What else are you working on at the moment?
I will be designing a Teijin stand for the Japan industry pavilion for the Shanghai EXPO, which will be held in China from 1 May, 2010. I’m also currently working on some very ambitious and interesting projects, which I have dreamed of for a long time but are still confidential.



Grcic's Camper Bricks show off the shoes and divide up the store


Grcic's Chair One design decorates the store


Grcic's Chair One design decorates the store


Grcic's Camper Bricks show off the shoes and divide up the store


Customers can customise the interactive map at the back of the store with their local hits


The facade of Yoshioka's Camper store in London


Yoshioka's Bouqet chairs for Moroso provide a cushioned rest for prospective buyers


Two walls of the store are coated with the Japanese designer's signature fabric petals

INFORMATION

Website
http://www.camper.es

Address
Camper Tokyo
Za house building
1-34-17-b1 ebisu nishi
Daikanyama district
Tokyo

Camper London
207-209 Regent Street
London
© by Wallpaper

It's a Man's World at Harrods

Whilst shopping tends not to come naturally to most members of the coarser sex – even the most seasoned of male retail aficionados will admit to getting hot and bothered after an hour flicking the rails – the latest all-male shopping experience, devised by London retail monolith Harrods, is set to make a day pounding the aisles that little more permissible.

Entitled ‘It’s a Man’s World’, the experience has been pedalled as ‘the ultimate international destination for the fashion conscious man’. Set in the ensconcing throes of Harrods’s lower ground floor, the revamped menswear emporium will feature all the old favourites, with new collections from Prada to Zegna and Lanvin to Brioni in some wholly sumptuous surrounds.

All dense woods, creams and gentleman’s club-inspired aesthetics, the space has been designed to encourage the most leisurely of shopping approaches. With made-to-measure suits, grooming treatments, rare wines and state of the art technology all available from the comfort of the chocolate leather sofas - this is the least like shopping that shopping has ever been.

Aside from all the usual offerings, a series of one-off items have been produced by a whole host of designers for the launch - with a limited edition Union Jack t-shirt from Yves Saint Laurent, an exclusive print designed by Paul Smith featuring a candy-striped Mini on the roof of Harrods, and a crocodile-skin handled ‘It bag’ exclusively from Prada.

Opened with a flurry of well appointed luxury this weekend, each of the first 300 customers to make a purchase over £50 received a complimentary bag featuring Acqua di Parma hat box sets and samples of Bond No.9 for Him – exclusive to Harrods.



A hold-all offering from Hugo Boss, produced exclusively for the 'It's a Man's World' Launch


Burberry's cream coated space within the male retail haven


A signature Paul Smith wallet decked in a print designed for the launch


Armani's space inside the store


A Paul Smith Holdall, decked in Paul Smith's exclusive print, featuring a mini atop Harrods' iconic roof


The Prada allotment of the new men's store


A raised monogram suitcase from Louis Vuitton, designed for the launch

INFORMATION

The Harrods menswear emporium - open from Saturday 31st October

Website
http://www.harrods.com

Telephone
44.20 7730 1234

Address
Harrods
87–135 Brompton Road
Knightsbridge
London
SW1X 7XL
© by Wallpaper

Gucci Icon-Temporary flash store

Pop-up stores have been the recurring theme in retail this year but it seems the trend for popping-up may be popping its clogs, to be replaced by something a little cleverer. Frida Giannini, Gucci’s Creative Director, has set the tone, launching the ‘Gucci Icon-Temporary flash sneaker store’, a travelling pop-up shop with a difference.

The flash store will travel the world, starting today at Crosby Street in New York, where it’ll rest for two weeks before jetting to Miami in December, to catch the crowds at the art and design fairs. Giannini has enlisted the help of super-producer Mark Ronson, not just to provide the soundtrack (though he’s done this too) but to design a limited edition Gucci Ronson sneaker, one for every leg of the tour.

Alongside Ronson’s offering, 18 styles of limited-edition sneaker are available (16 for men and 2 for women), each incorporating classic Gucci elements like the interlocking G logo and the red and green band. Upping the exclusivity, each pair comes with a silver or gold dog tag and the option of embossing the buyer’s initials onto a leather tag for the laces. The packaging for each pair has been tailor-made for each destination too.

In the speedy world of retail, where shoppers are ever savvier and brands are obliged to innovate and offer something even more special than the month before, Gucci’s answer is a step ahead of the pack.

And, proving they’re inclusive too, for anyone not in range of one of the store’s scheduled stops, Gucci have just released a comprehensive, free iPhone app. As well as giving people the chance to buy a pair of the exclusive Ronson sneakers from their phone, when the store arrives in their city, the Gucci app has a ‘Gucci Beats’ virtual turntable also designed by Ronson for customers to mix their own music and a little black book of Frida Giannini’s favourite shops, restaurants, clubs and hotels around the world.



Limited edition Gucci-Icon sneaker, one of the 18 designs available exclusively at the Gucci-Icon store


















© by Wallpaper

Gucci WEBsite

Kinder Aggugini's Mayfair Flash Boutique, London

Taking the well-worn pop-up shop stencil and giving it a twist - avant garde clothing designer Kinder Aggugini this weekend opened a one-off Flash Boutique in London’s Mayfair, coinciding with Fashion Week.

aking residence in an atmospheric basement in Mount Street, the boutique is has the air of a Dickensian-style curiosity shop.

After working for the likes of Vivienne Westwood and John Galliano, London-based designer Aggugini launched his debut collection at nearby Dover Street Market, after being plucked from the crowd by Rei Kawakubo herself.

Since then, Aggugini’s immaculately tailored collections - which combine the ragged punk spirit of 70’s London and the sartorial perfection of the same city's tailoring heritage - have gone on to garner international acclaim.

The boutique itself features an edited selection of signature pieces from past seasons; one-off garments from the current collections; photographs; paintings and a range of vintage Chanel jewelry from a generous private collector.

Set to stay open up until October 31st , Aggugini’s one-off store is a fitting dose of left-of-centre creativity that London Fashion Week is famed for.


© by Wmagazine

Kinder Aggugini WEBsite