New Embert façade, chaussée de Charleroi, Brussels
Fur house · Brussels · since 1954

The heritage
of living fur

Seventy years of expert hands, in the last fur atelier in Brussels.

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Our history

Seventy years
of expert hands

In 1954, the house opened on the chaussée de Charleroi. In 1990, Madame Fuchs-Lejeune took it over and breathed new life into it. In 2001, her son Lionel joined her at the cutting table. Seventy years on, the same house continues the craft — at the same table, with the same gestures, in the same spirit.

Madame Fuchs-Lejeune and Lionel Fuchs

1954 — The founding

The house was founded in 1954. A fur boutique on the chaussée de Charleroi in Brussels, in a quarter that then counted dozens of them. The house made its name — the finesse of the cut, the wisdom of its counsel, the loyalty of a clientele who returned season after season.

1990 — Madame Fuchs-Lejeune

In 1990, Madame Fuchs-Lejeune took the reins. She learned in the atelier, she trained at the cutting table, she took the measure of the craft. Under her direction, New Embert weathered the most difficult decades the trade has known — ever milder winters, anti-fur campaigns, the collapse in the number of rival houses. New Embert endured, because Madame Fuchs-Lejeune turned the boutique into a living atelier.

Madame Fuchs-Lejeune, at the cutting table.

Madame Fuchs-Lejeune in the atelier, white coat, fabric in her hands
Lionel Fuchs in the atelier — black-and-white portrait

2001 — Lionel arrives

Lionel Fuchs joined the house in 2001. From mother to son, the craft is passed on as one passes on a language: by the ear, by the hand, by patience. Madame Fuchs-Lejeune taught Lionel what no manual ever could — the way a mink pelt responds to the blade, the sense of a bias seam, the moment a coat ceases to be a garment and becomes a second skin.

Lionel Fuchs, in the atelier on the chaussée de Charleroi.

Brussels, then and now

Brussels once counted fifty-four fur houses. New Embert is today the last of them. Not by chance — by choice. By the atelier we have kept. By the transformations we know how to perform. By our refusal of throwaway fashion.

The Belgian hallmark

The house was for many years a member of the Union des Fourreurs Techniciens de Belgique — a crest we have kept on the wall, in memory of a trade that was once mighty. Today, it is the Furmark and Brussels Expertise Labels certifications that bear witness to our craftsmanship and our ethics.

54 1

“From fifty-four fur houses in Brussels in the Seventies,
we have come down to one today.”

Lionel Fuchs · RTBF Interview, 1st March 2024

Brussels Expertise Labels

Like mother,
like son.

The BEL label honours family transmission within the craft. A story of inherited gestures, of glances exchanged over a pelt, of patience learned across the seasons.

88 seconds · BEL · 2024

The atelier

The precise gesture,
the rare craft.

Behind the boutique, the atelier. A cutting table, wooden hangers, patterns yellowed by the years. And tools that have not changed in fifty years, because they have no need to change.

The furrier's tools
Cutting gesture with the blade
Shears and claw tool
Lionel at the furrier's sewing machine, in concentration
Hangers and patterns
Blade in the fur
Portrait of Lionel at the furrier's machine
The atelier at work, in full view
Macro detail — craftsmanship at the closest range

We have survived because we also have an atelier. Eighty to ninety per cent of what we do today is repairs and, above all, transformations.

Lionel Fuchs · RTBF · 2024
Hautes Fourrures · Fine Furs

A rare craft,
and a precious one.

In the shadow of the traditional ateliers, there still survives a craft that is no longer taught. Lionel Fuchs and Madame Fuchs-Lejeune are the keepers of a gesture — the one that turns a pelt into a garment, and a garment into a legacy.

94 seconds · 2024

Women's Collections

Nine silhouettes,
five furs.

Every woman finds her cut. Every cut finds its fur. And every piece, hand-made in our atelier, is one to be passed down through the generations.

White fox — editorial
White fox in profile
H Silhouette

The H Silhouette

Straight · timeless

Fitted H Silhouette

The Fitted H Silhouette

Drawn in at the waist

O Silhouette

The O Silhouette

Cocoon · enveloping

Fur marquetry

A One-of-a-Kind Piece

Fur marquetry · bespoke

Barguzin sable

Barguzin Sable

The rarest of all sables

Sable

Sable

The purest of forms

Powder-pink fur jacket

Powder-Pink Jacket

Couture spirit · sheared mink

Long pink fur coat

Cocoon Coat

Pink fox · an enveloping silhouette

Patchwork stole in khaki, brown and black mink

Patchwork stole

Khaki, brown, black mink · one-of-a-kind piece

A new coat at ten thousand euros is dear, certainly; but over a hundred years, it is a hundred euros a year.

Lionel Fuchs · RTBF · 2024
Men's Collections

For the man
who has nothing to prove.

The man who wears fur today does not do so to be remarked upon. He does so because it is right.

Long coat in black mink

Long Coat in Black Mink

H silhouette · leather finishings

Grey coat with asymmetric collar

Cashmere Coat

Asymmetric collar · mink lining

Blue trench lined in sable

Navy Trench

Sable lining

Gabardine bomber with mink collar

Gabardine Bomber

Mink collar · full mink lining

Bomber with fur collar — catwalk

Contemporary Pelisse

Catwalk · Caroline Kuhne

The Catwalk

Forty silhouettes,
one house.

Once a year, the atelier steps out of the shadows. The pieces of an entire season parade beneath the chandeliers of a Brussels salon. Arctic fox, velvet mink, Russian sable, chinchilla, rex rabbit — each piece is a dialogue between matter and hand.

New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk New Embert catwalk
Transformations

The coat,
reborn anew.

Between eighty and ninety per cent of our work is transformation. Your mother's coat becomes a jacket for you. Your grandmother's fur becomes a contemporary parka, a sleeveless gilet, the lining of a trench. And sometimes, when there is a little left over, a throw for the home.

First — a garment given a new life
Long sleeveless gilet in piombo mink

Long Gilet, Piombo Mink

A slate-grey silhouette, long and open. To be worn over a jumper, over a dress, over oneself.

Long sleeveless gilet in black mink

Long Gilet, Black Mink

The verticality of black, the density of the fur. From day to evening with no need to change.

Hooded jacket in brown mink

Hooded Jacket, Brown Mink

Fur becomes the everyday jacket. Hood raised, hands in the pockets.

Short jacket in palomino mink

Short Jacket, Palomino Mink

A clean line, a gilded ivory tone. The grandmother's coat becomes the granddaughter's jacket.

Jacket in ivory mink

Crew-Neck Jacket, Ivory Mink

No collar, no fanfare — a confident volume, worn with jeans as readily as with a dress.

Short black mink coat with stand collar

Short Coat, Black Mink

Stand collar, long sleeves, three-quarter length. The piece that gathers up the whole of our craftsmanship.

Ice-grey fox coat

Quilted Coat, Fox Trim

The fur of yesterday becomes border, hood, cuff. The coat gains a second, technical life.

Reversible parka lined in silverblue mink

Reversible Parka, Silverblue Mink Lining

The rain on one side, the fur on the other. A garment that adapts to the morning and to the mood.

Reversible parka lined in perla sable

Reversible Parka, Perla Sable Lining

Russian sable on the inside. Discreet without, sumptuous the moment the collar is turned.

Reversible parka in navy and green

Reversible Parka, Navy & Green

Two colours in a single piece. Blue for the city, green for the weekend.

Reversible parka in khaki and burgundy

Reversible Parka, Khaki & Burgundy

Khaki on the one side, deep burgundy on the other. A parka that knows how to change its mind.

Transformation into a modern garment — short jacket, gilet, parka, three-quarter coat, trench lining — from €500 to €3,500 according to the piece, the quantity of fur, and the cutting work involved.

And, on occasion — an object to carry the fur on elsewhere
Sofa throw in beige fox

Sofa Throw

The coat rediscovered, spread out by the fire on a Sunday sofa.

New €12,500 · Transformation €2,500
Cushion in Magellan fox

Cushion

A few square centimetres of fur for softness, set upon an armchair.

New €900–1,800 · Transformation €650
Throw in black-and-white Orylag

Armchair Throw

A statement piece in orylag. Graphic, contemporary, timeless.

New €7,500 · Transformation €1,850
Bed throw in silver fox

Bed Throw

For the nights of winter. Yesterday's coat, laid at the foot of the bed.

New price on request · Transformation €2,850

They are clients between twenty-five and forty-five who do not wish to wear their grandmother's old coat, but who do wish to give it a new life.

Lionel Fuchs · RTBF · 2024
Conservation

When summer comes,
it spends it with us.

Your coat spends the winter with you. In summer, it comes to us. This is how it lasts forty years.

Embert Fur Storage

An editorial evocation · the craft of the last century

Four reasons to entrust your fur to us for the warm season:

  • 10–15°C The atmosphere that slows the ageing of the fur. A climate-controlled space, with humidity regulated by an active dehumidifier.
  • Grade 2.5 Security to Belgian standards NBN/EN 1627. Your coat sleeps in a safe.
  • Zero moths Inspection, gentle brushing, natural preventive treatment. No chemical products whatsoever.
  • 1925 The year of the oldest coat entrusted to our care. Nearly a century of seasons, and it still sleeps on our rails today.
Cleaning

A hundred per cent natural,
zero chemistry.

A fur is not washed like a woollen coat. It is combed, it is refreshed, it is aired. Our process is entirely natural — no perchloroethylene, no solvents. Only the gestures of the craft.

The gesture of cleaning

The process. Sawdust of noble woods is steeped in a selection of essential oils, then introduced into a drum together with your fur. The tumbling motion allows the oiled sawdust to penetrate every hair — it absorbs the impurities the season has left behind, without ever soaking the pelt.

Then comes the extraction: every grain of sawdust is drawn out of the fur. And finally the lustring, by hand, which restores the natural sheen and the original drape of the fur. Not a single solvent, not a drop of perchloroethylene. The old craft — and it is, by some considerable margin, the better one.

01

Tumbling

Sawdust and essential oils, in the drum. Each hair is cleansed in depth.

02

Extraction

The sawdust, now laden with impurities, is wholly drawn out. The fur recovers its lightness.

03

Lustring

By hand, in the direction of the hair. The natural sheen and original drape return.

Official recognition

Member of the BEL
Brussels Expertise Labels.

The BEL brings together the houses of artisanal excellence in Brussels — those whose savoir-faire is recognised as part of the living heritage of the capital. Hautes Fourrures New Embert has been a member since the label's inception.

BEL Prizes ceremony, 28th November 2024

BEL Prizes 2024

The annual ceremony at which distinctions are conferred upon the recognised artisans of Brussels. A consecration of local excellence in craftsmanship.

The Brussels Expertise Labels is a quality mark that distinguishes the houses of recognised expertise within Brussels. It is the acknowledgement that our craft — fine fur — forms part of the cultural and economic heritage of the capital.

To be a member of the BEL is to belong to a circle of artisans who pass on a gesture, a technique, a standard. From the chocolatier to the tailor, from the restorer of works of art to the furrier — all of them carry the soul of Brussels.

Our film “Like mother, like son — the BEL transmission” tells the story of this family continuity: my mother handed down the craft to me, just as her own mother had handed it down to her before. Seventy years of gestures passing from one generation to the next.

Discover the BEL →

Our commitment

Slow fashion,
by definition.

A true fur passes down through the generations. A fake one lasts three seasons, and ends as plastic in the ocean. That is why we do not sell faux fur.

The harm done by fast fashion is denounced often enough. Well — fur is the slow fashion.

Lionel Fuchs · RTBF · 2024
As featured in

In the press
and on television.

RTBF.be · Article

Hoping to sell on an old fur? Best you know — it is worth nothing, or as good as.

Eric Boever puts to Lionel Fuchs the question of the vanishing fur boutiques of Brussels, of transformation as the new heart of the trade, and of the ecological meaning of slow fashion.

Read the article →

1st March 2024

RTBF · Television News

Fashion: what second life for fur coats?

A report from inside the New Embert atelier. Lionel Fuchs shows how an old coat becomes a jacket, a throw, or a cushion. Transformation as an alternative to waste.

Watch the report →

RTBF Auvio

RTBF La Première · Radio

A day in history — Fur.

A radio programme retracing the history of fur, from its golden age in the twentieth century to the present day, with an eye on the few houses that have endured.

Listen to the programme →

RTBF Auvio · Podcast

BEL · Brussels Expertise Labels

Like mother, like son — the transmission.

A film portrait of the New Embert house under the BEL label, which distinguishes the houses of Brussels of recognised expertise. On the family transmission of the craft.

Watch the film ↑

2024

Visit us

35 chaussée
de Charleroi.

Our boutique welcomes you from Tuesday to Saturday. For a fitting, a transformation, or summer storage — come in, write to us, or telephone.

Address

35 chaussée de Charleroi
1060 Brussels · Belgium

Opening hours

Tuesday – Friday: 9.30 a.m. – 5.00 p.m.
Saturday: 1.00 p.m. – 6.00 p.m.
Sunday & Monday: by appointment

Telephone

+32 (0)2 640 54 24

Email

reservation@newembert.com

Write to us

Watercolour of the New Embert façade

The house through an artist's eye · an original watercolour