Copenhagen is a hotspot for model agents, fashion street photographers, and luxury design teams looking for new trends for their next collections. Walk past Værnedamsvej or through Jernbanebyen and you’ll see why—style here feels natural, lived-in, and often ahead of the curve without ever trying too hard.
Copenhagen isn’t just stylish — it sets the tone. And not everyone wears black and white here. From high-concept design stores to vintage finds and one-off boutiques, the city shops with personality.
There’s past-season Henrik Vibskov tucked in Carlsberg Byen, apothecary lighting and raw wood shelving at Frama, and secondhand shops that feel more like quiet galleries than thrift shops.
Our list includes the places we go for rare perfumes and indie magazines—because in this city, details always matter.
Here is a list of the cool clothing stores in Copenhagen right now.
TOP Shops in Copenhagen for Design & Fashion (Yes, Some Ship Worldwide)
Storm – Design, Art, Fashion
Store Regnegade 1, Copenhagen K
Seriously cool concept store—part gallery, part fashion lab. In addition to high-end labels, you’ll find niche parfumes like Voyeur Verde by Maya Njie, lesser-known independent designers, trendy magazines, thick art books, organic skincare like an award-winning deodorant with seaweed extracts by Salt & Stone, and limited-edition collabs like PUMA and JJJJound. Rotating installations and drops keep it feeling fresh. It’s fashion, culture, and design all in one space.
Henrik Vibskov – Archive Boutique & Online Store
J. C. Jacobsens Gade 26, 1778 København, Denmark
Fashion superstar Henrik Vibskov has reshaped Danish fashion over the past two decades. A graduate of Central Saint Martins (2001), he’s created over 40 collections that blur the lines between fashion, performance, art, and design. Past-season gems and cult pieces from Vibskov’s 2015-2025 collections, tucked into a low-key space in Carlsberg Byen. Color, shape, and play—still very much alive here.
You’ll find rare, directional pieces at the Henrik Vibskov Boutique in Carlsberg Byen—from sculptural knits by A. Roege Hove and iconic Issey Miyake Pleats Please, to collabs like Adidas x Wales Bonner and Rick Owens DRKSHDW x Converse. The boutique blends avant-garde, Japanese, and Danish labels, making it one of the sharpest fashion edit spots in Copenhagen.
You’ll also spot rare perfumes, architectural sneakers, and one-off accessories from fashion’s left field: necklaces, sunglasses, rings, tabis, flats, socks – for men and women – all here. It’s part studio, part shop, part creative hangout—and always worth a slow browse.
Shop online. They ship orders worldwide, including the United States. Duties and taxes paid.
HGBB Studio
Gl. Kongevej 91c, St. Tv, 1850 Frederiksberg, Denmark
Part store, part gallery. HGBB brings together clothing, objects, and small-run art pieces in a thoughtful, minimal setting just off Værnedamsvej.
Established in 2019, HGBB STUDIO blends Copenhagen minimalism with Seoul street sensibility. Located just off Gl. Kongevej, this independent fashion and design space stands out for creating playful, contemporary pieces that reject trend-chasing in favor of identity-driven collections. The brand produces two seasonal drops a year—around 70% reworked carryovers and 30% new pieces—merging patchwork, sporty classics, and clean silhouettes.
Everything is designed in Denmark and produced in South Korea, where their Seoul showroom doubles as a B2B hub. Beyond clothes, the studio’s philosophy centers on freedom, curiosity, and slow evolution. It’s one of the few Copenhagen labels quietly redefining what independent fashion can be—culturally fluid, instinct-led, and not just about the visuals.
Frama Studio Store
Fredericiagade 57, 1310 Copenhagen
Located in a former pharmacy from 1878, Frama Studio Store blends design gallery, concept shop, and creative workspace. It showcases Frama’s minimalist furniture, lighting, and apothecary collections in a raw, atmospheric setting that reflects the brand’s Nordic aesthetic.
At FRAMA’s Copenhagen studio store, you’ll find all kinds of crafted home goods made with natural materials and a minimalist design philosophy. They’re also known for their signature apothecary line—think aromatic hand washes, candles, and oil diffusers—with scents like Komorebi and Beratan. From aluminum tables and oak consoles to sculptural candle holders and soft self-care essentials, FRAMA blends utility with quiet elegance in almost everything they make.
Shop online. Worldwide delivery, including the United States.
O-S-V. Secondhand Fashion
Peder Hvitfeldts Stræde 4 & Møntergade 2
Our favorite one – secondhand, but carefully chosen. O-S-V. mixes archival pieces (cool leather jackets, coats, sneakers, jewelry, bags and more), minimalist staples, and a few bold finds — all with a sense of style that leans more gallery than thrift. Quiet, clean, and worth digging through.
Shop online. Shipping worldwide, excluding the USA.
HAY House
Østergade 61 (2nd & 3rd floors), Copenhagen
Part showroom, part living room, part art gallery. Housed upstairs in a townhouse off Strøget (the best view to the street and the fountain from the second floor), it’s a light-filled maze of sofas, colorful accents, neat accessories—and even toys. Everything feels usable, cheerful, and effortlessly stylish.
HAY was founded in 2002 by Rolf and Mette Hay, with a vision to bring Danish design into the modern day—making it playful, functional, and accessible. Since then, the brand has become a global name in contemporary furniture and never non-essential home objects like candles, pens, phone holders, and HAY House is its flagship store.
You’ll find new launches, reimagined classics, and collaborations with designers like Muller Van Severen and Inga Sempé.
The Hay House collaborates with both new and iconic Scandinavian designers — Amanda Borberg, Ana Kraš, Andreas Bergsaker, Andreas Engesvik, and Aspekt Office, as well as studios like Big-Game and Bertjan Pot. That mix keeps things fresh while staying rooted in Nordic craft and form.
It’s the kind of place where you wander upstairs “just to look,” then leave with a pastel lamp, sculptural vase, or three stackable trays you didn’t know you needed. A must if you’re into interior design—or just want your suitcase to come home with something Danish that isn’t edible.
Paustian
Niels Hemmingsens Gade 24, 1153 København K
Inside a former 19th-century bank near Købmagergade, Paustian opened its flagship store in late 2018, transforming the grand palazzo-style space into a contemporary design destination. The soaring marble columns and gilded ceilings now house a curated collection of Nordic and international furniture, lighting, and accessories—from modern icons by Cassina, Vitra, and Artek to smaller lifestyle pieces and fresh Danish names.
Designed by Paustian’s in-house team with Helle Flou Studio, the interior balances soft colours and textures with the building’s original architectural detail. It’s a calm, spacious place to explore high-end design in Copenhagen’s city centre—right across from Helligåndskirken and a few steps from Gråbrødre Torv.
by Adelborg
Bryggernes Plads 22, 1799 København, Denmark
Carefully curated fashion, vintage, and home pieces with a quiet, clean aesthetic. Feels more like browsing someone’s dream apartment than shopping.
Kirk Studio
Århusgade 128H, Nordhavn
Founded by lighting designer Brian Kirk, Kirk Studio in Nordhavn is where Japanese inspiration meets Danish craftsmanship. Kirk’s designs—like the Moon and Moon R pendant lamps—draw from the concept of komorebi, the way sunlight filters through trees.
These sculptural lights use materials like oak, ash, walnut, and brushed metal to diffuse light in soft, ambient layers. His Solaris E fixture, crafted from 40 hand-cut steel or brass pieces, has become a standout for its interplay of shadow and glow. Each piece feels warm, natural, and architecturally precise—ideal for those seeking poetic lighting with a grounded aesthetic.
The studio also functions as a showroom, open Wednesday to Saturday.
If you are in Amsterdam, explore the top design stores there.