sneaker shop gipsstr

sneaker shop gipsstr

sneaker shop gants hill

Sneaker Shop Gipsstr

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Pay less for more nights! Welcome to Casa Camper Berlin Mitte Our Berlin design hotel is situated in the vibrant and historical heart of Berlin, Mitte. Hotel Casa Camper Berlin Mitte provides unique city accommodation. Creative design and attention to detail can be seen in our Berlin boutique hotel's 51 rooms and suites. Tentempié offers fresh snacks and drinks 24 hours a day on the top floor of Casa Camper Berlin Mitte with incredible views over the city. No timetables, no bills, all free for guests of Casa Camper. Join us on Facebook Follow us on TwitterWe help outstanding entrepreneurs build innovative companies that will be remembered We help outstanding entrepreneurs build innovative companies that will be remembered Discover our global companiesand success stories. Dailymotion is the largest European video content publisher. It was sold to Orange in 2011. Sigfox operates a global cellular network for low-throughput IoT communication.




FreedomPop is a disruptive wireless services provider which delivers free, fast, mobile phone and wireless internet services to consumers. is an online home furnishings and homeware retailer which offers its customers great design direct from the makers. Lafourchette is the leading online restaurant booking service in France and Spain. It was sold to TripAdvisor in 2014. What our entrepreneurs say about us The financial commitment, board leadership, management mentorship and time investment Partech made in Rockyou has been critical to us. I believe that tackling huge, risky, complex and cash-consuming issues is the right vision to build something big in tech today, bigger than Talend! That’s why I chose Partech Ventures. I started 123Venture with Partech and it was inconceivable to start Lendix without Partech in my Board. When I decided to partner with Partech, it was one of the best decision I ever made at Alltricks. Partech was the only VC able to take us from Paris to the US!




Partech is a rare kind of investor: they were absolutely instrumental in launching our development in Japan and the UK. Partech is one of very few investors able to both challenge and support the management team when the business is facing strategic questions. Partech was always the one investor pushing us to accelerate our international expansion well beyond our borders. Partech was instrumental with the merger that gave birth to Teads! Partech has been an excellent partner to Dailymotion: their hands-on assistance have really helped the company. Partech really helped Qype to become the #1 in Europe, supported us through thick and thin, and ultimately was key in our tradesale. I have consistently found Partech is in the top few percent of VCs. These guys are the best! Partech was the first international VC in Alvarion because they understood the opportunity faster than the others. Partech's partners have helped us think through each opportunity carefully, to ensure that we made the right decision.




Partech played a critical role in designing the right strategy to enter key European countries. Although they didn’t have the best term sheet, we chose Partech because we knew we would get a much bigger check come exit time. They ask tough questions, challenge us hard to think deep and different in order to build a global game-changing business.Autumn and winter trends Wee Gallery Imm Ceramics Mix & Match Plates TIGER Mix & Match Plates BEAR Mix & Match Plates CAT Poster NOT A BLACK SWAN Strumphose QUEEN OF HEARTS Leggings KINGS & QUEENS Schuhe LIV BLACK DOODLE For the kids room Welcome to WALKING THE CAT, the online shop for everyone who has always asked themselves: “Why are all the coolest and trendiest children’s fashions only available from Scandinavia, France, Spain, Australia, the USA or England?” We asked ourselves exactly the same question. And decided to do something about it. The result: labels like Mini Rodini, Bobo Choses, Soft Gallery, Imps&Elfs, ESP No.1, Noé & Zoë, Indikudual, Louise Misha, Tocotó vintage, Sunchild, lötiekids, Búho und Salt Water Sandals are now available from Berlin!




With an eye on the latest trends, we have lovingly selected the most fashionable German and international kidswear brands for you. And our fast and uncomplicated ordering process means that shopping for your favourite kidswear labels is child’s play! Taking up less time for shipping, leaving you with more time for shopping. This means that your little ones will be running riot in the playground in their new outfits in no time at all.Themen » Shopping » Neueröffnung New Balance eröffnet Flagship-Store in Berlin-Mitte Auf rund 350 Quadratmetern wird der Sportartikelhersteller Footwear und Mode aus den Bereichen Tennis, Fitness, Fußball, Running und Lifestyle präsentieren. Zudem werden Modelle mit den Qualitätssiegeln "Made in UK" und "Made in USA" erhältlich sein. Weltweit gibt es bereits fast 3000 New Balance Stores, davon 50 in Europa. Geschäfte in der Nähe Mehr Mode im BerlinFinderS.Wert Design began with a research project of Fernsehturm graphics in 2001, which turned into the book publication Von der Partei zur Party 1969-2003 – Der Berliner Fernsehturm als grafisches Symbol (2003), by Dirk Berger, Ingo Müller, and Sandra Siewert.




I met with the Swiss graphic designer and architect by training, Sandra Siewert, who came to Berlin in 1992 from Basel, and has been translating Berlin’s surfaces and façades into her graphic designs. After researching her work, visiting her store, and writing about it in our Berliner Chic: A Locational History of Berlin Fashion (Intellect 2011), I had a chance to sit down with Sandra in person and learn more about the story of S.Wert and Stadkluft. Susan and I dedicated Berliner Chic to the women of Berlin, and Sandra Siewert and Claudine Brignot were among the few we singled out. Even before the Fernsehturm became the now-popular symbol of reunified Berlin, before the publishing houses realized the best-selling potential of Berlin urban and architectural history, Sandra and Dirk founded S.Wert with their own publication. The book documents the history of the Fernsehturm in different graphics published in the GDR, and simultaneously traces the history of life in East-Berlin, with the ever present tower accompanying its citizens from the first school day, to weddings, to anniversaries and state celebrations.




Well researched and documented, the book became a best-selling homage to the city and its tallest structure, and a history told in images, postcards, graphics, and advertising. In 2004, came the wrapping paper project “Ruhesitz am Zoo” (“rest near the Zoo” named after a home for elderly people located next to Berlin Zoologischer Garten, the former center of West-Berlin), showing four decades of architecture around Bahnhof Zoo. The “journey” starts in the 1950s – the time of building and rebuilding the city after the war and ends in the 80s – before the wall came down and East-Berlin was attracting more people than the former center of West-Berlin. In 2005, Bahnhof Zoo, once a key arrival point in West-Berlin was demoted to a regional train station, and practically fell into slumber. Today, the Zoo area is a construction site, revamping and gentrifying the former West-Berlin structures and buildings, and adding some new skyscrapers that resemble Potsdamer Platz.




The former DOB fashion headquarters were housed in the Bikini House – which stood empty for decades, and is now under renovation to become part of new shopping and condo complex. After that, S.Wert began to work with textiles, creating the Angry Children pillow collection – homage to the erasure of Berlin post-war modernist facades. Sandra began working with various textile print techniques. It turned out to be a challenge to find textile manufacturers that still remained in Germany (most textile production has been moved to Asia in the 1990s), and who were interested in collaborating on smaller textile print orders. In 2006, a friend introduced Sandra to Claudine Brignot (also from Basel) – thus began a collaboration on a fashion collection entitled Stadtkluft (first presented in Tokyo). Both Sandra’s pillow design and Claudine’s dresses featured similar motifs of the city. In Stadkluft, Sandra’s urban graphic design and Claudine’s fashion design came together.




Since then, they collaborate on one collection per year, singling out different cities. The next collection features Barcelona. Since 2008, S.Wert Shop is located in Brunnenstr. 191 in Mitte, U-Rosenthaler Platz. This is where I first came across the designer’s work and then wrote about them in our last chapter of Berliner Chic (2011). Claudine’s Urban Speed fashion atelier and shop is located nearby in Gipsstr. 7 (also near U-Rosenthaler Platz). Next came a collection of curtains that featured city motifs, the most popular and best-selling design pattern being the street lamps, with the poetic name “City Flowers.” Sandra and Dirk think of themselves as story-tellers as much as a creative design team. Fascinated by the constructed environments of Berlin, they tell the stories of the city, its buildings (forgotten and newly constructed), and the changes that take place. In summer 2010, began the collaboration with fashion designer Barbara Gebhardt (originally from Munich), who moved to Berlin for fashion school and founded her label NIX in 1990.




Since 2010, NIX uses Sandra’s fabrics in her fashion designs. Regular patrons are mostly local Berliner and ex-Berliners because most tourists don’t really get the conceptual  layering of meaning behind S.Wert design, they don’t have the background knowledge of the architectural and social transformations in Berlin, they look for more recognizable symbols and images of Berlin. S.Wert Design is an original Berlin brand that requires a certain amount of insider knowledge of Berlin, a certain relationship and engagement with the city. Those who discover it and understand its multi-layered and intricate web of significations and symbols bring their friends to the store and show them around, and explain the symbols to them. S.Wert presented their collections multiple times at Premium, but as of last year they no longer accept smaller Berlin labels, and only deal with large trademarks. Culturally, this is counterproductive and stifles Berlin creativity, since undiscovered, new, and young designs are no longer show-cased.

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