In 2025, Eytys reopened in Stockholm with a gallery store on Norrlandsgatan, a central street just off Stureplan that has seen plenty of brands come and go. This one feels different. Designed with Jonas Hultman of Hultman-Vogt, the space reads like someone’s apartment rather than a shop: furniture, art, books and an espresso bar sit alongside the full footwear line, and every object is for sale, then quietly replaced. Eytys built its name on weighty leather trainers and boots, most famously the ‘Angel’ sneaker with its unapologetically thick sole. Founder and CEO Max Schiller treats the store as a working canvas, a place to test ideas, host collaborations and let the brand breathe.
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Pensionat Furuhem
Båstad, Sweden
Many have anticipately been waiting for the return of Magnus Nilsson, after he closed Fäviken in Järpen in 2019 and stepped out of the chef circus. In Båstad, Pensionat Furuhem has been rolled out in seasons: bakery first, then the restaurant, then the rooms, like a place coming back to life . It sits in an early-1900s wooden villa – built in 1901 and part of Båstad’s hospitality story for over 120 years, with a past life as a boarding school for young women. “Pensionat” here means guesthouse energy: 15 simple double rooms, no minibar, no TV, no hotel gloss. Food runs through the day – breakfast, fika, weekday lunch, weekend lunch and dinner – plus a private dining room upstairs for 14. Frida Nilsson is head chef, steering the kitchen day to day, while Daniella Rebelo runs service across the house. The kitchen leans local producers, with some ingredients coming from the team’s own farm in Axelstorp.
Pensionat Furuhem
Östermalmsvägen 1
Båstad
Sweden
Båstad
Sweden
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Photography courtesy of Pensionat Furuhem