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Words by Andrea Juckem, images by Gaia Padovan

SOBEK, a sustainable fashion brand from Denmark: in conversation with founder, designer and creative mind Sophie Strøbek

May 29, 2024 by Katharina Geissler-Evans in Fashion, Brands & creatives

Sophie is a designer and the creative mind behind the sustainable Danish clothing brand SOBEK, which makes handmade vests from upcycled vintage wool. Just a year after making her first wool vest, Sophie is poised to open her own boutique studio and workshop in the heart of Copenhagen, where she also lives with her husband, and two sons, Frederik and Hans. 

What made you to start creating these unique upcycled vests from wool?

Vests are just such an easy piece to wear and style. It’s functional and classic, but with a twist. You can go causal, sporty or trendy, depending on what you wear with the garment. I practically live in these vests, styling them depending on the occasion.

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You chose wool as your main material to work with. Why wool and where do you source it? 

I wanted to make a product that you feel you treat yourself with – something of style, luxury, quality but at the same time with history and value – in accordance with a sustainable way of living. So, I needed a fabric or an item that could tick some of those boxes and wool was the obvious choice. 

It also helps that I have a deep love for wool. It is almost essential to life in Scandinavia – a natural material that we’ve used for thousands of years. It has a lot of benefits too: wool repels odor and stains, feels comfortable in a broad range of temperatures, can be damp and keep you warm and often you can just air it out instead of washing it. 

To be sustainable, I wanted to upcycle vintage wool instead of using new. I use wool blankets that I find from local or vintage retailers in Scandinavia. Working with vintage wool blankets provided me with a special feeling – one of continuity, comfort, quality and sustainability. It is something that is passed down, valued and cared for. I hope to pass that feeling on, into each garment. 

“Happiness can be found in our ability to value what’s around us”
— Sophie Strøbek

Where did your passion for environment and conscious creating come from? 

I’ve always had a passion for fashion and dressing up, and vintage shopping is among my favorite pastimes. There's an exhilarating thrill in the hunt for unique vintage pieces. This same feeling is what I aim to evoke with SOBEK, by incorporating vintage textiles into the creations and crafting one-of-a-kind pieces.

Using pre-existing textiles is a core value for me, as is creating timeless and classic designs. I believe that craftsmanship instills a sense of pride in our customers, motivating them to care for their garments.

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What do you personally like to wear the most? 

Most of my clothes are vintage, both high-end brands and lesser-known labels. My go-to outfit typically consists of a pair of worn jeans, or a mini skirt, paired with a knit or t-shirt, always complemented by a wool vest. 

I would describe my style as minimalistic, yet with a distinctive touch. Additionally, I have a weakness for glitter, whether it's on clothing, bags or shoes. My friend affectionately calls me a raven because I simply can't resist a bit of sparkle.

Can clothes provide us more comfort in our everyday, often hectic, lives? Is happiness a warm vest? 

Certainly, clothes make us comfortable – I think it’s the most basic function garments hold – making us warm and dry during cold weather or protecting us against the sun’s glare or stormy days. 

But I think that we often value things based on something more than their functionality. We have a favorite sweater – not only because it makes us warm but also because it gives us something else. Something more than its function alone. We value beauty, quality, craftsmanship, connection and understanding.

Happiness is perhaps not found entirely in just a warm vest, but instead, happiness can be found in our ability to value what’s around us. A value not based solely on functionality, but because it adds something more – something translucent yet essential to our everyday life. 

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You live in an old villa in Copenhagen. What is your most favorite thing about the city?

Definitely biking around the city in the spring. It amazes me every year how quickly the long dark and rainy winter evaporates into this buzzing warm atmosphere full of anticipation and summer dreams. The city simply changes. Thick parkas are replaced by lightweight bombers and cute dresses. 

Wine is served through open café windows, kayaks are rented by young, tipsy students for a tour through the canals. The sun is up from 4 am to 10 pm and everyone knows they must get the best of it before the dark cold months return. 

Not a second is wasted and I love every bit of it!

What are the moments that bring you joy? 

Toast with butter on a rainy day, my children’s faces, paid bills, a smile from a stranger, a call from an old friend, comfortable shoes, people laughing in public spaces, being alone in a museum or small details about people or places I care about. 

Also, thinking about all of the things that are yet to come, like the opening of my own boutique and workshop in the heart of Copenhagen!

Andrea Juckem is a writer and co-creator of the bi-lingual online magazine NIKA (which means niche in English). She has always been attracted to people's stories and communication but it was not until recently that she decided to put it all in words that have an impact: Andrea now uses her (Czech and English) writing to express emotions and share meaningful thoughts and stories.

May 29, 2024 /Katharina Geissler-Evans
sustainable fashion, scandinavian design, conscious fashion
Fashion, Brands & creatives
2 Comments

Words by Josephine Snowling

How to enjoy the cold, dark season: a guide to finding heiter

November 19, 2023 by Katharina Geissler-Evans in Daily heiter

For those of you living in the northern hemisphere, you’ll have noticed by now that the evenings have become darker, the temperature has begun to drop and leaves are steadily beginning to fall. Autumn is here and winter is on its way. 

But this doesn’t mean that your spirits need to drop or there are any less of those heiter moments to revel in. In fact, what this article will enlighten you to is that if this time of year is given a bit more consideration and attention, it can actually end up being something you look forward to each year. 

So allow me to guide you through some of the mindfulness practices I use to heighten my enjoyment of the darker, colder seasons. 

Vision boards

Pour yourself a cup of your favourite brew, open up your laptop and afford yourself an hour or two to create a vision board. So often when we think about the colder seasons, our focus goes straight to all the not so pleasing aspects. However, there are many fun and exciting activities to be enjoyed during these seasons. 

Fill your board with enticing images, colours, inspirational words and watch how quickly your focus fades from your usual unpleasing thoughts to ones of excitement and anticipation. 

This year my autumn vision board has images of pumpkins, warm drinks held in snuggly mittens, gatherings around the fire, candle light, books, blankets, autumnal walks, favourite jumpers, marshmallows on sticks, mugs of soup and the list goes on. What isn’t to love about that?

If you can, carve out some time to create your vision board in the last month or few weeks before the end of each season, that way you won’t be shocked when the colder weather comes. Instead you’ll be eagerly awaiting those first few leaves to fall and the sound of the heating clicking on. 

But if you find this article in the midst of winter, I always say there is no better time than now. What seasonal activities can you look forward to in the coming weeks?

Be prepared 

They have a saying where I live in Wales, “there is no such thing as bad weather, just bad choice of clothing” and that couldn’t be closer to the truth. 

Now is the time to hunt in the loft, thrift the secondhand stores or go all out and by yourself some new winter apparel.

One of the main issues people have with this time of year is the weather. Being cold and wet don’t tend to rank too highly on anyone’s list of enjoyable activities. 
So prepare your outfits like you have every intention of enjoying the weather. If you have warm waterproofs, wellies and even thermals then no amount of dreary weather will dampen your spirits. 

For many of us this is the number one reason why we don’t spend much time in nature around this time of year but nature is a freely available resource that allows us to neutralise our energy and soak in the rich nourishment that the earth has to offer. Don’t allow unprepared clothing choices to stop you from taking in the freshness of the air and the wonder sights that can be found in nature during the cooler months. 

There is beauty in darkness 

Another common complaint from people about the colder months is the increasing amount of darkness. 

Sunlight is a natural mood enhancer and so when the sun loses its strength and is only present, for sometimes a few minutes each day, it can become very easy to slip into feelings of internal darkness.

But I want you to think of darkness differently. For those of you that have ever sat to meditate, I want you to think how nice, how comforting and relaxing it feels to be in the quiet and comfort of your own mind. 

This form of darkness is rejuvenating, calming and zen like. And the same can be applied for those darker days of winter. The darkness is our invitation to go inward, to quieten our minds and our internal landscape. 

If this still doesn’t enhance your thoughts about darkness, see if you can play around with mood lighting. Candles are a wonderful way to add an element of light but also encapsulate a feeling of warmth and cosiness in any space. Alternatively you could install a dimmer light switch, dulled lamp such as a himalayan salt lamp, or even a string of fairy lights will do the trick. 

This duller lighting also allows you to stick more closely to your body's cues for sleep, as it can be difficult to start receiving sleep signals when we have bright lights in and around our homes. 

Honour your body

Whatever the season, it’s important to listen to how you feel and to honour your body’s cues. If your body is telling you that it needs rest, that it needs to curl up in a warm blanket by the fire, shut out the cold and dive into a book or magazine, see if you can honour that desire. 

Equally, if you feel energised by the winter sun and want to spend a day roaming the countryside in the fresh air, put yourself a flask together, pack your waterproofs and go explore. 

Depending on our culture and our upbringing we can feel very pulled to conform to either of these two approaches toward the cold and dark days.  

We either feel like we have to carry on with the same energetic energy left over from the summer and deny ourselves the opportunity to slow down and to rest. Or we feel like we should be slowing down, when really the bracing weather is what ignites our energy levels.  

Neither is right or wrong. The best option is always what feels good for you, your life and your body. 

Mindset shift 

All it takes is a simple mindset shift. A turning of our attention from the less desirable aspects that often consume our conversations around this time of year and a refocus towards the small heiter moments, that if peppered throughout the colder seasons, can have a profound effect on your mood, outlook and enjoyment of half the months of each year. 

Will this year be the year that you see the cold, dark and damp in a different light?

Words: Josephine Snowling

Josephine Snowling is a writer, teacher and entrepreneur who shares her own personal truth, understanding and insight of how this reality works and how you can learn to come home to yourself so that you may consciously manifest the life you desire.

Main image: Katharina Geissler-Evans

Images 2-4: via Unsplash

Image 5: tobetold for heiter issue 2, Homecoming

November 19, 2023 /Katharina Geissler-Evans
positive mindset, heiter tips, heiterautumn
Daily heiter
1 Comment
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