Showing 1-14 of 14 results
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5 Scarlett Row
Beautiful, modern, exclusive, minimalist. If that's what you're after, try the creations of Eley Kishimoto, Zero, Irish designer Sharon Wauchob or menswear label Unis. Co-owner Eileen Shields worked with Donna Karan in New York before returning to found her own gorgeous shoe label, which retails here.
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Alias Tom
Dublin's best designer menswear store, where friendly staff guide you through casuals by bling labels Burberry and YSL Rive Gauche. Downstairs it's classic tailored suits and Patrick Cox shoes.
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Ave Maria
If Tina Turner were in Dublin, she'd shop here. Glam up with neon net, sequinned and satin cocktail dresses from Queenie, Manoush and Consumer Guide, and some seriously bling costume jewels.
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BT2
The kiddie's table in Brown Thomas' exquisitely laid-out dining room, BT2 is the annexe shop for the city's trendy young things, targeting an audience who want to look the contemporary part and set the tone for tomorrow. Brands include DKNY, Custom, Diesel, Ted Baker and Tommy Hilfiger.
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Circus Store & Gallery
If you are looking for the most elegant, one-off creations by Irish designers - from dresses for that fancy occasion to pins to tie up your hair - and fancy looking at some contemporary local art in the meantime, this wonderful new shop is perfect for you. You mightn't know any of the designers represented here, but that's only because they're still busy making their time come.
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Clark's
This well-known shoe store stocks not only its own brand but others too; it also has an excellent selection of Birkenstocks. There's a branch on O'Connell St that stocks women's shoes only.
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Costume
Costume is considered a genuine pacesetter by Dublin's fashionistas; it has exclusive contracts with some of Europe's most innovative designers, such as Isabel Marant and Anna Sui. It also has the city's best range of Tempereley and American Retro. Local designers represented here are Helen James, whose Japanese-influenced obis are enormously popular, and Leighlee.
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Flip
This hip Irish label takes the best male fashion moods of the 1950s and serves them back to us, minus the mothball smell. US college shirts, logo T-shirts, Oriental and Hawaiian shirts, Fonz-style leather jackets and well-cut jeans mix it with the genuine second-hand gear upstairs.
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Harlequin
A fantastically cluttered shop, jam-packed with authentic vintage clothing gems from the 1920s onwards as well as satin gloves, top hats, snakeskin bags and jet-beaded chokers.
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Havana
This is as exclusive as Dublin fashion boutiques get, but the rewards for a trek out here are the best of Irish design - Lucy Downe's Sphere One cashmeres, Joanne Hynes' elegant evening wear - as well as a host of other top international names. Shoes, jewellery and accessories fill out the rest of the stock.
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Louis Copeland
Dublin's answer to the famed tailors of London's Saville Row, this shop makes fabulous suits to measure, but also stocks plenty of ready-to-wear suits by a host of international designers.
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Schuh
Two floors of footwear, from trainers to formal shoes, and pretty much everything in-between. The labels represented here are of the high-street variety, so don't expect Manolo or Gucci.
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Smock
This tiny designer shop sells quirky (and very exclusive) international women's-wear from investment labels Easton Pearson, Veronique Branquinho and AF Vandevorft, as well as a small range of interesting jewellery. Rumour has it that it might be moving to Drury St, closer to the action.
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Tulle
International designers with attitude - Sass and Bide, Wheels & Doll Baby, plus Fornarina and Sonia Rykiel - are stocked in this small outlet for fashion-savvy young gals, tucked away in the arcade. Don't be fooled by the plain frontage; this place is seriously cool.
Showing 1-14 of 14 results






