Epatant by Dennis Paphitis and Lock Smeeton

Cardboard tubes divide up an old factory in Melbourne to create new gentlemen’s outfitters Epatant, founded by Dennis Paphitis and Lachlan Smeeton.

Epatant by Dennis Paphitis and Lock Smeeton

“We worked with the bones of this building, which was an old wire works factory built in the late 1960s and was more recently used as a bicycle warehouse,” says Paphitis. “We cleaned up and retained the original steel trusses on the ceiling and scrubbed back the concrete floors.”

Epatant by Dennis Paphitis and Lock Smeeton

The shop stocks luxury menswear and accessories including “beautiful wallets, scarves, and obscure Nordic hammers,” displayed on pegs round the walls and tables with deep cases in their tops, all made of local woods. More cardboard tubes were cut to form pendant lighting overhead.

Epatant by Dennis Paphitis and Lock Smeeton

“The building is flooded with natural light and butts onto an adjacent park so we look through to large eucalyptus trees from the saw-toothed roof,” says Paphitis. He’s also founder of skincare brand Aesop, whose stores have frequently featured on Dezeen, including one fitted out with materials from a demolished house and a kiosk at Grand Central station made of thousands of copies of the New York Times.

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Here’s some more information from Epatant:


We at Epatant believe that there are two fundamental categories of objects in the world: there are those that function without flourish, that soullessly satisfy and exist at the most basic level, and then there are those all-too-rare items that excite and amaze with both their form and function, belongings that sing, inspire and delight with every use.

Those objects used in day-to-day life ought to deliver the utmost pleasure and that’s why you’ll discover, in our modest Collingwood store and within the pages of our forthcoming website, a collection of these exceptional items, considered and collated so that you may explore and be amazed.

From individually selected vintage eyeglasses to superb silk pocket squares in just the right Neapolitan hues, whistles of supreme British quality to German underwear of the finest weave, Epatant’s product offer is founded on distinctive and authentic design, quality engineering and a celebration of irreverence.

Of course, what are mere objects without words? We have likewise pored over countless paperbacks, hardcovers and hours of footage to bring you a concise and carefully selected array of works from our favourite authors and auteurs. And in to this heady mix we offer some of our own words, thoughts and suggestions, reserved for those ideas and individuals we feel warrant particular attention.

And so it is that in July, 2012 we launch Epatant as a considered, intelligent and streamlined retail experience. Our collections and collaborators will evolve with the passage of time; measured against the seasons, our mood, and always tempered against the evils of mediocrity. Expect to be seduced and surprised.

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Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi Studio

Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi

Interior designers Matteo Bianchi Studio have installed a customised retro jukebox in the window of this estate agents in north London.

Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi

The Carlton estate agents in Islington is fitted out in a style inspired by gentlemen’s clubs.

Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi

A bespoke winged armchair has been placed near the window while metal stools with latticed backs line the long desk.

Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi

The jukebox in the window operates as a flip display to show the houses on offer.

Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi

Photography is by James Balston.

Carlton Estate Agents by Matteo Bianchi

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Louis Vuitton & Kusama concept store at Selfridges

Fashion brand Louis Vuitton has collaborated with Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama to create a collection of dotty garments featuring Kusama’s obsessional polka dot patterns for a concept store at Selfridges department store in London.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

Well known for her repeating spot patterns, painter, poet and performer Kusama has lived voluntarily in a psychiatric institution since 1977 after battling with her obsessions from a young age.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

Following Louis Vuitton’s sponsorship of Kusama’s Tate exhibition earlier this year and inspired by her repetitive designs, the brand has created materials, bags and shoes covered in bright red, yellow and black polka dots.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

The concept store is also immersed in polka dots: perforated giant lamps hang over display tables while walls, floors and display cabinets are covered in an infinity of bright dots in various sizes.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

The collection includes a plastic trench coat that makes the wearer appear as though they’re painted with spots, an idea Kusama explored in her early works.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

Twenty four Selfridges display windows have been dedicated to the Vuitton & Kusama Collection and inside visitors are instructed to follow the red dots along the shop floor leading to the store and a life size, polka dot-clad model of Kusama herself.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

Louis Vuitton & Kusama concept store at Selfridges London will remain open until 1 October.

Louis Vuitton and Kusama concept store at Selfridges

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SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

Shoes are balanced on bolts across a chunky chipboard wall at this Stuttgart shop by designer Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano (+ slideshow).

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

A series of boxes create clustered seating and display areas in the centre of the store and are constructed from the same wooden boards with bitumen-coated mats over their surfaces.

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

Light bulbs are attached to bicycle wheels and cast circular shadow patterns over the walls and ceiling.

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

The store owner keeps limited edition and rare shoes in a long narrow chest below the main display wall, where he can show them to other collectors.

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

See more projects featuring chunky chipboard »

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

Here’s some text from Ferrazzano:


Suppa is Stuttgarts first pure sneaker boutique, made for sneaker lovers, sneaker collectors and for those who value individuality and exclusivity. SUPPA is a Boutique which has a selection of limited and rare sneakers and a small collection of accessoires. The interior concept is minimalist but with a high attention to detail. The focus is directed on the essentials – Sneakers!

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

“Tar” cover transports the road into the shop. They give a first impression of how the shoe works on the street.

A second sitting area with built-in magazine table provides a communication platform in the middle of the room.

The shoes will be presented on an eight-meter-long wall. They are placed on screws, which can be removed at any time. The grid/layout of the shoes can be changed according to an event or sneaker release.

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

Under the shoe wall is a consistent sideboard – as a further display area. The sideboard, or the “treasure chest”, is loaded with special editions and rare models (owner’s private collection), which invites sneaker lovers to talk and exchange.

The shop window is a combination of presentation space and seating/bench. The built-in heater provides a warm seating in winter time

The floor lamp RIM LAMP is part of the lighting concept.

A small but fine selection of accessories is offered at three, “Butler”. The butlers are stylized stick figure made of curved round pipe.

SUPPA Sneaker Boutique by Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano

Daniele Luciano Ferrazzano or DLF PRODUCTDESIGN

Project Scope: Project Management – concept, design, interior design and lighting installations, Corporate Design (Interior) and corporate behavior, construction management and interior design – to turnkey handover.

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Garde

Our interview with the founder of LA’s new home design and accessories shop
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With a style owner Scotti Sitz describes as “modern natural,” the new Los Angeles boutique Garde inhabits a tranquil and airy space stocked with eclectic handmade items.

Summoning her years of experience in fashion and interior design, Stitz filled the richly textured, light-filled shop with merchandise highlighted by carefully selected furnishings like hand-crocheted collars by Nathalie Costes, 2550º Candles and jewelry by Naomi Maslon arranged on tables made by Kristan Cunningham and Scott Jarrell.

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We caught up with Sitz to learn more about the store from its opening to the constantly evolving collections she curates.

How would you describe Garde?

We are definitely a gift shop with home accessories. I wanted the opportunity to bring in designers and artists who weren’t necessarily represented here. I can mix my reasonably priced quilts and pillows with maybe a more luxurious cashmere throw. When something has a price point here that is a little bit higher, there is a reason for it. There is a process behind it in terms of the work and the material. Not just for the sake of being a luxury good.

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With so many shopping neighborhoods to choose from in Los Angeles, why did you decide to open on Beverly Boulevard?

I used to live in this neighborhood in the Beverly corridor a few years ago and I have watched it evolve. It’s become a destination for high-end vintage furniture, great restaurants and accessories. We looked at this space. It was a dump. The building is from the early 1940s and it had not been touched. The first business here was a bank of operators. It was the pre-411. So if you wanted to know who sold apple pies in Los Angeles between Fairfax and La Brea, these operators would tell you where to go. When we got this space there were the old phone jacks all along this wall. Then 30 years ago an electronic repair shop opened here. There was linoleum and false ceilings. The skylight was boarded up. We gutted the space.

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Why the name Garde?

We named the store Garde, keeping the idea of something new and different, and I also like the definition as it applies to “en garde, the stance in fencing to prepare for your match.

What is the philosophy behind the things you include in the store’s collection?

I ask myself, “Would I put it in my house?” “Would I wear that item?” If I have to say no, then it does not belong here. Except for some basics at good price points, everything has to have a story behind it. Everyone I represent has a story to tell. They have a process to tell and a unique and wonderful product. I love a good story.

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What is your latest favorite item in the shop?

My new obsession is Christien Meindertsma. She’s from the Netherlands. She is represented by Thomas Eyck. What I love about her is she comes up with a concept for a product design and takes it to an end product. I fell in love with her flax project a couple of years ago. Meindertsma commissioned a farmer to plant the flax seeds. Then she designed her flax collections, the flax ropes she makes into lighting fixtures. I also sell her wool Urchin poufs. If you go on her website you’ll see pictures of the sheep. They are all numbered. I love seeing the photos before and after they have been sheared.

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Who are some of the designers that inspired Garde’s style?

I love Vincent Van Duysen pottery. He is a huge inspiration to me in terms of his look and design. The ceramic canisters with a sand-blasted white oak lid. The first time I got them in they weren’t even here for 24 hours. Something like that you have to touch. It has a softness to it that is just beautiful. It’s the same with Sara Paloma‘s pieces. Right now I am sold out of her work, except for one vase. We had a collection in when I first opened that I would literally make everyone touch because it was so exquisite and feels like suede. I also feel that way about the hand-blown glass vessels with cast brass botanical stoppers by Lindsey Adelman.

Tell us about the apparel you have in store right now.

They are from a fashion house in India called Injiri. Everything is hand-done—the beading, the tassels, the lace, the buttons, the embroidery. There is a lot of workmanship that goes into these garments. I like the idea of carrying things that are good basics that can cross over. The scarves can be worn by men or women. The shirts are more of a year-round garment.

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Who made the leather bags hanging on the wall?

They are one-of-a-kind. The designer is T Smith Knowles. She’s local. Everything is hand-done, the stitching, the beadings are antique. The workmanship that goes into those bags is just exquisite. They really are unique, all hand-signed and numbered. The leather is the finest and really light-weight. She will even customize the strap for each customer.

Why do you do this?

I think what is so wonderful about this time is that there are so many amazing artists. It is the best time to do something like this. I can showcase my favorite artists and designers and many people who’s work is not represented everywhere else.


Askov Finlayson

Minneapolis retail innovators Eric and Andrew Dayton talk about their one-stop shop

By Joan Erakit

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Askov Finlayson owners and founders, brothers Eric and Andrew Dayton believe in a simple design philosophy: keep it fun. The lighthearted approach they took to their men’s retail store in Minneapolis’s North Loop neighborhood highlights their personal style and aesthetic while removing any pretense. Founded in October 2011 as the retail component to their space that also includes their Nordic-style restaurant, The Bachelor Farmer, and Marvel Bar, Askov Finlayson rounds out the offerings while reflecting their sense of entrepreneurial creativity.

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The handsome space features wall-to-wall exposed brick, high ceilings and antique rugs, making for the prime setting to showcase a selection that can be hard to come by in Minnesota. Merchandised with the idea of creating a comfortable space reflective of the Daytons’ laid-back style, the arrangement of clothing and accessories among home goods and design objects makes the visitor feel at home while shopping.

We dropped by Askov Finlayson to chat with the brothers during their annual Krafstkiva festival, a traditional Nordic celebration in August boasting fresh crayfish, live bands and plenty of brews.

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What was the concept behind Marvel Bar, The Bachelor Farmer and Askov Finlayson? Why all three spaces in one location, and why here in Minneapolis?

Eric: Well, this was a neighborhood we knew well. We both live nearby—just down the river from here—so we go to Moose and Sadies for coffee and we visit the small shops in the area. It was still pretty early on in the development, so it was a neighborhood we saw heading in a promising direction and would be something exciting to be a part of, and that was as far as our thinking had gone. We weren’t really actively looking, it was just something fun to think about. We were both away at different grad schools outside of Minnesota, and I heard from a friend about this particular building—this guy who owned it for 30 years or so and kind of tinkered around in here, and he would never entertain offers and wasn’t interested in selling. So it wasn’t an abandoned building, but it was a pretty closed-off building.

Andrew: There was a little sign on the front door—which is now the retail space—and he must have gotten a lot of inquiries because he had a little sign up on the door that more or less said, “Not for sale. Don’t even ask. Go away.”

So how did the building end up in your hands?

Eric: It went from the “Don’t even bother asking, go away” building to finally there being a little “For Sale” sign in the window, and a friend called me. I was out in California at school, and my friend said that the building is now for sale and you should check it out. So it began with a phone call inquiry, and then I came home from California. I spent more and more time in the building, and because there was a lot of space—it was probably more space than we would want to do just a store or just a restaurant, or just a bar—it became this opportunity to combine a few different ideas and shared interest that Andrew and I had. We could just sort of see how it could fit well together. It was something that we’d seen in other places done well—maybe it was in the same building, maybe it wasn’t. For example, a hotel where you have a restaurant and a bar, and maybe there’s a retail component. We liked the idea of the three different pieces, each being separate, each having its own identity, but working well together and driving energy that would be shared between businesses.

You might come from dinner and stay for a drink, or come to shop and then meet and friend for dinner—whatever people want to do with it—but it could also be kind of a community hub and something of a clubhouse feel without the private membership aspect—a place where people could feel at home.

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What went into designing the retail space?

Andrew: The store was…I don’t want to say the “least” planned-out, because we put a lot of work into it, but when we built out the restaurant, we worked with a contractor that had experience with projects of this magnitude and really helped us do a great layout in terms of what was best for the diners, what was best for the kitchen and everything else. That was a main focus of our dealings—same with the bar. But for the store, we decided that we were going to go a different route, and we worked with a local woodworker who helped us conceptualize the space and built the main point-of-sale stand, the moving racks and the bench on the window sill. Beyond that, it was just found tables, two chairs from my apartment and a rug from my apartment.

Wow, it really came together on a shoe string.

Andrew: Yeah, we wanted it to feel eclectic to a certain extent. The merchandise is a representation of items that we’ve found and fallen for over the years, and we wanted the components and fixtures of the store to feel the same way. As opposed to working with a contractor to build it out, we put it together ourselves. It was fun.

Eric: It’s the space that’s evolved the most since we opened. When I think of where it was when we opened and where it is now, it’s been fun to see it evolve as we’ve added more brands and expanded in new categories. Now with the help of Charlie Ward—who is the studio assistant for Alec Soth, the photographer whose work we have hanging in the main dinning room—we are putting together some really great art books. Now it’s like, “Where are we going to put all our art books?” We go out to the salvage shops out in Northeast, and we find an old baker’s rack, and now we’ve got that for books. With the restaurant and the bar we sort of knew what those needed to look like from the beginning, whereas with the store, we’ve kind of been learning or moving things around, and it’s not done even done yet.

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Do you guys do all the buying for your merchandise?

Andrew: Yeah, we were in New York just two weeks ago for market week, and we’ve been out there about three times. We opened the store last October, and the restaurant last August, so the first time we went out there, we didn’t have a space, we had business cards. It was sort of interesting walking out there and trying to sell ourselves. We basically said, “We’re going to open this cool store. You can’t see it yet, it doesn’t exist, but sell us your stuff.” Fortunately folks were willing to take a leap of faith with us.

Eric: We really had to trick the first couple of brands into selling to us.

Eric: I can’t remember who we lined up first, but I think it helped that, in Minneapolis, we were going after brands that weren’t here and so they were excited for a new market. We also explained the whole project and they where excited by that, but we really had to bluff our way through those first couple of meetings.

Andrew: The whole project is personal to a certain extent. We put a lot of our time, energy and resources into getting this off the ground, but the store in general, I’d say, is the most personal. With the restaurant we’ve been able to manage thee vision and drive it forward, and really rely on our team and great management. We’re not cooking the food, and you wouldn’t want me serving your table. It’s still really a meaningful part of what we do every day, but it’s not personal at the level of the store, where we’re going to New York and making the final call in what we’re carrying. So in that sense, it’s sort of the most hands-on project.

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In the selection process with the brands that you’re bringing in, do they mimic your own personal styles?

Andrew: Yeah, I think there’s a lot of overlap between Eric’s and my personal taste. We’re not redundant, we have different perspectives to a certain extent and there’s enough that we disagree on where I think the selection process is paired down to what is usually the better result.

When someone comes into any of the three spaces, is there a specific experience you want them to have?

Eric: We want them to have a good time and to have fun. Something we had in mind with the restaurant and the bar—without going overboard or hamming it up—was how many different moments can we create to make someone smile, where there’s going to be a little unexpected detail. Maybe they’ll miss it, maybe they won’t care, but if they notice it and they do care, they will appreciate that we were thoughtful about whatever that is. There’s hopefully a sense of fun or whimsy and playfulness in the design, and it’s not meant to be too self-conscious or taken too seriously. There are a lot of colors and patterns, and it’s meant to have a good energy that way—I’d say downstairs especially with Marvel, but also in the store as well. There’s substance and quality in everything we carry, but it’s meant to be fun.

Andrew: I think people experience it in different ways too. Some people come into the restaurant and what wows them is the history of the building. It’s this great old space which was built in 1902, and the front portion where the store lives was built in 1881. There’s a lot of history here and I think some people come in and they’re excited by the historic setting of the meal or the historic setting of the shopping experience—and some people come in and they’re excited by the design, the colors and the patterns. In the store, people may come in and come across a great classic Barbour coat that has a real timeless feel to it, or someone might come in and be drawn to something a bit more ambitious with colors and whatnot. I think it’s been set up in a way where people can sort of take from it what they want.

Images by Taimoor Dar


Nike+ House of Innovation at Selfridges

Nike+ House of Innovation at Selfridges

Sports brand Nike has opened a temporary shop showcasing the future of sport at Selfridges in London and Dezeen readers can win one of 25 pairs of tickets to an exclusive event we’re hosting there next Thursday, featuring Nike‘s global creative director for the Olympics Martin Lotti in conversation with Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs about the brand’s latest innovations for the London 2012 games.

Nike+ House of Innovation at Selfridges

The event is taking place from 7.30-9pm on 9 August at the Nike+ House of Innovation at Selfridges, 400 Oxford Street, London, W1A 1AB.

Nike+ House of Innovation at Selfridges

To enter this competition email your name and address to houseofinnovation@slice.co.uk. The first 25 to respond will be added to the guestlist and will be notified by email on Monday.

Nike+ House of Innovation at Selfridges

The Nike+ House of Innovation is also open daily until 12 August and is split into several zones where customers can trial and buy the latest digitally enabled Nike products or experience a series of interactive installations.

See all our stories about Nike here, including the movies we filmed previously at the NikeFuel Station at Boxpark.

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Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

A multi-faceted gold block dominates this perfumery in Wrocław by Polish interior designers Theza.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

A beauty salon and back office have been squeezed inside the block and can be glimpsed through perforations in its brushed gold exterior.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

The rest of the shop is divided into monochrome halves, with the main space in white and the passageway in black.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

Boxy lights jut out from the roof at angles, complementing the faceted block.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

The shop, which is the flagship salon of the Frivol perfumery brand, is located in the recently opened Sky Tower in central Wrocław.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

Theza are a group of young architects and designers from Poland, based in Silesia.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

See all our stories about shops »
See all our stories about salons and spas »

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

Photographs are by Ludwik Kaizerbrecht and Bartłomiej Zabój.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Frivole Prestige perfumery is located in the centre of Wrocław in the recently opened skyscraper Sky Tower. The project is a flagship salon of the Frivol perfumery network, which is based mainly on the outlet sales.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

The decor stores Frivol network consists of white and black colour scheme, complemented by the leading colour and structure of the polygons.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

The guideline for the interior is to use mono colour and to develop polygonal structures. The new leading tone got the colour structure of brushed gold.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

The interior is divided into two zones: white – high, located in the depths, and black – low, located along the passage. Zones are compatible with the products range and type of sales.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

A gold polygonal structure is visible throughout the whole interior. The block is two sided – golden from the outside, white from the inside. The interior of the shell hides a beauty salon (manicure, massage, waiting room) and back office.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

In the cosmetic structure part there is a self-supporting three-dimensional structure attached to the floor and partly to the wall.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

Due to a parametric perforation, the coating becomes semi-transparent, partly allowing sight of the interior of the structure.

Frivole Prestige perfumery by Theza

Function: Perfumery/Cosmetic Treatments
Design: Theza architects
Building site: Sky Tower, Wrocław, Poland
Total floor area: 240 sq. m.
Design period: 12.2011 – 02.2012
Construction period: 02.2012 – 05.2012

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Merchandising System by OMA for Coach

Dezeen Wire: architects OMA are developing a modular display system for the stores of American accessories brand Coach.

Merchandising System for Coach by OMA

Inspired by the categorised storage systems of the stores that first opened in the 1940s, the units will create both shelving and space dividers that can be adapted to suit different locations.

The first two systems are planned for flagship stores in New York and Tokyo, with the former due to open in September and the latter to follow in 2013.

OMA have recently been nominated for the Stirling Prize with their Maggie’s Centre, Gartnavel in Glasgow and their Rothschild Bank headquarters in LondonSee all the nominations here »

See more projects by OMA, including a series of interviews we filmed with Rem Koolhaas »

Here’s some information from OMA:


OMA to reimagine retail for Coach’s new stores

American retailer Coach has commissioned OMA to develop a new merchandizing system that accommodates Coach’s wide diversity of products while returning to the clarity of Coach’s heritage stores. The collaboration, led by OMA partner Shohei Shigematsu, will be inaugurated in upcoming flagship stores in New York and Tokyo.

Since establishing its first workshop in 1941, Coach has diversified its product range and styles, while simultaneously broadening the spectrum of its retail environment: from factory stores to outlets, shop-in-shops, boutiques and flagships. Although this expansion transformed Coach from a specialist leather atelier to a global distributor of “democratized luxury goods”, it also clouded the clarity of the brand’s original, library-like stores which used a rigorous organizational system, categorically sorting products inside minimal wooden shelving at assisted counters.

Shigematsu commented: “We wanted a system that could tell the story of any of Coach’s wide repertoire of products, whilst projecting the legibility of its original stores. We created a system of modular display units that can be assembled to respond to the specific needs of each locale. In typical instances they are used for display; in others, they come together as an interior fixture. These units can also enclose spaces for program or curation, and by creating enclosures, they can also act as façades. OMA’s intention is to use combinations of this logical system to create magical spatial possibilities for Coach, in line with Coach’s motto of ‘logic and magic.“

Set to open in September 2012, Coach’s 1,930 square foot flagship shop-in-shop in New York’s newly renovated, Macy’s Herald Square will mark the first manifestation of OMA’s concept for Coach stores. OMA will also implement its concepts in the brand’s upcoming new multi-level flagship in Omotesando, Tokyo, with expected completion in 2013.

Both projects for Coach were designed by OMA’s New York office, led by partner-in-charge Shohei Shigematsu with project architect Rami Abou-Khalil.

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Opening Ceremony pop-up shop by Studio Toogood

Studio Toogood has filled a pop-up fashion boutique in London with rubber-coated objects and glass tabletops mounted on piles of industrial fabrics.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

The Opening Ceremony shop in Covent Garden features tables and chairs by Faye Toogood based on recurring shapes first seen in her Assemblage collection from 2010.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

One table has sheets of foam, carpet and other textured fabrics sandwiched between its glass tabletop and supporting trestles.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

Another glass tabletop appears to balance delicately on a foam-stuffed tube, a black sphere and a stack of fabric. An earlier version of this table used stone, brass and sycamore as supports.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

Upstairs, a similar table rests on an empty white tube, a skeletal sphere and cube with threaded sides. A white display cabinet also uses thread to create a subtle screen door.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

The Spade chair, with its distinctive handle-shaped backrest, has been reproduced in ash wood, and one of the chairs is also coated in rubber.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

Rubberised geometric constructions provide an abstract window display.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

See more stories about Studio Toogood »
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Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

Photography is by Leon Chew.

Faye Toogood for Opening Ceremony

Here’s some more information from Studio Toogood:


Studio Toogood has created a series of mechanical-looking constructions to coincide with the launch of Opening Ceromony’s first pop-up shop in London. Reflecting the immediacy and the temporary nature of the “pop up”, the rubberised pieces marry the handmade with the industrial. Each constellation plays with the ideas of construction, transparency, texture and abstraction that are characteristic of Studio Toogood’s aesthetic.

Working with Opening Ceremony, Faye Toogood has created a number of pieces to complement the architecturally deconstructed pop-up shop. Toogood’s pieces are featured throughout the space, and include stacked industrial forms in the basement, and translucent, light pieces on the ground floor.

Opening Ceremony, 31-32 King Street. Convent Garden WC2. July – October, 2012

The post Opening Ceremony pop-up shop
by Studio Toogood
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