Clothing shopping in Madrid
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A
Pedro García
The trademark of Pedro García is elegant shoes for women.
reviewed
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B
Roberto Verino
Roberto Verino is the purveyor of simple, classy designs for men and women.
reviewed
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C
Roberto Torretta
Specialises in romantic, yet practical design, combining casual and formal wardrobes.
reviewed
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D
Alma Aguilar
Alma Aguilar is a classy Madrid designer known for her stylish formal wear for women.
reviewed
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E
Jesús del Pozo
For glamorous evening wear for ladies ( not ‘women’, we were informed by the shop assistant), it’s difficult to go past this Spanish designer.
reviewed
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F
Piamonte
One of the favourite shoe shops of Madrileñas looking for that special something for an important occasion. This is one of the major standard-bearers for Chueca’s sense of style.
reviewed
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G
Sybilla
One of the more original Spanish designers, who combines local and international styles with strong, Spanish colours and deceptively simple pieces with stylish cuts that stand out in the crowd.
reviewed
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H
Ekseption & Eks
The catwalklike entrance is the perfect introduction to brand names dedicated to urban chic with Balenciaga, Kokosalaki and Dries Van Noten in art-gallery-like displays; younger, more casual lines are next door.
reviewed
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I
Amaya Arzuaga
Sexy, bold and tastefully colourful, Amaya Arzuaga is one of Spain’s most creative designers. The fusion of black with bright colours (think orange, red, fuchsia or turquoise) is very Spanish and oh-so-stylish.
reviewed
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Armand Basi
Armand Basi is the purveyor of hip urban designs for the carefully casual (men and women). Just about anything you find here is well suited to a night out in Madrid, but especially the nightspots of Chueca and Salamanca.
reviewed
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K
Loewe
One of the classiest (and most expensive) Spanish labels, Loewe is the place to go for fine leather handbags and shoes and elegant fashions that are classical in inspiration and almost as pricey (and prestigious) as Louis Vuitton.
reviewed
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L
Mercado de Fuencarral
Madrid’s home of alternative club cool is still going strong, revelling in its reverse snobbery. With shops like Fuck, Ugly Shop and Black Kiss, it’s funky, grungy and filled to the rafters with torn T-shirts and more black leather and silver studs than you’ll ever need. This is a Madrid icon and when it was threatened with closure in 2008, there was nearly an uprising.
reviewed
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M
El Tintero
Terrific T-shirts are all that El Tintero sells. So if you’re looking for a colourful camiseta (T-shirt) with Spanish-language slogans that translate as ‘I'm maturing – apologies for any inconvenience’ or ‘Does anyone have an instruction manual?’, this is your place. It's all good, clean fun and they also take a similar approach with kids’ wear, from newborns to aged 10 years.
reviewed