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DRINK SYNDIKAT ADVENT CALENDAR — OPEN THE DOOR TO FESTIVE GIN COCKTAILS

DRINK SYNDIKAT ADVENT CALENDAR — OPEN THE DOOR TO FESTIVE GIN COCKTAILS

This advent calendar is for adults only: Drink Syndikat’s Gin Cocktail Advent Calendar, which has a new festive design and is packed with the perfect ingredients for sippable cocktails. Founded in 2014 by Jens Hoffmann and Erik Pfauth, Syndikat is all about whipping up high-quality mixed drinks in the comfort of your own home. Their sets combine high-quality spirits with the knowledge and skills of experienced bartenders, and the Advent calendar, which brings together popular recipes from the past eight years, is no exception. Behind each of the 24 doors are the ingredients you need for mixing at home (such as bitters and syrups), and every two to four days you’ll collect enough to craft a delicious beverage, for a total of 16 drinks. You can look forward to the likes of a Reserve Coffee Sour with a nutty aroma, and a Pink Float with elderberry, grapefruit and orange notes. Also included is a handbook with eight recipes, recommendations and details about the various manufacturers from around the world. And since the holiday spirit is best experienced in great company, the Advent Calendar’s drinks are designed for two people. Here’s to happy cocktail sipping!

Text: Sofia Fischer / Photos: Drink Syndikat & Kateryna Firsova

Gin Cocktail Adventskalender from Drink Syndikat

You can order the calendar online.

@drinksyndikat

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WAVY WINTER KNITWEAR AND WORKS FROM BERLIN ARTISTS — PLĀS COLLECTIVE POP-UP ON KOTTBUSSER DAMM

WAVY WINTER KNITWEAR AND WORKS FROM BERLIN ARTISTS — PLĀS COLLECTIVE POP-UP ON KOTTBUSSER DAMM

The clothes from Plās Collective are, in the label’s own words, “drawn by chaos”. The “chaos” here lies in how they’re constructed: the cotton garments are made by making random movements with knitting needles, giving a wavy motif that makes each piece unique. The resulting knitwear collection – made in Italy from organic cotton, no less – is called Unseen Realities and includes winter warmers like the “Glitch” fingerless gloves and the slender “Oddity” scarf. Plas is not your average fashion brand: it’s a sort of hybrid between a garment label and art project, based not in one place but always moving around Europe (“nomadic” is the motto here). Mainly focused on clothes, the collective has also dabbled in design objects like sculptures and stoneware. Now it’s Berlin’s turn to welcome the nomads with a ten-day pop-up in the Somos Art House on Kottbusser Damm.

Besides the off-kilter knits, you can browse and buy design and art from Berlin-based creators: cute garments from hand embroiderer Stefanija Pejchinovska, paintings from Italian-born illustrator Elenia Beretta and prints from artist and photographer Sara Scanderebech. Just the thing if you want your bedroom wall to be as stylish as your wardrobe…

Text: Benji Haughton / Photos: Kevin Rashid Giaquinto

Plās Collective pop-up at Somos Art House, Kottbusser Damm 95, 10967 Berlin–Neukölln; map
04–13.11.2022 14–19; opening 03.11 18–21h.

@plas_collective

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BANNACH — CONTEMPORARY FURNITURE DESIGN MIXING TRADITION AND INNOVATION

BANNACH — CONTEMPORARY FURNITURE DESIGN MIXING TRADITION AND INNOVATION

It must be the color, I thought, when I first stumbled across the furniture by Berlin-based Bannach. It’s the clear, rich, deep surfaces that aesthetically captivate me. Or is it the combination of colors, those unusual mixtures of pink, orange, forest green and burgundy? But the longer I looked, the more certain I was: No! It’s the shape, of course! The simplicity of the designs, lines and waves that combine with complex and harmonious results. It’s so peculiar that I struggle to find comparisons: it’s a bit like if minimalist artist Donald Judd designed a Memphis Edition for Ikea in 1993. But that doesn’t quite fit either, and maybe it’s best to leave the analogies behind. It’s simply Bannach.

Founded in 2018 by the eponymous landscape architect Moritz Bannach, the label blends design, art and architecture. It designs contemporary furniture and home accessories and in doing so achieves what few brands can: a clear design language, always making references but remaining unique. Bannach emphasizes resource-saving production and innovation while at the same time preserving traditional craft techniques. The designs are manufactured in Germany and Italy and you really notice – this furniture really is perfectly polished.

Text: Hilka Dirks / Photos: Ragnar Schmuck, Marcus Wend & Faruk Pinto

Bannach furniture is available by request online.

@bannach.eu

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SUITS AND LOUNGEWEAR MADE FROM UPCYCLED FABRIC IN KENYA AND GHANA — EMEKA

SUITS AND LOUNGEWEAR MADE FROM UPCYCLED FABRIC IN KENYA AND GHANA — EMEKA

Fashion label Emeka Suits started with some found fabric. The brand’s creator, Sydney Nwakanma, posted a photo of a suit he’d made from curtain fabric bought at a market in Kenya. The messages started flooding in. People were so interested that Sydney wondered if this upcycling could be an answer to unemployment – and fabric waste – in Kenya, a country close to his heart. So in 2019, Emeka’s tailored, stylish, limited edition suits were born. The word “Emeka” is short for chukwuemeka, which means “God has done so much” in Igbo, a language originating in Southeastern Nigeria. It’s also Sydney’s second name. His suits are upcycled from fabric waste and handmade in rural Kenya. The latest range – and the first loungewear collection by Emeka – is fittingly called “Home“.

The collection is made from soft, breathable cotton, hand-dyed and ethically made in Ghana. The garments come in matching two-piece sets in earthy tones – red clay, bronze and eden – and have spotted variations printed with white figures in organic shapes. As they’re all handmade and individual, each design differs slightly. This makes each set special, speaking to the possibilities of ethical production and craftsmanship. We think it’s no surprise that they released these loungeable items just in time for the cozy season…

Text: Savannah van der Niet / Photos: Aja Dotson

Emeka Suits

@emeka_suits

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TOP INTERIOR DESIGNERS GATHER FOR A THREE-DAY EXHIBITION — AD INTERIOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES

TOP INTERIOR DESIGNERS GATHER FOR A THREE-DAY EXHIBITION — AD INTERIOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES

Every month I flip through Architectural Digest in search of interior inspiration and to discover the style and design of tomorrow. This weekend, however, I’ll be finding out in person: at AD Interior: New Perspectives (21–23.10.2022), an exhibition that is welcoming renowned design experts to the Kronprinzenpalais in Mitte. The three-day event will feature 12 design studios including Batek Architekten, Gonzalez Haase AAS, Julia von Werz, Stephanie Thatenhorst and Studio Oink. David Kosock and Joern Scheipers from Vaust Studio, for instance, draw on brutalism and play with familiar materials like stone, wood and – of course – concrete. Ester Bruzkus Architekten, meanwhile, are inspired by the idea of “boxes inside boxes” and have a soft spot for color. Their work is just one example of the new German perspectives on interiors, product design and architecture that go way beyond the usual Bauhaus, Bella Italia and Parisian Chic. 

Text: Alison Musch / Credit: F|DREI agency for AD Architectural Digest Germany

AD Interior: New Perspectives, Kronprinzenpalais, Unter den Linden 3, 10117 Berlin–Mitte; map
21–23.10.2022 

See online for tickets and more info.

@ad_germany

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