MAGAZIN X RAW COLOR
MISSION COLOR
MISSION COLOR
MISSION COLOR
MAGAZIN X RAW COLOR
MISSION COLOR
MISSION COLOR
MAGAZIN X RAW COLOR
We asked the Dutch design duo RAW COLOR to give our STAPLER, KNICKER and FALTER shelves a new color scheme. And we learned two things in the process: MAGAZIN and RAW COLOR go really well together. And: if you swing the RAL fan with color experts, the desk tray also becomes an expressive mood maker.
Available from 6 November 2025 here and in the MAGAZIN stores.
STAPLER, KNICKER, FALTER
STAPLER is a beautifully designed two-part paper tray made of folded steel. The inner shape, which can be moved like an insert in the inner section, has a slightly raised front edge, which symbolically serves as a slot for maximum A4-sized formats. The outer shape envelops the contents and allows several STAPLER to be stacked on top of each other. FALTER is a classic paper tray and therefore holds A4 formats, stands separately on table or shelf surfaces or fits snugly on top of the STAPLER tray. KNICKER is a five-fold folded steel sheet and can be used as an insert in FALTER or separately as a tray for business cards, writing utensils or miscellaneous items. The moss green STAPLER is also available separately and extends the height of the set.
RAW COLOR is first and foremost Daniera ter Haar and Christoph Brach: Together with their team, they materialize colour concepts in their studio in Eindhoven - in their own products as well as on behalf of well-known manufacturers. From cushions to graphic patterns, structures and fabrics, to three-dimensional products, corporate identities and set designs - the unconventional color combinations and overlays from RAW COLOR charge things with personality.
About the design process
How did the selection come about? With lots of paper samples and time: Daniera and Christoph's team built paper models of the three storage elements - in all possible colors - and combined them again and again. And then it was all about observation. Because the effect of colors changes with the light - they look different in the morning than in the afternoon, in early summer than in early autumn.
A surprising change of perspective: thinking about our products in terms of color adds a new dimension to them. For our STAPLER, KNICKER and FALTER set, the team has developed a color combination that evolves the desk organizer from a purist pragmatist to an expressive helper. The moss green (RAL 6005) of STAPLER forms the strong basis, while FALTER in RAL 4009 pastel violet builds an airy bridge to the bright RAL 2002 blood orange of KNICKER.
The use of RAL colors is no coincidence: MAGAZIN uses the clear color definitions exclusively for its products. They can be reproduced particularly well and consistently on any material. A nice coincidence: RAL is 100 years old this year - so our edition fits in perfectly. Our warmest congratulations.
Edition Raw Color
To mark the 100th anniversary of RAL colors, the renowned Dutch design studio Raw Color has created a graphically revised anniversary edition of the RAL color fan K5 with the RAL COLOR FARBFÄCHER K5 - EDITION RAW COLOR. It contains all 216 standardized shades of the proven RAL CLASSIC palette. Each color represents a historical field of application for RAL CLASSIC - from industry to infrastructure to product design.
Edition Raw Color
Thanks to its compact format, the RAL COLOUR RANGE K7 - EDITION RAW COLOR fits in a bag, toolbox or design folder - ideal for quick color matching on the go or at the workplace. The anniversary product thus becomes a functional tool, an inspiration in the design process - and also a beautiful object on the desk.
More STAPLER, KNICKER, FALTER
Prints by RAW Color
Read more
Raw Color trägt die Farbe schon im Namen – und die Liebe für ehrliche und gute Materialien im Herzen. Das Eindhovener Designduo Daniera ter Haar und Christoph Brach arbeitet über die Grenzen kreativer Professionen hinweg und verbindet Grafik-, Ausstellungs- und Produktdesign mit Farbe als Gestaltungselement.
We encounter color everywhere - on products, in rooms, in the city. It makes surfaces visible - but its effect goes deeper. Color organizes and arranges, triggers emotions and conveys messages even before a word is spoken.



















































