• dress & Other Stories 

    hat Jil Sander 

    belt Viktorya Abraham  

    shoes Tom Ford

    photography Sandra Myhrberg

    fashion Daniil Kudriatcev

    Amwin

    Written by Fashion Tales

    Amwin is a rising singer-songwriter who is quickly gaining attention for her unique blend of pop, R&B, and electronic music. Her music is characterized by catchy melodies, introspective lyrics, and bold production choices that reflect her diverse musical influences. Amwin's debut EP, “DREAMWAVE,” was released in 2020 and features the hit single “Uber,” which has garnered millions of streams on Spotify. Last year, in 2022, Amwin released two new singles - “Friends, Right?” and “Long Gone.” These tracks showcase Amwin's unique blend of pop, R&B, and electronic music, with catchy hooks and introspective lyrics that explore themes of love, relationships, and self-discovery. With her soulful vocals, honest songwriting, and boundary-pushing creativity, Amwin is definitely an artist to watch in the coming years.

    When did you first realize that you wanted to do music?
    I think the dream has always been present, although I didn’t quite take it seriously. Like, my one hobby has always been watching music videos, trying to learn the choreographies, and singing along. That’s what I did for hours, every day after school. But I never thought I would have the opportunity to proceed with the dream. Until I realized I had to take charge and go for it, or else I would die depressed 100 years from now, from not trying.

    Where do you get the inspiration to write songs, and what does your creative process look like?
    Cliché answered, but yes, life. When I started working with music professionally, I had never written a song before or been in a studio, which was challenging. But it has always been very important to me to be a part of the full process and grab any chance I can to express myself. Like literally any chance I can get. Therefore a big part of my focus has always been on developing my writing skills and just explore who I am, not just as an artist, but as a composer and writer. These past five years, when getting to write and create music, have been a rollercoaster. Sometimes feeling more than your body can handle and sometimes feeling nothing. It’s truly a process where you don’t just get to express yourself, you get to know yourself. Good sides and bad sides. Writing music is like that and is supposed to be like that. I’ve realized that what really inspires me to write is music. Like, melodies and themes come the most easily to me, so that’s usually where I start when I create a song. My melodies tend to tell me what I want to write about. So, I usually freestyle over a beat, like melodies and whatever words come up, and after that try to narrow down what the story feels like, and shape it into something more concrete. At the end of the day, I think what I really want to create is a world, a space for me and other people to visit. So, I look at songs like concepts, every song is its own world and story. If that make sense?

    In 2015, you came second in Swedish Idol, how has that experience affected you as an artist?
    For me, it was really an intense journey. I had barely ever been on stage when I joined Idol and I got to learn so much in a very intense, but also professional setting. To me, that’s the best way to learn - under pressure. I’m impatient and want to do everything - now. Of course, literally, everything was new to me, but I was very focused and learned to trust myself and my intuition through that journey - something I carry with me today as well.

    You were signed to a major label for a long time, but now release music through your own label. What challenges have you encountered? Was it an obvious choice to go independent?
    What challenges have I not encountered, haha. I think that’s what excites me. Choosing to embrace the musical and creative path really from the beginning, for me, was the ultimate challenge and that’s what I like about it. There are no rules, so you must set your own. Going independent has been an important part of my journey. For years I’ve worked hard to learn every part of the process, as I mentioned before, I felt it was time to own the full process. Therefore the choice was obvious, I felt I needed a new challenge to keep evolving. Kind of like a butterfly leaving a cocoon: I’ve had to grow, learn, and absorb - now it’s time to try my own
    wings!

    What is the best thing about the Swedish music scene?
    That it’s so full of talented people. A day doesn’t go by when I’m not inspired by my colleagues, which makes the Swedish music scene very flourishing.

    What are your fears?
    First, I don’t believe in putting too much focus on fears. I’d rather focus on the contrast: What you hope for. With that being said, I think my one fear is to go through life with fear, fear to fail and thereby not try. I want to live my life unapologetically, in the way that I want to give life to my ideas and others. Try and learn that way.

    What is your relation to fashion in relation to your artistry?
    Fashion has always been a big part of my life. To me, fashion is about expression. It’s a way to visually communicate, who you are, what you want, and how you feel. Therefore I think music and fashion go hand in hand. To me, the visual part is very important and is a big reason to why I chose to approach music in the first place. I think music is the story you hear, when it comes alive visually it turns into something different - a purer version of itself. It’s a way of saying ”Hey, this is what this looks like in my head”. I guess to me I look at it this way: I’m a creator and the way I’ve chosen to express myself right now is through music, but that involves so much more than ”just” music. As I said before, it’s about creating a world and inviting people to visit that world.

    Over the years you’ve worked with Selam Fessahaye, tell us about your collaboration.
    She’s been a very important person to me throughout the years. She first started to style me, I think it was like back in 2016, and what I most value about our relationship is that it always has been a safe space. Where both of our crazy ideas aren’t crazy, they make sense. Or maybe, they are made to make sense. She is very good at seeing the core of people I think, like, not who they present themselves to be but who they are deep down. She’s really helped me to partly trust in my own ideas and ride for them, but also to embrace the creative process and focus on what’s fun and interesting rather than what ”looks good”. Now she’s been acknowledged as one of the most interesting and talented designers. Which makes nothing but sense, as she always has been. Also, we both like animals a lot, which is dope.

    Can you name someone you admire and why?
    I admire so many people I don’t know where to start. I seriously just admire everyone who has the courage to follow their intuition and dreams, regardless of what that is or means to them. I think that’s the most courageous thing you can do.

    What makes you happy?
    Being on stage. Period. It’s the one place where I feel in full contact with myself and my surroundings. Like, I want to get into meditation and stuff. Literally every shrink that I’ve ever talked to tells me that’s the one thing I should do. But I’m restless, which makes that kind of hard for me. I’ve realized that being on stage is my meditation, as I in those moments really feel like there is no other place than here and now.

    How would you describe your music to someone who hasn’t heard it before?
    Fucking dope.

    In 2019, you released the EPAMWIN In Wonderland’. What has happened since then?
    A lot. Apart from me starting my own label, which has been a lot of fun and work. I feel like I’ve really grown when it comes to writing music. I’m still focused on creating music that isn’t loyal to a genre, I just want to create whatever I think is dope, without being put in a box. I don’t want to follow rules. But I also feel I’ve gotten to know a new side of myself, and I feel more open to letting people in, which also reflects in my music. It’s very close to heart this time. Since then, I’ve also been in a relationship, which ended rather recently. It’s taught me a lot I guess, and I feel like you will hear that in my music as well.

    So far this year, you’ve released the songs ’Friends, Right?’ and ‘Long Gone’, can you tell us about them?
    They’re both different songs, but in a way, they’re not. ”Friends, right?” has a playfulness to it that I love and it’s a side of me that I haven’t really shown in my music before. It’s just a chilled, vibey, and relatable song. Whereas ” Long Gone” is a bit more messy. We really went off with the base and the lyrics is a bit of a contrast with the production, which I like. Sound wise they both come from a happy place. Especially ”Long Gone”, which I made with my ex when we were fresh in love. When everything and anything felt like it was possible. Apart from it being a dope song, the whole process of making it was very special and I feel like we in the end succeeded in capsuling that hopeful and honest feeling. It will always have a special place in
    my heart.

    Looking back at your career, is there anything you would have like to have done differently? What are you most proud of?
    I wouldn’t change anything. I’ve always made all my decisions from my heart, and I feel like I’ve stayed loyal to my intention as much as possible throughout. That’s something I’m proud of, that I stay loyal to what I feel is right, even though it sometimes makes life a bit harder than it could be, haha. I feel like I’m on the path I’m meant for and I’m just excited about what’s to come!

    Finally, what are your plans for 2023?
    My main plan is to take life by storm. I’m excited to keep releasing more music. I’ve worked on the new music for quite some time, and it’s been a lot of ups and downs, but I’m stoked about the result and to share it. Honestly, my music is all I’m focusing on right now. That and having fun, enjoying my youth, and occasionally dancing in bars.

    dress & Other Stories

    hat Jil Sander

    belt Viktorya Abraham 

    dress & Other Stories

    flounce chaps Swedish School of Textiles / Emilia Marklund
    eyewear Swedish School of Textiles / Alice Gruvander

    left

    coat & trousers COS
    shoes Eytys
    blouse Arket

    right

    dress Sthlm Misc
    shirt Baum und Pferdgarten

    jacket Swedish School of Textiles / Emilia Marklund
    dress Sthlm Misc
    shirt Baaum und Pferdgarten
    shoes Arket
    top Ahlvar Gallery
    trousers Hope
    shoes Isabel Marant

    dress &Other Stories

    flounce chaps Swedish School of Textiles / Emilia Marklund
    eyewear Swedish School of Textiles / Alice Gruvander
    shoes Swedish Hasbeens

    dress & Other Stories
    shoes By Malene Birger

    photography Sandra Myhrberg

    fashion Daniil Kudriatcev

    hair & makeup Alicia Hurst

    makeup assistant Paloma Axehiem Gonzalez

  • The Beauty Essentials for March

    Written by Yasmine Mubarak

    The sun is slowly coming through the clouds here in Scandinavia, but the weather is still cold, dry and we even have snow. So, while we think spring is here, make sure you still use products that hydrates and protects your skin barrier.

    This month, the focus is not only hydration and sustainable design, but the motto less is more. Without further ado, find some of our tried-and-true staples as well as a few new items we're currently falling for. Pick up any one of these healing wonders and thank us later.

    After, MAGNESIUM MASSAGE BAR from Lush
    This refreshing magnesium bar is a must-have for the active gurl. The hazel and arnica massage bar will help to unwind your mind, while easing and recovering aching muscles. Use it after a hard workout where you want to boost your skin with magnesium thanks to menthol. As well as eucalyptus, peppermint and spearmint oils to cool you and your joints down. Warm the bar in your hands, before applying it directly to skin onto muscle groups, that needs some love. Store it fresh and clean in a lidded container, as the oval tint in the photo. Great to take to the gym or your next adventure. Find it here

    La Roche-Posay, Cicaplast Balm B5+
    I have always loved La Roche-Posay, it’s my go-to brand that never lets me down. So, when I first tried the new balm B5+ I was a bit concerned that perhaps it’s just a hype. To my great relief it’s not. The Cicaplast Balm B5+ is hydrating, thick (but not greasy) cream designed to hydrate, and protect the skin. It’s formulated with ingredients such as vitamin B5, shea butter, glycerin, and centella asiatica, which reduce inflammation. I use it for my face but also for my hands. My hands are constantly being washed with sanitizers and by using this balm, it instantly relieves that dryness and discomfort. This is my second bottle, and will probably be a third purchase. 5 stars yet again La Roche-Posay. Find it here.


    Rutines, Slim Comfort toothbrush
    Being in nature, you need to switch your plastic toothbrush to an eco-friendly option. And thanks to Rutines we can! The 100% FSC-certified bamboo toothbrush not only comes in a modern Scandinavian design, it’s very comfortable. The toothbrush has a smaller brush head to make sure you reach the corners of your teeths with a rounded head for the most comfortable feel. Found it here

    Use your new tooth brush together with Lush’s Plaque Sabbath toothpaste jelly with charcoal, liquorice and clove - and you are all set. 

    Brow Powder Sculpt It, The Body Shop
    The last few weeks, The Body Shop has completely re-branded and added new products to their makeup section, while a lot of their new products have entered my bathroom cabin. One of them for this less is more segment is the Sculpt It Brow Powder. Easy to have on your travels. This full recyclable* aluminum compact case, powered by natural-origin ingredients. Is not only sweat-resistant but formulated to seamlessly hold to the skin, leaving brows feeling comfortable, looking natural-looking and staying in place for at least 12 hours. Made from 90% ingredients of natural origin. Find the new brow powder here.

    Ultra Facial Cream SPF 30, Kiehl’s
    Who doesn't love hydration and SPF all in one product? My first introduction to Kiehl’ was a dream, for those cold days to protect my skin. The Ultra Facial Cream with SPF 30 broad protection, is a great day cream all year around. After my 3 weeks of using it, it keeps my sensitive face hydrated, especially now when the sun comes out but it’s still cold outside. The non-greasy cream provides 24-hour hydration, and leaves your skin balanced and comfortable. Find it here
     

    Lush Oval Tin Product holder , Rutines Tooth Brush,

    The Body Shop Sculpt It,

    Kiehl's accessory 

    images courtsy Yasmine Mubarak / shot on Google Pixel  7 Pro  

  • coat Maison Margiela

    turtleneck Marni
    trousers Saint Laurent
    boots Vetements
    sunglasses Bottega Veneta
    necklaces Channel's Own
    pant chain Vitaly

    photography Joseph Culitice 
    fashion Tiffany Briseno 
    fashion assistant Emily Diddle

    An Interview with Channel Tres

    Written by Dante Grossfeld by Sandra Myhrberg

    Since arriving on the music scene in 2018, Channel Tres has developed a unique style, his own mixture of Chicago house and hip-hop from his hometown of Compton, dubbed “Compton house.” My first introduction to Channel Tres must have been his 2019 remix of “EARFQUAKE” by Tyler, the Creator, and their subsequent collab in the song “fuego,” from Channel’s 2020 EP, “i can’t go outside.” “skate depot,” the one and only single from said EP, became the soundtrack to my late fall and winter that year. Little did I know then that two years and a pandemic later I would be doing a Zoom interview with him.

    What are you listening to nowadays?
    I mean, it changes constantly, and it depends on what I'm doing. When I'm reading, I’m usually listening to Herbie Hancock. Listening, I've been listening to Thundercat.

    You went on tour with Thundercat a few years ago. How was that?
    Yeah, last year. It was beautiful. Great musicians.

    You've collaborated with a lot of big names recently, like Thundercat and Tyler, the Creator.
    Would you say that has changed how you view music in any way?

    Not necessarily changed how I view music. Maybe changed my creative process a bit, but not really.

    How would you say your process has changed?
    It’s just become looser. I’m taking charge of my creative process with myself and just making a bunch of ideas and learning the process of finishing and growing with records and making things that I like.
    You know? Trusting the feeling.

    Has your process also changed because of COVID in some way?
    No, not really. No, it didn't change with COVID. I mean, I made some different things because of COVID, but I was working the same. I'm a bedroom kind of producer from the start so it was just kind of going back to what I started doing or have always been doing. I was just home more so I wasn't on the road much.

    Your latest EP, refresh, was completely instrumental. How did your experience creating that differ from your earlier work?
    Well, I made that project while I was on tour with Thundercat. That was the first tour I got on. It was like two and a half months long. That was the first tour I was on since COVID so the first couple weeks I was kind of miserable because I was just drinking and trying to do what I usually do while I'm at home, but it was weird because you're on the tour bus, and we were playing shows every night, so I kind of had to go back to the basics within myself. I brought my laptop, but I didn't bring studio equipment. So I just went to Guitar Center. I think I was in Boston, and I just bought gear and then I just had my tour manager set it up in every green room, and then what I would do is just before the show, after the show or during that downtime, I just started making beats and then that's kind of how refresh came.

    You've also been experimenting with a lot of different genres. Would you say there are any genres that you would like to explore more going forward?
    I think eventually I want to do a jazz album. A full jazz album. And, you know I really have a love for country music in a weird way. I mean, it's not weird to me, but maybe to some people it might be. But you know, I want to experiment with country music and experiment with film scoring as well.

    Are there any particular people you'd like to work with? Any directors for example?
    No, not really. I don't really have a list of directors, I just would like to work with one whose project I'm excited to be on, and they're excited to have me a part of it.

    In general, where do you think you see yourself in 10 years?
    I’ll probably be like some sort of top star by then and have a grand story. And I see myself having children, and you know, investing into my community in different ways, through art programs and maybe I’ll end up writing for TV or write a book or something.

    And you're going on tour soon again, right?
    Yeah, I'm starting my North American tour in a week. What do you what do you hope to get out of that? Well, it's my first North American tour, so I'm excited to see who my fans are. I designed it hands on, so that was fun, and the show is just coming together. And now I’m with a new stage design. It's just trying to see how my creative things work and see how it affects people and what I have to learn and take back and change for next time.

    Do you have any words of advice for up-and-coming artists? Because you you've had a pretty
    quick rise to fame, right?

    No, I wasn't quick. I mean, it seems quick. And I know I've been working on it since I was five, you know? Maybe things just happened a little back-to-back to back, but it wasn't quick. I had to go through a lot of stuff to get here. I would say be consistent. Look at yourself as a project. Look at yourself objectively and see what you want to ad and see what areas you lack in, and use vision boards to kind of craft because it comes in waves and it comes in moments and it takes years. So, you have to kind of look at it day by day. Maybe a month you want to spend working on this particular thing because you know it's going to advance you in this way. Right now, I'm working on song writing because I want to get better. So I'm writing words and reading lists. Learning how to write poetry. Poetry is not necessarily music, but it's something that'll help with me get familiar with more words and it'll help me craft songs better.

    Are there any specific themes that you want to explore more in your song writing?
    I have a hard time writing about myself and different things that I go through on a day-to-day. So, learning how to craft those things in a song in a certain way.

    Channel Tres’ upcoming EP will be titled “Real Cultural Shit.”

    tank top Vintage
    trousers Celine
    gloves Valentino
    sunglasses Dior
    necklaces Channel's Own
    coat Marni
    shirt Lanvin
    trousers Saint Laurent
    boots Vetements
    gloves Valentino
    coat Maison Margiela
    turtleneck Marni
    trousers Saint Laurent
    boots Vetements
    sunglasses Bottega Veneta
    necklaces Channel's Own
    pant chain Vitaly

    tank top Vintage

    trousers Celine 
    sunglasses Dior

    gloves Valentino

    necklaces Channel's Own

    photography Joseph Culitice
    article Dante Grossfeld
    fashion Tiffany Briseno
    fashion assistant Emily Diddle
    overshirt & gloves Valentino
    tank top Vintage
    trousers Celine
    sunglasses Dior
    necklaces Channel's Own

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