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What Are People Wearing In Berlin Germany

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What Are People Wearing In Berlin Germany

Brevite is deff one of my fave backpack companies, highly recommend ❤

Today we’re in Berlin, Germany, to see what are people wearing abroad in Germany. Berlin has always been an intriguing place for me. I share with it painful associations of what was done to my people there not so long ago, and yet, over the decades Berlin has flourished into what seems like one of the leading European cities in culture, diversity and tolerance. I wanted to explore this dichotomy further, to see how real berliners feel about their city, and how they express themselves through fashion.

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ABOUT THIS SERIES:
I visit different cities around the world interviewing people on what they are wearing to showcase how location and environment influences fashion choices!

MY JOURNEY:
500 subs: March 20, 2021
1,000 subs: August 6, 2021
5,000 subs: December 11, 2021
10,000 subs: December 28, 2021

FEATURED:
@Sohee — CHECK HER CHANNEL OUT SHE’S AMAZING
Aya
Vianne
Charity
(Charity’s brand) Asafowear
Paula

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for 10% off Goli Vitamins use code: cynical_duchess

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MUSIC:
Alin Coen – Festhalten
Schindler’s List Main Theme –
Mussorgsky – 2 Polish Jews Rich and Poor
Milkshakes by Lofidavid
all other music from Epidemic Sound

FOOTAGE USED:
How to get into the world’s most exclusive club (berghain) – Zack Alsop (Zack and Jay Show)
Berlin drone footage
Kreuzberg, 1981
Hollowcost footage:
footage of jewish life before the war (this footage was fascinating)

TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 intro
0:35 Mauer Park Flea Market
6:31 Tempelhoffer Field
8:55 Surprising My Friend In Germany
13:16 Mitte ‘Fits
15:19 Jewish & Arab experience in Berlin
17:58 Kreuzberg Outfits

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46 COMMENTS

  1. I remember us chatting about your vision for this video whilst eating hummus with bread in my room and it's super super cool how it turned out! This must have took so much thought and time to make and ofcourse you gotta include me doing the dishes ahahahahah Thank you so much for making me feel special :"") probably the best first date I've ever been on 😉

  2. The best fashion will never be found anywhere in Germany. You have to go the the US. I can't even find a pair of sexy heels or cute sandals. Women here wear sneakers and combat boots! Feminine style is certainly lacking!!

  3. For German born foreigners, Berlin is crucially nationalistic! I’m Muslim born in Germany and it’s been horrible, as an international you don’t really identify yourself with Germans so therefore nationalism doesn’t apply much…

  4. I find it rather rude that creator has liked comments of people who agree with the tolerant hipster vibe of Berlin and has chosen to ignore the voices of people who've spoken about how Berlin truly is as a city barring the superficial hipster culture. I'm from India and as much as I want to travel to various countries in Europe, I fear that most capital cities have become an amalgamation of woke people dressing funnily and the true charm of the monuments, the museums, the history and the struggles of the people of the past is being lost.

  5. I miss berlin!
    But surprisingly the original Berliners. I lived and worked in the east as a woman with a migration background. Yes, the Berliners are unique but that's what I love about them. I don't just miss the cool scenes… I miss moments when I had to learn that „Brötchen“ are „Schrippen“ and „Sonnabend“ means „Saturday“.

  6. Fashion is mostly in prenzlauer berg, Kreuzberg and Mitte etc.
    I life pankow and the style is basic, so not special and that's every where in Berlin. So berlin is little overrated for my opinion. When you wear for example a skirt as a man and you go to Reinickendorf like märkisches Viertel or other districts…. A lot of people look at you like you crazy or see you as a "homo"….so I would not tell that Berlin is a 100% safes space

  7. Berlin is in general very left or very right… the most don’t care about religion. Berlin is a very atheistic city no matter what religion you have… religion is the last thing to be tolerant at in Berlin. I feel sorry that Shabbat wasn’t able to keep, that’s a bad move from your employer Hannah. As Christian’s have their sundays Jewish people should get Shabbat as the resting day.

  8. Many people give berlin a new identity from the outside. The authentic Berlin is very different. Berlin has changed into a hipster City… I love Berlin but even me am pretty annoyed from this “new Berlin”…
    They think they have to look like that. As someone before me wrote here, they take a lot but they give nothing back to this city.

  9. I live in New Zealand. I haven't been to Germany. I would like to visit. At the market in this video there are some model toy cars. In my childhood i was into cars. I had die-cast metal Dinky toy cars. My favorite ones were German made Marklin models. Marklin were known for their train sets. The toy cars were very detailed. Audi, VW, Mercedes- Benz, BMW models I had. I no longer have them. I sold them before going to live in Australia years ago. Enjoyed viewing this fashion posting. From Carl.

  10. You make some of the best street style videos! (second only to Karen Britchick)…. Also, I know I'm a hormonal sap, but when you called to surprise your friend, I cried a little, lol

  11. I once moved from Frankfurt to Berlin for the sake of fleeing the "finance capital" for a more creative environment – but during the past 7 years of my absence even Frankfurt in my eyes changed so much to the positive side so now I would live there again. The high fluctuation tho is also an aspect I can empathise with I see locals complaining about: people come to the city with the Berghain experience expectations, "consuming" the city for a time of their life but not giving back.

    We used to live in Moabit which was more of a melting pot of local "Ur-Berliners" & (regional / international ) migrants. Couldn't have imagined tho living in a district full of expats 😀

    talking about "all-black" idk – Guess it was more of a thing 5 years ago but I'm still doing it since it's easy to decide what to wear and it gets you not only through your dirty city day by day while maintaining your "anonymity" but also stays clean on a bike, potential coffee spills etc. Also my choice for traveling light. just loving it. The things I customise are my bike & laptop so they less likely get stolen and even though my direct fashion outfit is pretty "normcore" I still appear as "colorful spot" in the city.

  12. Berlin has pushed this diversity thing way to hard and believe me, all the effort they had put in too achieve this diversity heaven resulted in everyone being actually completely the same. Try to be somehow regular, wear normal jeans and shirt and you ll be the biggest hipster motherfucker there. People wearing blankets or tablecloths just to prove they are special makes it utterly forgettable.

  13. Being tolerated means that you may be there under certain terms and conditions but will never be a part of it. It is not a positive or progressive thing but more of an us versus them, a way to once again distinguish between people. Because you named Jewish memorial, Jewish people were tolerated for centuries until they chose not to tolerate them anymore.

  14. Hi Batsheva! Just wanted to say that I think your content is so unique in the best way and it has brought me SO much enjoyment. I love that you are so proudly yourself. You are such a breath of fresh air and I wish you all the best.

  15. I love the overall vibe of the video!! No critisism just something to think about: some people find it inappropriate of disrespectful to sit on the Memorial and take aesthetically pleasing video shots at a Place that exists to remember the victims of the holocaust

  16. Having lived in Berlin 8 years. I can tell you for sure. Berlin is not tolerant at all. Thank me later

    (As a tourist if you don't understand German on a native level you will probably not notice tho')

  17. I have visited berlin for 2 months, to mostly check it out and start learning German to see if i would like to study university there, i am a muslim hijabi women, now i was always treated well as in customer service, but i did receive some micro aggressions in public transportation , it is still tolerant to a point but if you are a hijabi keep in mind that ppl will purposely avoid you (in public transportation mostly not streets) and if you want to make friends you MUST initiate the friendship bc most of the time ppl will not talk to you, but overall my experience is not bad cause once you talk with people they tend to be respectable, tbh i think berlin and london are probably the most tolerant europe capital cities in my opinion, i will coming to berlin december <3

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