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Denim
Care guides|February 2026
Denim is special for its exceptional durability, unique aging process, and versatile appeal. With proper care, your denim garments can improve with time.
ARKET and LAILA GOHAR – LAUNCHING SOON
Interviews|August 2025
Inspired by traditional Nordic and Japanese crafts, Swedish designer Carina Seth Andersson has made it her mission to create beautiful utility items with perfectly balanced proportions.
With a small studio production of glass and ceramics, as well as commissions for producers like Svenskt Tenn, Iittala, and Marimekko, Carina Seth Andersson aims to transcend the traditional hierarchy of arts, crafts, and the mass-produced.
She considers her materials to be living and organic, and therefore, they demand the human hand and sense to transition from liquid to solid form, even if made industrially. Objects of glass or ceramics will never be entirely uniform, she believes, but slightly varying, reflecting the hand’s work and craft.
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For Andersson, using utility design as the starting point means returning again and again to an object’s principal function. Rather than sketching and experimenting with the material, she begins working with words, listing needs and end uses, cutting and pasting and attributing them to a certain object or form. She draws inspiration from the simple, archetypal shapes that have evolved over time as solutions to everyday problems.
In her work, traditional utility designs also serve as examples of how functional form is achieved, by studying the proportions and balance between an object’s components.
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For ARKET’s first collection, launched in 2017, Carina Seth Andersson created a series of everyday bowls and plates in glazed clay that united the refined, simplistic expression of Nordic and Japanese crafts. The series was designed for the modern kitchen as multifunctional vessels for holding, preparing, and serving.
A characteristic spout runs as a red thread through the different designs, but as the size of the spout remains the same in bowls of different shapes and dimensions, the proportions are transformed and thus create a unique expression in each object. In spring 2022, some of these pieces were revisited and reintroduced alongside new and original designs.
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Carina Seth Andersson works out of her studio in the ceramic centre of Gustavsberg in the Stockholm archipelago.
Her products have been exhibited in galleries in New York, Paris, Milan, and Tokyo, and her pieces are part of the permanent collections at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, and Designmuseum Danmark in Copenhagen.
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Care guides|February 2026
Denim is special for its exceptional durability, unique aging process, and versatile appeal. With proper care, your denim garments can improve with time.
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Care guides|October 2025
A timeless outerwear staple, Barbour’s classic waxed cotton jackets are known to last for decades with proper care.
Care guides|August 2025
Suede is crafted from the underside of leather hides, offering a soft, fuzzy finish. Due to its delicate nature, it is important to properly care for your suede products to extend their lifespan.
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Care guides|August 2025
Linen is a strong natural fibre that gets softer with use and time. It’s breathable and has a soft texture. Caring for linen properly helps maintain its natural characteristics.
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Food|April 2026
Semla is a classic Nordic pastry widely enjoyed as a seasonal sweet treat. Traditionally, it's served as a wheat bun with almond paste and whipped cream, but in our version, we use a mini version of a Danish tebirkes bun.
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Food|April 2026
Our signature iced tea is a savory, non-alcoholic aperitif, tailored for summer get-togethers. Bursting with natural flavour, it's a refreshing accompaniment to any outdoor gathering.
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Design|April 2026
For Spring/Summer 2026, we have joined with artist Laila Gohar on her debut ready-to-wear collection. The collaboration spans 27 pieces, translating Gohar’s singular aesthetic into a rich, multi-layered wardrobe, designed for moments that move between the everyday and the exceptional.
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Interviews|March 2026
In the basement of his apartment in central Stockholm, our menswear designer Oskar Eriksson keeps boxes filled with historical denim pieces he’s collected over decades: from torn-down jackets and heavily mended dungarees to scraps and remnants – some even rusted –, hand-embroidered work shirts, and decades-old jeans he still wears from time to time.