Live
N° 001 — Alpenblick
The opening folio
April · MMXXVI
Frühjahr Ausgabe

Vie
alpine
moderne.

Un journal lent de la vie tyrolienne moderne — enregistré dans les vallées de l'Inn et les hauts cols du Karwendel. Style, lieux, intérieurs, les gens qui les font.

01 — Issue
N° 001
02 — Folios
48
03 — Read time
2h 14m
A Tyrolean alpine valley at golden hour, mist rolling through pine forests.
Live from Inntal
Fig. 01 Inntal at golden hour — the valley unfolds westward toward the Lechtaler Alps. Photograph by Reichhalter.
—  Im Tiroler Wörterbuch
N° 002 — Folio

Trois récits,
à lire lentement.

Monthly dispatches from the valley — a conversation with a leatherworker, a night in a restored stube, the grammar of alpine wool. Read in order, or don't.

A woman wearing a modern reinterpretation of a traditional Tyrolean loden wool coat in an alpine meadow.
Folio I
Style — 14 April, MMXXVI · 8 min read

The grammar
of wool.

For two hundred years Tyrolean loden has been cut from the same cloth. We trace its quiet revolution through the hands of three designers reinterpreting the alpine wardrobe for a warmer century.

Lire le cahier
Interior of a minimalist modern alpine chalet with a Wegner chair and mountain view.
Folio II
Interiors — 02 April · 6 min

A house that watches the weather.

Architect Katharina Lanz rebuilt a 1923 Kitzbühel farmhouse around a single five-metre window. A meditation on restraint, raw larch, and the Nordkette.

Close-up of an artisan's hands carving a traditional alpine wooden mask in a workshop.
Folio III
Culture — 28 March · 11 min

The last carver of the
Matschgerer masks.

In a workshop above Absam, Sepp Kofler cuts lime-wood faces for a carnival older than the country itself. A visit to one of the few remaining mask-makers in Tyrol.

—— Archives des dépêches
Forty-two more folios in the vault.
Tous les récits
N° 003 — Inhalt

Table
des matières.

Four bodies of work. Each is a thread — pull it and Tyrol unspools: fabric, stone, light, language.

I Style & Fashion II Places & Travel III Living & Interiors IV Culture & Craft
N° 004 — Alpine Style

Tradition
↔ Moderne.

Two languages, one grammar. Tyrolean style pulls from three hundred years of field work and thirty years of Viennese design schools — a dialogue, not a compromise.

α Tradition
Macro detail of dark forest-green Tyrolean loden wool fabric with an antique brass edelweiss button.

Loden, brass, and the Dirndl.

Cloth pounded into waterproof felt by wooden mallets. Buttons cast in village foundries. A dress grammar that survived two world wars and one plastic century.

Loden Trachten Handwerk
β Moderne
A contemporary Tyrolean loden wool coat worn in a meadow.

A cleaner silhouette, same thread.

A new generation of makers — trained in Milan, rooted in Wattens — is cutting the dirndl against the grain. Unstructured, pocketed, raw-edged. Still loden.

Minimal Wool-blend Unisex
N° 005 — Ortsverzeichnis

Six lieux,
une vallée.

No photographs, yet. Just the addresses — and why to go. The register is updated monthly; the listings never outstay their welcome.

—— Une note : nous ne listons pas par saison, nous listons par humeur. Le registre complet vit dans les archives.

Full ortsverzeichnis
A floor-to-ceiling window inside a modernist alpine residence framing a panoramic view of the Dolomites at dusk.
N° 007 — Interieurs
An editorial full-bleed
Fig. 07 · Dolomiti Lodge

Une fenêtre est une pièce
qui ne finit jamais.

In the new alpine house, glass has replaced the painted chest. We visit three homes that frame the mountain instead of decorating against it.

Read the series
N° 008 — Abonnement
001
Abonnés jusqu'ici · vous êtes le suivant

Une lettre,
une fois par mois.
Pas de bruit.

Un résumé envoyé par courrier des meilleures lectures, nouveaux lieux et trouvailles discrètes de la vallée. Lisible en quatre minutes avec un café.

—— Désabonnez-vous à tout moment. Nous gardons la liste courte, volontairement.

N° 009 — Häufige Fragen

Questions qu'on
nous pose.

The six most useful. The other nine are in the colophon, and ten more on the archive page.

Q · 01

What is Tyrol style?

A quiet triangle — fabric, stone and light. It is less a look than a posture: durable, unornamented, at ease with weather. Older than Austria, wider than a dirndl.
Q · 02

Where do I find the authentic?

Leave the postcards at the tourist office and walk two streets north. The authentic tends to live one block off the Maria-Theresien-Strasse — and at altitude, above 1.400 m, always.
Q · 03

What should I wear here?

Layers, in wool. One pair of well-made shoes that you can walk up a cobblestone lane in. A long coat for the Föhn, which always comes. Nothing with a slogan.
Q · 04

Are there real local brands?

Yes — eighty, by our count. We feature thirty on the masthead page. They are rarely on Instagram, often in the back of a workshop, always worth the small detour.
Q · 05

When is the best time to come?

Mid-September, for the light. Late May, for the meadows. Early February, for the silence. Never in August — the passes are full and the coffee is indifferent.
Q · 06

How do I collaborate with you?

Write a real email, in any language. We accept a handful of partnerships a year — small makers and quiet places only. Addresses and details sit in the colophon below.
N° 010 — Redaktion
Déclaration éditoriale
—— Signé
M. Reichhalter
Rédacteur en chef
We read slowly, walk slowly, write slowly. Tirolstyle is an almanac for a region that never needed to be loud — only noticed.”
Fondé
MMXXVI
Rédacteurs
6
Contributeurs
42
Imprimé
∞ pixels