Tag Archives: Fabric Shopping

Fabric shopping in Tokyo

Nippori-map

Tokyo is absolutely brilliant for the fabric loving visitor… it even has its own fabric district!!!! how cool is that? very, that’s what.  Nippori is the most well-known place in Tokyo to shop for fabric, but this is my third visit to the city so I investigated some more and found a few other great stores well worth a visit as well.

But firstly; Nippori… because it’s awesome.  If you only have time to visit one location then this will not disappoint.  Setting aside a whole morning, or afternoon, would not be excessive for the truly dedicated fabric lover.

It conveniently has its own train station; called Nippori, on the JR Yamanote line.  When you get off the train you really want to find and exit from the East exit, where you will descend a long flight of old stairs and soon will see this sign on the street.

IMG_9574You just keep on going and you can’t possible miss it, the street is crammed with fabric stores; also, each of those fabric stores is likewise crammed with fabric too.  Most stores are situated along the one main road.  The map above has so many marked, you can get a feel for the sheer number of options available… and there are bins and bolts of fabric set up in the street all over, you’re just spoilt for where to look next.  Prices are mostly low to middling by Australian standards, quality varies, but is overall pretty great with some fabulous bargains to be had.  The most exciting thing about it of course is the CHOICE!!  You will find selvedge denim, leather, laces, linens, cottons, tartans, knits, sweater knits, mountains of haberdashery and… well probably everything, if you take the time to look.

There is one very important thing to bear in mind when shopping in Nippori, and I cannot stress this too much…

TAKE CASH!  because some stores here will not accept credit cards.  Also, it can be quite difficult for the foreigner to obtain cash, even in shopping districts.  In my experience, 7Eleven convenience stores have ATM’s that accept foreign credit cards so are a handy place to get some Japanese yen out.

In fact, and this is general advice for the foreigner travelling in Tokyo; it’s a very good idea to sear into your memory the location of a 7Eleven nearby your ryokan/hotel and remember to pop in and stock up on yen if you’re getting low… BEFORE you head out shopping/sightseeing for the day!!  Reason being, of course while there are 7Elevens dotted about all over, you can’t count on one being there for you in a pinch and the very last thing you want in Tokyo is to be a bit low on cash.  Because I can guarantee; you WILL see adorable things everywhere that you WILL want to buy, and then you WILL waste huge amounts of time first searching for that cash and then for that cute little store again.

Unfortunately there is NOT a 7Eleven conveniently close to Nippori Textile town.  So make sure you have plenty of money before you head over!

IMG_9570 IMG_9571

I bought leather and denim in Nippori.

fabricnippori

The good news is that all the following stores DO accept credit cards.  #shamelessenabler

Mina Perhonen Arkistot

minaperhonenarkistot

google map location

2nd and 3rd floor; 5-13-14 Shirokanedai, Minato-ku.  

The nearest train station to this store is Meguro, on the Tokyu-Meguro line or the JR Yamanote line.  It’s an easy fifteen minute walk away, but is very unobtrusively tucked away in a side street and you really have to keep a sharp look out for the turnoff.  The store’s lower floor is the 2nd floor, and you have to climb up that white spiral staircase pictured above to enter.  The fabrics are all located on the floor above that, on the 3rd floor.

Interesting factoid; Mina Perhonen is a Scandinavian name and I’ve always mistakenly thought it was the name of the designer too.  However the designer Akira Minagawa is Japanese, and it’s just that his love for Scandinavian design informs much of his own design.  The brand’s flagship store is very nearby, on the on the 3rd floor, 5-18-17 Shirokanedai and you can go and browse beautiful and expensive homewares and clothing… however this is a sewing blog so this is all about the fabric only, alright?  OK.

Anyway, my discovery that the designer was actually Japanese zoomed a quest for Mina Perhonen textiles right up high on my must-do list.  Prices are high, which is kinda to be expected for a designer name brand of this calibre.  The small range of fabrics is really gorgeous, and there is also a small sprinkling of very cute and interesting knick-knacks to tempt you; everything beautiful, and exquisitely displayed.  The store feels a bit art museum-y, and you’re treated with quiet and charming attention by the staff.  I decided upon one metre of printed linen; which was reverentially wrapped up in tissue paper printed with abstract-y sewing pattern pieces and, along with a complementary pattern for a handbag and a small box of incense sticks; popped into a really nice little fabric carry bag then tied up with a mina perhonen ribbon.  The lady spent about five minutes tying the most perfect, beautiful little bow with the ribbon.  It’s all very very lovely.

minaperhonen

Even the sticky tape on my parcel has the mina perhonen butterfly!!  #attentiontodetail

minaperhonen2

The next store I visited was Cocca

P1120829

google map location

1-31-13 Ebisunishi, Shibuya-ku.

The closest train station to this store is Daiken-Yama on the Tokyu-Toyoko line, and the store is short and easy, uphill walk from this station.    This shop supports work by local art and textile people, and also has some handmade clothing for sale too.  Overall, it had a relaxed and busy vibe almost like a studio, and I swear some of the interesting-looking people who came in and went straight up the staircase to the loft were some of the makers themselves, coming in to do something creative.  Fabric-wise, there were lots of  interesting “art” prints that were probably unique one-offs, as well as there was a nice selection of more regular fabrics too; some pretty polkadots, stripes and checks.  I was more interested in the “art” fabrics though, and it was actually very hard to choose!    The prices here were mostly middling; not particularly cheap but not top end either.  I eventually bought a length of wool printed? or painted? with a “messy”, brush-stroke-like tree print.

fabriccocca

Craig sneakily took this picture below; of me poking about in the store while he was waiting for me to make up my freaking mind.

DSC_0496

The last store I visited was Check & Stripe

checkstripe

google map location

2-24-13 Midorigaoka, Meguro-ku.  

The closest station to this store is Jiyogaoka, on the Tokyu-Toyoko line, or the Tokyu-Oimachi line

If you are planning to visit with an unenthusiastic husband and/or offspring in tow, you will all be pleased to hear that just around the corner from this store is Jiyugaoka Burger, which has huge burgers that are everything your average meat-eater dreams of and more.  Also, just near the train station I noticed a store with the very promising name of Sweets Forest.  Just saying  😉

Anyway, Check & Stripe is a quietly uber-chic kind of a fabric store, with a beautiful range of checks and stripes obviously, as well as tartans, polkadots and plains.  It may sound ordinary and the prints themselves were, but what made the fabrics stand out for me was the exceptional quality.  The store also carried a decent range of Liberty fabrics, I think they could have been the Japanese printed Liberties.   My husband chose some for a shirt, although now I’m secretly coveting it myself, hehe.  Although since I’d requisitioned some of his spare suitcase space for that very heavy roll of factory selvedge denim that I’d bought in Nippori… well I figured I should let him have something.   As well as the divine fabrics that were right up my alley, the store had adorable buttons, embroidered labels, and a few eponymous pattern books, filled with simple, very loose and unfitted styles photographed in minimalist, faded-colour settings; that “look” that those of us who have more than one Japanese pattern book are all very familiar with now.

Prices were middling, and I thought excellent value for the quality of the stuff.  Hmmm, I bought quite a lot in this place!

checkandstripe

In closing, how nice is this little thought printed on my Mina Perhonen carry bag…  !

minaperhonen1

pinterestmail

the spoils from Scandinavia…

I totally should have posted this before, sorry!… some fellow fabric enthusiasts expressed interest in seeing my Scandinavian purchases; the spoils sought and acquired, packed and repacked, schlepped through cities, one cobble-stoned street after another; and once safely home to be borne triumphantly aloft with pomp and circumstance and deposited with due ceremony unto the bottomless black pit that is The Fabric Stash.  Haha, only joking, hopefully I will get around to making some things up without too much delay!  I have already muslined up a highly possible “maybe” for the caramel leather.
Anyhoo, without further ado here are the goods:
leather from Copenhagen…
two pieces of the caramel and one small piece of the yellow

from Stockholm;
an enormously expensive upholstery fabric which may prove too scary to actually cut into… eeeek! and below; a linen mix that is a modern Swedish design.  I fell in love with this straight away and bought the rest of the roll, which wasn’t very much!  I’m really hoping I can get out of it the summer frock that I have firmly in mind.

from Norway;
it might not look traditionally Norwegian but somehow this fresh navy and white gingham print does seem both nautical and Norwegian to me.  I’m thinking of a little summer-weight, boxy, zip-up hoodie of some kind.

from Iceland:
fish leather, from left green wolffish (catfish), black cod, salmon.. well, salmon! and aqua blue perch leather.

and a knitting book;

Also in Iceland;  on our last day I just couldn’t resist a visit to the brick and mortar store whose online site is one of my favourite to visit and merely drool over the eye candy within, KronKron.  Long ago I succumbed to an online purchase from these cooler than cool Icelandic shoe designers.  Well, I would have hated myself forever if I had left Iceland without popping into the real deal.

Take a look at these details.  Obviously I was helpless to resist, of course.

pinterestmail

Fabric shopping in Scandinavia

When going away I like to buy at least one piece of fabric or some yarn from a place, so I can make for myself a wearable souvenir.  So how fortunate that fabric shopping in Scandinavia is fantastic!!

Our first stop; Copenhagen.  I didn’t find much by way fabric stores online, but I had read about a leather shop and paid it a visit.
Well.
It.  Was. AWESOME.

Skindhuset
Skindergade 6
1159 København K

Here can be found a lot of leathers and suedes in a variety of colours, leather needles and other working tools, and a good range of metal bits and bobs such as purse frames and handles; and buckles, snap latches and hooks used for finishing handbags and luggage.  Stunned by the fabulosity within I conservatively bought only three pieces of leather.  Later on I realised I had been way toooooo conservative and planned a return visit on our last day.  Biggest mistake ever.  My advice: buy stuff when you’re there, on the spot.  Because you may find, like I did, that your last shopping day in a place is unexpectedly a public holiday and the shop is shut.  *silent scream* a la Edvard Munch
oh well.

Next stop; Stockholm…
and Craig’s reflection in the window, wearing a shirt that I made for him too, hehe…

Svenskt Tenn AB

Strandvägen 5
114 51 Stockholm
Stocks a very beautiful, albeit extraordinarily expensive range of Swedish designs and prints in the form of upholstery fabric, lots of curtains and cushions made up.  I was prepared to buy curtains as a last resort but fortunately found that you could also buy some of the fabrics off the bolt… and I did buy a lovely bucolic print that is still deciding whether it wants to be an Elisalex or a spring coat.  Ahhh, decisions decisions!
And now I am so very grateful to Liz, who emailed me to point me in the direction of some bonafide garment fabric stores too; thank you so much Liz!  Enabling successfully achieved.  🙂

Tygverket – Tyger i Stockholm

Sankt Paulsgatan 19
118 46 Stockholm
As soon as I walked in this place I knew I had come to the place where Swedish ladies shop for their fabrics.  A cheerful jumble of all sorts of fabrics of every description piled up all over the place, not unlike our Spotlight, but more intimate and classier.  I found some very lovely designs, both cute kiddies’ and lovely adults’ prints from Swedish designers and also other European countries.  The staff were super helpful and kindly took my name and email so as to keep me notified about a sold-out button.
er, I promise that is not as lame as it sounds!  They have a dala horse button, and I HAVE TO HAVE SOME!!  They would be perfection personified; per-button-ified? to finish the little white summer blouse I have planned, and for which I have the fabric already  🙂

Ohlssons Tyger & Stuvar AB

Sveavägen 34
111 34 Stockholm
Another regular fabric store, with some lovely reasonably priced Swedish designs on linen and linen blends.  A smaller range than Tygverket but of a more select quality, so still worth a visit.  I bought one piece.
Next stop… Oslo!
Thank you so much to Sølvi for this recommendation 🙂

Rainbow Tekstil AS

Storgata 28
0184 Oslo
It doesn’t look like much on the outside but it’s an Aladdin’s cave of a shop; two stories with floor to ceiling shelves all stuffed to bursting point with fabrics.  I didn’t find any traditional Norwegian designs here or anything, it’s more like a regular fabric store, but it does have a very large and a nicely diverse range.   After much hemming and hawing I managed to choose one piece.
A word of advice to the fabric tourist; the address says Storgata 28, and the shop is in this building but the store entrance and the shop itself is situated quite a way away from Storgata, around the corner on Lybekkergata.  I had come thisclose to giving upon my search, but Sølvi had confirmed the address and so I was sure that it must be there somewhere and so kept on looking.  I was glad that I spotted it at last!
Next stop; Reykjavik!
I hadn’t found any fabric stores in my online searches, so had thought I would most likely be buying yarn here.
However!
First day we wandered in here…

Nordic Store ehf.

Lækjargata
101 Reykjavík
And sure enough, found some lovely yarns and knitting patterns immediately.  Browsed these for a bit, but then my amazed eye was caught and held by something else, far far cooler and all thoughts of yarn were abandoned.  Not that yarn is not cool, you understand.  It is.  Really, yarn-lover from way back, here, honest.   But wait.  This store also sold leather made from fish skins.  Fish leather.  I kid you not.  Cooooool!  Obviously I bought some.  I bought cod, salmon, perch and catfish leather.  What on earth am I going to do with that, you might ask.  Ahh, we shall see, we shall see  😉  I have some ideas, but everything’s still bubbling and geminating.  One thing’s for sure, it has to be something to do the materials justice so I’m not rushing in.

So I didn’t buy any yarns, but do have to say something about Icelandic yarns though.  Knitted items are part and parcel of Iceland.  Icelandics are serious about their wool, maybe even more so than Aussies.  Once you get out of the city sheep are everywhere you look and traditional Icelandic knitted items are sold and worn everywhere.  It seems like everyone has and wears an Icelandic jumper, and I can’t tell you how much I loved seeing this.  Even regular guys pumping petrol into their monster trucks,  kiddies riding their bikes, women shopping in the supermarket.  Everyone rocking their Icelandic jumpers.  I just loved the regional cohesiveness, and it seemed to me a really nice thing, and sorta quietly patriotic.

Speaking of supermarkets, even the supermarkets sell wool and knitting patterns.  That’s pretty impressive.  How much do I wish we still had that here in Australia?? so much!  Browsing through a knitting pattern book in one little supermarket I even found patterns for knitted wedding dresses.  Consider my jaw officially dropped.  Seriously, how lovely!  Seeing this just made me love Iceland even more  🙂

So no, I didn’t buy any yarn, sadly not enough space in the suitcase… but yes! I did buy an Icelandic knitting book!   Expect some Icelandic-style cosiness to pop up here, at some stage  😉
pinterestmail

The Shopping and the Spoils…

…the lowdown on the fabric and yarn shops I visited whilst in Italy and Paris.

First stop, Rome; and before we had headed off on our trip I had read about Fratelli Bassetti Tessuti in a really excellent review which is also on the store website, and from which I also borrowed the below photo of the store exterior since I neglected to take my own.

Fratelli Bassetti Tessuti
Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, n. 73 00186 Roma
map

Well, well.  Oh my.  It’s rare for a fabric store to leave me speechless and incapable of waxing lyrical about the multitude of lusciousness contained within, but this one is pretty mind-blowing!
Just read Elaine’s review to which I have linked above instead.  It’s a goodie.
Rather lamely, I ended up buying only one piece of fabric.  Confronted with all that fabric; my brain started out exploding with possibilities and then went numb.  In fact, it was not until a few days later than my brain managed to process, and then belatedly began to kick myself.
But: and there is a but.  Along with all that fabric wonderfulness, went sky high price tags.  So I am not beating myself up too badly over not having bought more.
My recommendation; if you are ever lucky enough to be in Rome and have time to visit this store; do.  Despite the high prices, it is nice to get a little piece of fabric for a souvenir, just because.

I bought this citrus-y pinstriped linen.  It wants to be a summer-y dress, when the time comes  🙂  Or something summer-y.  I haven’t decided exactly.  I was thinking of limoncello and lemon gelati when I bought it.

Now, to Milan.
I had googled fabric stores in Milan prior to getting here but came up with zilch.  Then one afternoon, sitting in a cafe watching all the beautiful people strolling by, I happened to catch sight of a girl holding a carrybag printed with the unmistakeable motifs of a fabric store; roll of fabric, scissors, measure rule.  Could barely contain my excitement.  Fortunately could make out the name of the store, and immediately looked it up and headed out there… pronto

(this photo by me)
Tessuti Scampoli
Via Lario, 14  20159 Milan, Italy02 6886493
map
 

Another treasure trove. Not as large, therefore not as fabulously and overwhelmingly stocked as FBT, but still pretty fantastic. Here the fabrics were heaps more reasonably priced yet still very high quality; and plentiful enough while not so much as to overwhelm. There is the ground floor section which is not very prepossessing; but if you wander into the back corner of the store you find an unobtrusive staircase, leading one down to the basement which is where most of the action is.  Here were leathers, pure Italian wool suitings, silk velvets, linens and shirting cottons, tonnes of other silks, metallics, cotton denims for jeans, some cashmere knits, a whole wall of jerseys, some synthetic offerings … lots of stuff.

I got more excited in this store, buying two pieces.
Pure Italian woven wool, for which I paid the paltry sum of E15.49/m (A$19.38/m)  Only my fellow Australians will know what you would pay for this fabric over here in Australia.  It’s OK, I will understand if you hate me.  I would too  🙂
I also bought a piece of silk velvet.  It is hard to see from the picture, but it is black pile, on an intensely neon orange background, giving it a sort of chocolate-y glow in the light.  Pure gorgeousness, no?
The downsides to this store: they do not accept credit cards and are a cash-only business.  Plus; the cashier, perhaps not realising that I could understand Italian since I had only spoken with a girl downstairs, made a vaguely rude remark about “Americans” on our way out.  I couldn’t be bothered going back and sorting him out.

My recommendation: definitely still worth trekking out there.

Now, to Paris.  Aah, Paris.  The day I popped out to Montmartre to meet Donna I allowed way too much time to get there and turned up at our rendezvous about three quarters of an hour too early, haha.  Easy tourist mistake.  So to kill a bit of time I wandered up and down the fabric store street and checked out this one, where I could not resist starting my fabric buying spree a little early.  I knew Donna wouldn’t mind…  🙂
Sacre Coupons
4 bis, rue d’Orsel 75018 Paris
closest metro stop: Anvers
 

Doesn’t look very enticing from the outside, huh?  Appearances can be deceiving; this is a small store it is true, but stuffed to the gills with gorgeous fabric.  Prices, mediocre.  Not as cheap as Milan, not as dear as Rome.  I found here another piece of silk velvet; green pile on a pink background, giving it a mossy appearance.  This is one of “my” colours, so I grabbed it, thank you.

Donna and I went into a neighbouring store, the name of which I cannot remember, which had a mind-boggling range of buttons, and I bought: some charmingly wonky pewter ones, and some delicately carved copper-y brown ones… (it’s OK, I did buy more than 3 each, this is just a representative sample)
I re-visited Sacre Coupons a few days later when Craig was at the conference, and bought a length of soft ivory, finely woven, pure wool; and which needs almost no input from me to make it into a perfectly gorgeous light and floaty scarf.  Cassie really really really wanted this one, but… so do I!  I might let her borrow it every once in a while.  If she’s good  🙂
Finally, Donna took me to visit L’Oisive The, a perfectly lovely tea-shop and knitting cafe.
L’Oisive The
10, rue de la Butte aux Cailles ou 1, rue Jean Marie Jego
75013 Paris
closest Metro stop; Place d’Italie
Here I bought 4 skeins of hand-dyed French wool, in a shade of French blue, no less!
I’m envisioning a little nipped-in waisted cardigan.  One day.  Soon.  🙂  I have a few other little things that really should be finished off first.  But I will get ’round to it.  All of it.
I will not suffer from thisfabricistoogoodtocutup-itis, I promise!

 

pinterestmail

Fabric shopping in Tokyo

Now this was something I was really looking forward to…
Fabric shopping in Tokyo with Yoshimi and Novita.  We were meeting for the first time in reality, although we had met and knew each other virtually before this time.  Isn’t the internet amazing?  Still blows my mind a bit…  I’m so grateful for this wonderful online sewing community that just over a year ago I never even knew existed.
We met in the morning and took the train together to scope out of their favourite fabric shops, took a break for lunch, followed by just a little more fabric shopping, and still later met up with a friend of Yoshimi’s for a special Japanese tea ceremony with very interesting green tea on the menu that I had never had before.  It was great fun!  I’m enormously grateful to Yoshimi and to Novita for coming out to see me, and for their help and guidance.  Tokyo is BIG, around ten times bigger than Perth easily!  Also the fabric selection there is also on a grander scale than I’m used to.
Down to specifics…
Helpfully, Tokyo has concentrated a lot of its fabric trading down into one area, one street even.  The Nippori district is so famous for fabric shopping it even has its own official website where you can find a bigger version of this very useful map to download.  We alighted at Nippori train station and took the very short and straightforward walk to the main street where multitudes of fabric Aladdin’s caves await.  To make matters even easier the pavement twixt station and destination are marked clearly “Fabric District” and the main street itself likewise marked “Fabric Street” on the footpath.  Or was it possibly Textile District/Street?  Whatever, still pretty handy, right?  Kudos to Tokyo for superior organisation and efficiency.
We certainly did not go into all of these shops, partly because that would have taken days for dedicated fabric enthusiasts such as ourselves.  But there’s no doubt you can find an amazing selection of fabrics, all the way from cheap and cheerful cottons up to beautiful and very expensive wools and silks.  I decided, after a bit of indecision re some very tempting and price-y Italian wools, to limit myself just to Japanese fabrics.  After all, when in Japan…?
We spent most of our time and money in Iden (http://iiden.tanmono.com, actually two shops next door to each other, numbers 75 and 76 on the map) and Nagato (ph. 03-3806-3637, number 35 on the map).   From these stores I have five new beautiful lengths of fabric; three winter-weight wool/silk blends, for a skirt, a dress and a jacket respectively, some lightweight apricot cotton denim/gabardine and a length of summery printed cotton.

Also worth a mention is Tomato, a big discount store with several outlets along the street.  I think the one we went into was Tomato Notion, number 46 on the map.  Visit-worthy for haberdashery and all extras remotely related to sewing, sort of like our Spotlight.  A simply gorgeous selection of buttons… I could not resist these cute little things.

Something to keep in mind for the Westerner shopping in Tokyo is that streets are not actually marked in the same way that we are used to.  I kept checking out the, well, what I thought were street signs, so that I could jot down addresses for later reference, but actually were not.  If you do not have much Japanese the street signs can be a little confusing, and one is better working from a map like the one above with landmark buildings and train stations to guide you, rather than relying on finding a street name that is possibly indistinguishable from all the other various signs that will be around it.

An internet tip I found to be true… bring cash, as credit cards are not always accepted.  Another handy tip?…  7Elevens have ATMs.

 

Thank you so much Yoshimi for organising a wonderful day out!
oh, and for permission to use her photograph of us, above…!

pinterestmail

Fabric and wool shopping, Melbourne

Having a blast in Melbourne, thus the lateness of the post.  Fabric-wise, twas another extremely successful day.  So I thought it would be helpful to give for you today a list of highlights in my explorations here…

The first shop I visited yesterday was:
Cleggs,
60 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne
ph (03) 9654 7677
Verdict; small but varied range of all sorts of good; little bit of knitting yarns, little bit of embroidery and craft supplies, little bit of fabrics.  The range of laces and lace borders was fabulous and had me hooning across the store as soon as I spotted the discreetly placed shelf of lacy treasures…!  After much awed contemplation I bought a series of black lace borders to make a layered camisole…  Also medium to good range of lace and sequinned fabrics on the bolt, some reasonably priced

Tessuti Fabrics
141 Flinders Lane, Melbourne
The verdict; not cheap, but a very good range of very yummy fabrics.  Couldn’t decide what to get.  Everywhere I looked new possibilities called their siren call out to me.  I seriously spent a couple of very indecisive hours in here.  Eventually bought a selection of muddy coloured summer weight fabrics for summer dresses but may have to visit again before I go back home…  This place is well worth it.

Morris and sons
level 1, 234 Collins Street, Melbourne
ph (03) 9654 0888
Biggest range of knitting wool I’ve seen, like ever.  Bought four colours of sock wool,  muddy autumn-y solid colours as I crave these in my sock collection.

RetroStar Vintage Clothing Company
upstairs in the Cathedral Arcade, 37 Swanston Street, Melbourne
a collection of amazing and incredible secondhand clothes, lots of which are worthy of museum status.  Nowhere else have I seen all in one place Texan cowboy boots, American college jackets, cheerleader jackets, an immense collection of band Tshirts, plaid flannel shirts, menswear including Lacoste sportswear, cashmere jumpers and cardigans, shirts galore, jackets, army disposal gear, womenswear from years and years back that will have you gasping in amazement at each new discovery; this place has to be seen to be believed.  The decor alone is unique and real entertaining.  Warning; not cheap though…

and today discovered The Fabric Store
184 Brunswick Street, Fitzroy (still within walking distance of central Melbourne)
ph 9416 4455
Verdict; a huge range of really good fabrics, all in a reasonable price range.  Lots of end-of-bolts from designer ranges.  This is well worth making the trip out to see it, it is within walking distance of central Melbourne but if you buy up big like I did you may find the walk back somewhat burdensome… just saying.  Hard to leave this store without spending up some.  As with Tessuti’s, indecisiveness also plagued me bigtime here (so much choice!! man…), but I had an appointment with the next very important stop so bought lots of fabrics as I don’t want to trudge back out there again.  Oh, another plus point, the girls are very generous cutters.

Koko Black
Royal Arcade, Melbourne
No visit to Melbourne is complete without a visit to this cafe.  I can’t remember the occasion I first discovered this little gem, but since it entered my radar I will go here once a day when in Melbourne.  Sometimes twice a day.  The Belgian hot chocolate is to die for.  Seriously.  This is divine stuff.  One cup of this nectar of the gods and you will commence a lifelong love affair…  Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

Later edit: Alannah Hill fabric outlet, 188 Brunswick Street, Fitzroy, is right next door to the Fabric Store.  Well worth a visit too!  Hint; bolts and bolts and bolts of Alannah Hill fabric are upstairs 🙂

My outfit today wasn’t very exciting, so I have no wish to bore you with a photo, but this will give you a chuckle…  for wealthy parents who have furnished their own wardrobes to bursting point with ultra-expensive designer gear and need another spending outlet: (now we’ve seen everything…)

pinterestmail
Switch to mobile version
↓