At a time when all establishments in the hospitality sector are wondering how to attract attention—the key to their survival—a clever company has come up with a solution. Called Giftshop, it bills itself as a ‘Souvenir Publisher’ and offers official collections to all venues seeking recognition of carefully designed fashion accessories and tableware. Something to help them stand out from the crowd.
Around thirty establishments are already customers. The range includes plates, mugs and glasses bearing the names of those iconic Parisian institutions that capture the imagination (Lipp, Au Pied de Cochon, Bofinger, Café de Flore, Bistrot Paul Bert…) as well as faux-authentic brasseries such as Brasserie Dubillot (opened in 2021) and Brasserie Bellanger (opened in 2019) from the Nouvelle Garde group, which are thus gaining heritage status. The image is always stronger than the truth. Giftshop also offers a clothing line designed to give these establishments a trendy lifestyle vibe much loved by young urbanites: T-shirts and hoodies galore, or, more unexpectedly, a supporter’s jersey for Le Buci café (nice touch), a silk scarf for Bistrot Paul Bert, a sleeveless puffer jacket for A la Mère de Famille, or a Teddy jacket for La Fontaine de Mars and Le Bistrot de Paris. Quite clever!
Following the growing number of fashion brands offering handcrafted objects in their stores—as if they needed to move beyond textiles to attract attention—we now see cafés and restaurants keen, in turn, to make their mark in ways other than through their customers’ taste buds. In the future, brand identities will be built by suggesting ways to escape them…
Giftshop’s range is indicative of this shift. It confirms that consumption has indeed become an experience, as those who have experienced it are tempted to buy a souvenir. A cool souvenir with a distinctive aesthetic that will, in turn, help build a place’s reputation to the point where it becomes “iconic” in its own right. It also confirms that young consumers are, more than ever, on the lookout for signs-to-wear to assert their identity and stand out on social media, which they view as a compass. To exist is to leave a mark.