Ven. Space Opens in Brooklyn

Ven. Space, an in-person-only boutique in Brooklyn, can't seem to keep the clothes on the racks.
[ Continue reading ]“A wealth of information creates a poverty of attention.” – Herbert Simon — Wednesday January 31st — —
The idea is to die young as late as possible. — Ashley Montagu — Wednesday January 31st — —
I love listening. It is one of the only spaces where you can be still and moved at the same time. — Nayyirah Waheed — Wednesday January 31st — —
Ven. Space, an in-person-only boutique in Brooklyn, can't seem to keep the clothes on the racks.
[ Continue reading ]A curious mind exploring the edges of all that's possible with design and beyond.
[ Continue reading ]On storytelling economies.
[ Continue reading ]444 is a community based platform that provides a system based on the 12 areas of health (4 for the body, 4 for the mind, and 4 for energy) to enhance the physical, mental, and energetic well-being of individuals.
[ Continue reading ]It appears that we’ve got a new Tyler, The Creator project incoming. The most recent Tyler album was the excellent rap record Call Me If You Get Lost, which came out back in 2021. Tyler just produced and rapped on Maxo Kream’s single “Cracc Era” last month, and he’ll reportedly…
[ Continue reading ]Michael Bodiam is an image maker based in London specialising in still life, moving image, interiors and landscapes.
[ Continue reading ]RM Sotheby's is the number one classic car auction house in the world. Cars for auction include rare antique, classic, and sports & racing cars.
[ Continue reading ]Perfectly heavy, dense, and smooth in hand. An abstract entry into the utility category of something you carry, trust, and live with daily. “Knock” naming comes from the sound the cardholder makes when being placed/dropped onto the table of a restaurant or bar. The noticeable weight is a specific part…
[ Continue reading ]For the greatest sports cars ever, high performance and ineffable beauty never go out of style.
[ Continue reading ]In this extended Q&A, author Nathalie Olah speaks with BAFTA Award-winning filmmaker Adam Curtis about climate change, and how nostalgia and doomerism are affecting our ability to organise for, and imagine, a better tomorrow.
[ Continue reading ]We chat with the type foundry owners about astrological inspiration, the life cycle of a trendy typeface, and how to keep your edge as you leave your wunderkind era.
[ Continue reading ]Every day on the news we are shown images of war and destruction. This coincides with global expenditure on arms increasing year after year. However, we are rarely afforded a glimpse behind the curtains of the global arms business. Photographer Nikita Teryoshin travelled to 16 arms fairs between 2016 and…
[ Continue reading ]Shots from the road by Joachim taken in the summer months of 2023, shooting Atelier Munro campaigns with Mounir, Milan, Paul and Colin featuring NHL players Andrew Mangiapane and Mark Giordano, the Fall/Winter 2023 Signature Collection, art historian Paul Rem, the Wedding 2024 collection and finally a story with artist Mike Dings to present our collaboration with Calgary institution Smithbilt Hats. Moving all over the globe from Calgary, to Toronto and Niagara-on-the-Lake, to Hilversum, Haarlem and Amsterdam, the island of Terschelling and finally back to the capital of Alberta, where we also celebrated the opening of a new Atelier Munro flagship store - all campaigns are now live. [ Continue reading ]
We are very proud to present Dead Cowboy by Mike Dings, the first project released under the sublabel of our Together& sideproject. The 88-page unbound A3 publication comprises of the complete collection of works on paper portraying deceased cowboys (2019) by the Dutch artist with a profound love for Spaghetti Westerns. It highlights the sensible strokes of Dings' pencils, showing lonely yet brutally honest scenes of anonymous cowboy figures captured during the dying moments before no one will remember them, again. We asked Dutch writer and poet Bram Schweckhorst to write the accompanying short-short story that forms the introduction of the magazine. [ Continue reading ]
Published under the label of our other sideproject, Together&, we are very proud to present SOUND OF HELL, a zine that we created with our good friend and multitalent Milan van Dril. The 152-page A5 size publication is a compilation of photography, film stills, rave flyers and shaved heads, captured on and around the set of Jim Taihuttu's HARDCORE NEVER DIES (2023). The result is a magazine that intertwines the contemporary gabber scene with the cinematic universe of the film set in 1990's Rotterdam. From raves in Rotterdam's Maastunnel to 'hakken' [signature Gabber dance] in a random parking lot, SOUND OF HELL is an ode to the people who keep the Dutch subculture alive to this day. [ Continue reading ]
Shots from the road by Joachim taken in the first half of 2023, shooting Atelier Munro campaigns with Mounir, Milan and Keng featuring actor Nasrdin Dchar, music director Gustavo Gimeno and CEO Mark Williams of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and menswear writer Mitchell Moss. Moving across the globe from Rotterdam, Toronto, to Cincinatti, Nashville and finally to Florence (during Pitti Uomo 104) where we also hosted our dinner with Mitchell and Clayton's Sprezza platform - all campaigns are now live. [ Continue reading ]
During Pitti Uomo 104, we collaborated with Clayton Chambers' weekly newsletter Sprezza and Mitchell Moss' blog Menswear Musings to host an intimate Atelier Munro dinner at Trattoria Coco Lezzone with some of our favorite people from the fashion industry. What a night it was, we loved every second of it! [ Continue reading ]
When we travelled to Pitti Uomo 104, in June of this year, we asked photographer Keng Pereira to capture the style on the street. See here our personal favorites, which were partly published by the Dutch JFK Magazine in their issue 102. [ Continue reading ]
When looking back at 2022, it is safe to say that reading David W. Marx’s excellent 'Status and Culture’ was among the most cathartic experiences. Marx’s elaborate observations on how culture moves through society is both enlightening and confronting. Reading his immaculately formed thoughts about the world we live in, granted us new perspectives on our own behaviour. Both as a consumer and an active participant and observer of culture as as whole. It has a been a rather strange year of (post-)pandemic life, the third half following those two earlier exceptionally strange years. Marx’s book offered some fundamental clarity about the times we live in. And what we strive for in the coming year(s) of the Another Something macrocosm. [ Continue reading ]