The Cornelis Schuytstraat is not a street you end up on by accident. You go there because you know what you are looking for, or because someone sent you there. 1 Amsterdam fits that bill exactly: a store that doesn't shout, but knows what it has to offer. The Italian family behind the business built more than three decades of experience in the fashion industry before settling down here. You can tell by the selection.
What the family has put together resembles the kind of assortment you would expect to find in a well-run Milan store. Mauro Grifoni is the heaviest weight in the closet: Italian menswear with an emphasis on sophistication, no frills. Salvatore Piccolo delivers shirts with handwork, the kind where you take a closer look at the seams and understand why it costs more. Neither brand is a name you'd come across in any department store, which is exactly the point.

The store itself is laid out like what they call a one-stop shop, but without the chaos that word often implies. The selection is deliberately limited: a handful of brands, well-chosen, side by side. The space on Cornelis Schuytstraat is narrow, like most stores on this street, but the interior exudes the same calm as the brands that hang there. Those who prefer not to browse among other customers can schedule a private shopping appointment. That's not for everyone, but for those who want it: it exists.
Three generations of fashion insight, brought together in nineteen square meters in Oud-Zuid.
Cornelis Schuytstraat has long had a reputation as the street for those who don't want to go to Kalverstraat. The other boutiques here do the same thing: focused, personal, with a clear view of what's right. 1 Amsterdam fits into that company. Three generations of fashion insight, brought together on nineteen square meters in Oud-Zuid. Those who know what they're looking for are likely to find it here.