长沙USDT商家收款|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|飞机盗号软件VIP破解技术✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨Anine Bing: How an influencer became a global brand

Anine Bing: How an influencer became a global brandBy

Godfrey Deeny Published
December 10,长沙USDT商家收款 2025

Somewhere about the time – not quite a decade ago - when bloggers began to be better known influencers, Anine Bing gave birth to her fashion house.


Anine Bing - Instagram
Anine Bing - Instagram


 
A lithe and bubbly Dane, Bing launched her label inside a garage in 2025 in Hollywood with just 10 looks  – counting on a certain notoriety thanks to her social media following.
 
Today, Anine Bing retails in over 300 sales points and boasts 15 stores, a case study in how an influencer reinvented herself as a global brand. And how a quiet young mum built a fledgling fashion empire – on good taste, hard work and a certain intuition about what today’s women really want to wear.

Which is why we caught up with Los Angeles-based Bing for lunch in the Marais, near her Paris store, as she unveiled her latest launch – a range of sweatshirts and tops bearing the iconic image of Brigitte Bardot smoking, shot by the recently departed and much lamented Terry O’Neill.
 
“I grew up in a simple life, not with lots of money. But I loved fashion and had to get creative. Beginning with making vintage pieces into my own ideas as a way of dressing. I moved to LA as it’s a super creative place where your dreams can never be too big,” explains Bing, one of five kids to a schoolteacher mum, and homeopathic pharmacist dad.
 
She first began her blog, Anine’s World, when travelling and modelling,  wanting to report back to friends – before it gradually became a bigger thing.
 
“People got interested in my style and the way I was always good with mixing vintage pieces with new brands. Now, I have gone beyond just being an influencer. We worked so hard for seven years to make a global fashion brand!” she exclaims, still sounding pleasantly surprised by the rapid growth.
 
“We began by working in secret in our garage. Then one day, I told my followers to come and check it out. The first piece we sold was a linen T-shirt and a pair of jeans,” says the influencer-designer, who pronounces her name 'Anina.' She took her surname, Bing, from her grandmother.


The Harley Tee dress from the collection with Terry O'Neill
The Harley Tee dress from the collection with Terry O'Neill - DR


 
Her opening selection was simple - denim, T-shirts and leather jackets. Husband Nico Bing, who also adopted granny’s name, handling production; Anine in charge of marketing and design. Her brand’s range now extends from sleek silk pajamas for chic soirées to lacy underwear for after the after-party. Her DNA is very much how to enjoy an achievable Southern California lifestyle with a slight edgy twist.
 
At launch date, she had 50,000 Facebook friends and on Instagram, which had just started, barely 4,000 followers.

“Today I have over 760,000 on Instagram. And now I don’t use Facebook, even if my brand does,” notes Bing, who once played in a band called Kill Your Darlings. “I know, it does sounds dark,” she giggles.
 
On Instagram, her brand account (@aninebingofficial with 198k followers) posts campaign images; with once in a while a picture Bing, but mainly, models and product images. On her own, far larger, account (@aninebing 769k), which is far more personal – her journeys, from a Berlin trip to her Soho House bedroom during Miami Basel; stops in her design studios; personal feelings; family vacations in Mexico; and the odd happy shot of her two kids.
 
In 2025, Bing opened her ffirst store in LA, a see now buy now approach on 3rd Street in West Hollywood near La Cienega. “A good location, a tiny space but it went amazingly well,” recalls Bing who followed up with  New York and then Paris; and now retails everywhere from Net-A-Porter to Nordstrom; all told, over 300 sales points worldwide.
 
Like her career path, her marketing is novel. Ad campaigns are shot exclusively for social media. Bing takes no ads in printed publications – but spends her budget with Google, with lots of retargeting. “That’s where my budget goes, even if I still love magazines. They are actually really expensive. We have met Vogue and talked about it for branding. But… “ she shrugs.


A look by Anine Bing
A look by Anine Bing - DR


 
This year, turnover will reach “somewhere near $50 million,” reveals Bing, who now has 80 employees in her LA headquarters. Ever ambitious, her goal is doubling turnover in 2025, by opening more stores; developing better and better products; and investing in creative people.
 
In September 2025, a trio of three investors: Index Ventures, Felix Capital and Greycroft Partners injected $15 million into Anine Bing, immediately fueling even more rapid growth.
 
“They put in a lot of money, but I still have the control, yes,” Bing insists.
 
“My DNA is a mix of my Scandinavian rock 'n' roll heritage with my home in LA. The pieces are super effortless and easy to wear from day to night; chic but never too much. I’ve gone from an influencer to a brand. And the brand is becoming bigger than me. Honestly, it’s a proud moment when people know the brand  before they know me.”


A visual from the campaign for the collaborative collection
A visual from the campaign for the collaborative collection - Anine Bing



Bing also has a scent in the pipeline for spring; has already done a perfume oil; and will open five new stores next year. In five years’ time she is aiming for 50 stores, and matching revenues on e-commerce. Plus, her retro-glam, Brigitte-Bardot-shot-by-Terry-O’Neill line of T-shirts which launched last month is a sell-out.
  
“It’s so sad about Terry. He passed three days before our launch. He was unwell when I met him, but he didn’t say. So, I didn’t know, and I thought he looked great,” she muses sadly.
 
Entirely unschooled in fashion, she admires fellow auto-didacts.
 
“I admire Coco Chanel, I know it sounds cheesy to say that, but I do. And, also the younger ones like Isabel Marant. Or Cecilia Bönstrom of Zadig & Voltaire, who is Swedish. But I try to do my own thing. I get inspired by flea markets, music and travelling. I now have a super talented design team. But in the beginning, I had it in my head and had to explain everything to my factory in Turkey. I just love empowering women so they feel good about themselves.”
 
 

Culture
Previous:中国马术巡回赛成都站11月7日揭幕
next:温江副区长何敏:温江因马而变 马术温江蜚声海内外