Accessories, Clothing shopping in Berlin
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A
Colours
This huge, light-filled loft has great used clothes going back to the 1960s (sometimes earlier) for both men and women, plus a smaller selection of new street- and club-wear threads for today’s cool kids. Most items are clean, in good condition and priced by the kilo (€14, or €10 during happy hour, 1pm to 3pm Wednesday). There’s a good range of accessories too. It’s in the back courtyard, upstairs on the right. In Schöneberg there’s an affiliated outfit, Garage (Ahornstrasse 2).
reviewed
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B
Boss Orange Concept Store
Boss Orange Concept Store ‘Concept’ doesn’t half cover it, with famous German label Hugo Boss’ creations housed in an architectural statement more akin to an art gallery than a mere retail space. You’ll find denim jeans embedded in the floor, quirky displays of unrelated modern-day paraphernalia and even regular exhibitions from contemporary artists and photographers in the downstairs ‘interactive space’. Oh, and some clothes.
reviewed
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C
AM1, AM2, AM3
So hip it hurts, Andreas Murkudis’ cluster of minimalist-chic shops tucked away in a pretty Mitte courtyard offer a wealth of sartorial temptations for men and women from designers such as his Berlin-based brother Kostas Murkudis, internationals Sophia Kokosalaki and Martin Margiela, sturdy Ludwig Reiter footwear (from Vienna) and Schiesser underwear (given a twist by Kostas). There’s also furniture and jewellery, plus helpful, refreshingly honest service.
reviewed
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D
Fuck Fashion
Youthful hipsters and the young at heart flock to this cheap and cheerful store, jam-packed with the latest street-wear must-haves. The last time we checked, this included pop culture–splashed T-shirts, Mexican wrestling masks, a rainbow’s worth of trainers, kitsch knickers, and jewellery for every body part – eyebrows to unmentionables. There’s also a branch in Charlottenburg (Joachimstaler Strasse 39-40).
reviewed
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E
Adidas
A mainstay of German leisure, this Adidas showcase holds a wall of creatively hued trainers (sneakers), plus lots of logoed T-shirts, pants, dresses and suitable accessories. Strangely enough, finding gear you can actually exercise in is not the store’s strong point, although the helpful staff will point you in the right direction if you’re in need of that sort of thing.
reviewed
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F
F95
One of Frankfurter Allee’s few outposts of icily smooth style, this taut collection of international and local labels attracts the pretty types to Friedrichshain to slap down credit cards for high-end denim brands, right-this-moment Maqua dresses, Filippa K separates, Veja trainers, and assorted fripperies such as tea, chocolate and perfume – all too cool for school.
reviewed
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G
Berlinomat
This minidepartment store presents the latest visions from a pool of Berlin creatives working in fashion, accessories, furniture and jewellery. Showered by electronic beats, you can inspect sassy jeans by Hasipop, cult GDR-era-style sneakers by Zeha, messenger bags by MilkBerlin and other Zeitgeist -savvy stuff you won’t find on the high street back home.
reviewed
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Fuck Fashion
Youthful hipsters and the young at heart flock to this cheap and cheerful store, jam-packed with the latest street-wear must-haves. The last time we checked, this included pop culture–splashed T-shirts, Mexican wrestling masks, a rainbow’s worth of trainers, kitsch knickers, and jewellery for every body part – eyebrows to unmentionables.
reviewed
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H
Ono Koon
Mature women wanting to dress themselves with a degree of imagination and avoid the pack mentality of the major labels should check out this appealing store, kitted out like a postindustrial salon. Pattern sizes are generous, fabrics and silhouettes are interesting and it’s all manufactured in Germany.
reviewed