Runway

Daily Paper, the Amsterdam Fashion Label, Opens Its First NYC Store

“Before any of this happened—the pandemic, the social justice movement, the election—we were thinking about ways to bring people together,” Suleiman says. “Stores can’t only be retail spaces. We have to actually try to create as many conversations as possible. Sometimes, I call this our embassy because it’s literally a place that we have outside of our home country that represents our values and what we stand for.” The Daily Paper founders are hoping to create a welcoming space for “like-minded people to talk about like-minded issues.” But it’s also about their team learning from the locals. “We’re guests in the city,” says Suleiman, “so we want to interact with the right people, learn from them, and create a community hub for people to come to our store and create something special and something genuine.” 

Suleiman, Trabsini, and Osei are eager to inspire other young Black creatives. “For us to be one of the few Black-owned brands in New York to have a store, why is that?” Suleiman asks. “I want to be part of this conversation, but I also want to be a part of figuring out how the next generation of creatives coming from New York can do what we’ve done. It should not be like this.” As Osei puts it, “There has to be a place for the Black community in Manhattan and the Lower East Side is the best place.” He added, “We intentionally chose the LES above all other boroughs because of resemblance it has with the area we grew up in Amsterdam Old West. The LES is known for its vibrancy and youth cultural presence. We hope that our store will function as a catalyst for a new era in NYC where different communities and like-minded people come together.”

On opening day, Suleiman, Trabsini, and Osei welcomed fans of the brand and curious locals, some of whom thought the store was going to be a museum when it was under construction. If it wasn’t the party they’d long hoped for—the guys said they were going to fly in their friends, family, colleagues, and collaborators, and really blow it out—there was plenty of excitement. Suleiman talked about potential collaborations and the pop-up concerts he’d like to do with the Bowery Ballroom. Whatever happens with the pandemic in the coming months, with the Daily Paper crew in the picture New York retail isn’t dead.