Limited drop · Live now
Formal Office Attire.
Formal office wear that doesn't look like a uniform — structured blazers, wide tailored trousers, shirts with presence.
Most Wanted
What everyone wants.
All pieces
All of Formal Office Attire.
Opium Elegance Wide Pants
€84,99Businesscore Vintage Leather Bomber Jacket
€94,99Opium Crystal Collar Polo
€74,99

Drop Alerts
Wir melden uns beim nächsten Drop in dieser Niche.
Drin. Wir melden uns beim nächsten Drop.
Opium Celestial Mesh Shirt
€124,99Businesscore Waffle-Knit Polo Sweater
€84,99Opium Contrast Stitch Polo Vest
€84,99

Drop Alerts
Wir melden uns beim nächsten Drop in dieser Niche.
Drin. Wir melden uns beim nächsten Drop.
Businesscore Wide-Leg Pants
€84,99Opium Studded Collar Blazer
€114,99Opium Hybrid Denim-Blazer & Wide-Leg Pants Set
€154,99Formal office wear that doesn't look like a uniform — structured blazers, wide tailored trousers, shirts with presence. At Fūga Studios, office wear is not a compromise, it's its own look.
Formal fashion without a dress code handbook
Formal office wear at Fūga Studios doesn't come from a department store. The cuts are inspired by Businesscore and Korean formal wear — broad shoulders, flowing trousers, minimal details. Pieces that work in the office and don't need changing afterward. If you're interested in Korean formal outfits you'll find the cultural context behind these silhouettes there.
Combining formal clothing correctly
An oversized blazer with a high-waisted trouser and a plain shirt — that's enough. Formal office wear lives on fit and fabric, not quantity. Dark palettes, one or two textures, no patterns fighting for attention. The 3-3-3 rule — three colors, three layers, three textures — is a useful starting point, but not law.
What this collection offers
Blazers, tailored trousers, vests and shirts for formal occasions and the working day. Cuts that hold between Seoul and Berlin. Limited drops, no restock.
Frequently Asked Questions
What goes into a formal office outfit?
A structured top — blazer or vest — tailored trousers with clear lines and a plain shirt or top. Colors: black, dark gray, cream. The goal is clarity, not visibility.
What is the 3-3-3 outfit rule.
Three colors, three textures, three layers. In a formal context, that means reduction over variety. A blazer in heavy fabric, a light shirt, trousers with drape — done.
Can you wear formal office wear outside the office?
If the cuts are right, yes. Fūga formal pieces are cut so they don't look like after-hours costume — oversized blazers work on the street just as well as in a meeting.
2015 → today
Fūga
風雅
Fūga isn't for everyone.
Berlin Plattenbau origins, Asia-inspired. Creative, but never fully fitting into the system. Tokyo 2015 as the starting point — six niche phases since then.
Today: Berlin · Shanghai · Tokyo · Poznań. We know our designers by name. Limited drops, no restocks.
We aren't dropouts. We know the system — went through training, worked, kept building. Both sides hold.
How Fūga evolved
One line. No closed worlds.
What started as Streetwear in Tokyo has shifted over the years — through different phases, our own and collective.
01
Streetwear / Anime
The first designs. Anime prints, Harajuku characters, Tokyo connection.
02
Techwear
Functional, layered, dark. Tokyo reduction translated into fabric.
03
Gothic
Heavier, uncompromising, more shadow. Grew up parallel to Techwear.
04
Opium
Berghain aesthetic with street cuts. Raw, black, Berlin avant-garde meets Streetwear.
05
Rave
Cyberpunk meets the Berghain floor. Reflective, tactical, sound-system ready.
06
Businesscore
Tailored cuts with Streetwear logic. Growing older without going 9-to-5. Stay edgy.
What comes next, we'll write when the time comes.












































