• Category Archives Stores
  • Barbie In Furs

    Those are real Barbie dolls dressed in real furs. This is the unusual window display of Zamir Furs at 90 West Houston Street. Click here for more photos. The fur controversy should be enough to deter one from owning a fur shop, but how about locating it in the heart of SoHo/the Village – one of the most liberal neighborhoods in the country – and a stone’s throw from NYU? Yet their relatively peaceful existence here demonstrates the tolerance of New Yorkers and, perhaps, the view that “fur is back.”

    Described as a “leading fur specialty shop in Soho offering unique stylings from all over the world,” Zamir inventories furs and does custom work. They also have fur hats, headbands, cuffs, earmuffs, pillows, and blankets. Mattel (Barbie’s manufacturer) has tried to put a halt to the trend of selling furs for Barbie: “We would not have Barbie wear real fur — she’s a friend to animals.” And in a 1989 promo piece, The Barbie 30th Anniversary Magazine, a resume for Barbie gave her current occupation as “animal rights volunteer.” Mattel’s attorneys contacted Zamir furs in the late 1990s asking them to stop selling Barbie coats. But given that her furs are made from remnants, perhaps Barbie is just saying that she’s being very eco-conscious 🙂


  • The Pink Pussy Cat Boutique

    Shops selling sexually oriented adult products date back over 30 years in NYC. One of the oldest is the Pink Pussycat Boutique at 167 W. 4th Street in the West Village, established in 1972. Click here for a peek inside. This is the same year that another sex shop icon was started: the Pleasure Chest, which is around the corner at 156 7th Avenue (these dates are according to their websites). Both have expanded with other locations.

    In spite of the availability of products via internet/mail order, the novelty of seeing sex devices, clothing, bondage gear, videos, books, etc. on display in a retail store is a real draw for tourists, which is much of the store’s trade. However, they do provide service in the way of advice and recommendations to those comfortable with discussing intimate details with a complete stranger.

    The Pink Pussycat and the Pleasure Chest have both avoided the super-garish, seedy look of stores seen in Times Square (or now around the corner on 6th Avenue). I think the community peacefully coexists with these two shops and sees them as businesses one would expect to find in a neighborhood like the Village…


  • The Evolution Store

    This is the type of place that would be hard to imagine anywhere outside of NYC. Even for the city, the Evolution Store, at 120 Spring Street in SoHo, is extremely unusual. Click here for more photos. Open since 1993, they are a landmark in the neighborhood – ask anyone who lives here, and they most likely know the shop.

    They sell animal (and human) skulls, fossils, meteorites, seashells, framed butterflies and beetles, anatomical models, medical posters, and tribal art. Many of their items are collectible and museum quality. Specimens are obtained from paleontologists, entomologists, anthropologists, and others who supply museums and private collectors from all corners of the world. They have an entomology workshop staffed by experts.

    The shop staff itself is definitely pro-insect – when I was there, Kate was showing her live pet scorpion, whom she said was very docile. According to their website, all of the items are legally obtained and can be legally sold in New York State…


  • Chelsea Market

    The Chelsea Market encompasses an entire city block – from 15th to 16th Streets and from 9th to 10th Avenues. The complex is essentially an urban food mall with an industrial decor – the central corridor has remnants of the old factory building (click here for more photos). An enclosed mall-like space this large is somewhat unique for NYC. The 11-story building is the former home of the National Biscuit Company (Nabisco), where everything from Saltines, Vanilla Wafers, Fig Newtons, Barnum’s Animal Crackers, Mallomars, and Oreos were made – in fact, the Oreo cookie was invented here in 1913. For an excellent article about this building and its history, click here.

    Nearly all the retailers are food-related: restaurants (Iron Chef’s Morimoto and Mario Batali’s Del Posto are there), cafes, gourmet food shops, produce shops, ice cream parlors, bakeries, and kitchen supplies. The building also provides office space for a variety of tenants, including various media companies such as Oxygen Network, The Food Network, and the local NYC cable TV station NY1.


  • Vilebrequin

    I’ve always admired this small, exquisite, pristine one-story building in SoHo on West Broadway (actually, I have learned that it is technically an extension of the neighboring building). The white-painted wood exterior, canvas awnings, the atmospheric lighting and the glow in the evening, the beautiful, neatly arranged merchandise in vibrant colors and patterns – the shop feels like a doorway to the South of France.

    In the 1970s, Fred Pryskel, living in St. Tropez, fashioned the first boxer swim trunks from a checkered tablecloth. He then improved on the fabric, using a fast-drying spinnaker sailcloth. The polyamide fabric has a soft, cottony feel. The first store opened in France in 1996; there are now 55 stores worldwide. And, of course, they have a site: Vilebrequin.com. American CEO Thierry Prissert brought the concept to the US, opening the first store in NYC in 1999.

    The pricey clothing line, primarily men’s swimware, has been popular with notoriety and celebrity since its inception (with the Brigitte Bardot crowd) to its current roster – British Prime Minister, Brad Pitt, Hugh Grant, Robert De Niro, etc. By the way, the name Vilebrequin is quite whimsical; Pryskel’s passion for auto racing led to using the word, which means crankshaft in French…


  • Greengrocer

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    One of the best things about New York City is the conveniences. The density, variety, and operating hours of businesses are amazing, and nothing typifies this better than the NYC Greengrocer. Our version (originally a British term) has expanded the concept. Primarily Korean-owned, there are nearly 2000 of these in the city, and all are open 24/7 – they never close, even for major holidays. And the selection at some of the larger ones, like that in the photo, is absolutely astounding. These places are studies in optimal use of space. There is produce, dairy, beverages, beer, snacks, extensive selection of hot and cold food, a deli section, household products, drugstore items, flowers, newspapers, ATM, etc.

    The one in the photo, Space Market on University Place in Greenwich Village, has a frozen food section that rivals some supermarkets – virtually every product group is represented. Here’s another view inside. As these establishments have grown larger and required going beyond employment of family members, there have been efforts to improve treatment of minority employees. I personally am very appreciative of the tireless efforts of all the workers to provide this level of service…

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Matt Umanov

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    Here’s another one of those truly authentic NYC places – Matt Umanov Guitars, in business since 1965. And, like many of the serious places in the city, it’s not always so obvious to the casual visitor. They are renowned worldwide and used by many professionals, including celebrity guitarists.

    Located on Bleecker Street in the Village, they only sell guitars (new and vintage) and have a very highly regarded repair shop on the second floor. Unlike chain stores, there is zero pressure to buy anything – you can spend all day there trying equipment out- and all the sales people are musicians. I wanted to take some video of someone playing in the shop, but it was not allowed. I love the all-steel acoustic resonator guitars made by National – see them in the lower part of this photo. If you go there, ask for Zeke and coax him into playing some blues slide on a National for you…

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • The Music Inn

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    At 169 W. 4th Street in the West Village is one of the most unusual shops in NYC. The Music Inn is, as one writer put it, “a claustrophic hovel.” The outside of the shop should tell you that before even going in – it’s so tight that at various times when it gets busy, I have seen the owner charge $1 to walk through it.

    It has probably the most extensive and eclectic collection of percussion and world instruments you’ll find (they also sell some recorded music and do instrument repair). The place is a real relic and throwback to the ’60s, when the street was a nexus for the counterculture. Bob Dylan lived on 4th Street, and the Music Inn was one of his haunts.

    If you’re looking for a link to the store’s website in this post, you won’t find one – this is the kind of place that doesn’t bother with websites. If you are in the city, take a look – it’s another one of those places that won’t be around forever…

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Giggle

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    Retail today is competitive. And, of course, in NYC, with tens of thousands of stores, it’s very competitive, so retail stores spend an absolute fortune creating their environments. Although parents have always loved and spoiled their children, it seems that we now have extreme indulgence of parents with gifts, furnishings, clothing, food, etc. for their children. Add the affluence we find in a place like New York, and you end up with places like this – a shrine to parental indulgence.

    Apparently giggle isn’t just a baby store (it is marketed as a “new parent store”). They now have two stores each in New York and California – this one was in SoHo. Although I don’t like promoting retail establishments on our blog, I must say that I did find the window display extremely striking and attractive…

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • One Hour

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    There are many different little neon signs in store windows around the city, and we both like them very much. They usually just take something simple, like a phrase or a name, and make them seem very important and festive. Hopefully this is not a technology that will be falling by the wayside anytime soon.

    One Hour is like a two-word poem, and we thought the reflections gave it even more dimension, in combination with it hanging on the transparent glass. Blue Moon is nice too, title of a song…we intend to show more of these in the future…

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Space Surplus Metals

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    Space Surplus Metals on Church Street is the last of an era. This area around Canal Street was filled with industrial suppliers, many of them virtual institutions. Just a few who have gone out of business: Canal Lumber, Tunnel Machinery, Industrial Plastics, Canal Hardware, Bob Michaels (metals). Canal Rubber, which I wrote about on May 12, and Pearl Paint still survive.

    Owned by Victor James (that’s him in the photo) and his wife, both from India, Space Surplus has been around since 1979. You can find anything metal here – brass, copper, zinc, aluminum, steel in sheets, rods, etc. And he cuts at no charge. I love the homey, quaint interior. His space is only 55 ft. x 13 ft., with a rent of nearly $5000 per month. With Victor at 80, his wife at 86, and rent the way it is, I would visit soon – our days in NYC with such places are numbered. More photos…

    Update: Space Surplus Metals has since gone out of business.

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Gem Spa

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

     

    Gem Spa is one of those real classic New York places. In business for 70 years, located at St. Marks Place and 2nd Avenue in the East Village, this place would certainly not stand out as anything special to the visitor or non-resident (an online search will bring up numerous articles and reviews). It is a newspaper stand/magazine shop/soda fountain, and at one time, before the spate of magazine cafes and super bookstores, its extensive selection was a rarity. And they are renowned as the last place serving an authentic New York egg cream soda, the origins of which are still debated. If you haven’t had one, go there and have an unpolished NYC experience. Here’s a peek inside

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Bigelow

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    Bigelow Chemists is the oldest pharmacy in the country, located in the Village on 6th Avenue near 8th Street in a Beaux-Arts building (here’s a link with photos, history, and story). It’s a pleasure to go in – they specialize in very high quality and hard-to-find products for the skin and hair, fragrance for the home, and small luxury items for everyday life. They continue as a true apothecary, making their own line of remedies and filling prescriptions.

    They cultivate relationships with their customers over years, an unusual practice in this type of business nowadays – getting to know the local residents. People come in to browse, take in the atmosphere, and try on the samples. Perhaps this is overly enthusiastic for a simple drugstore, but they have preserved an atmosphere that opens the door to the past and the senses simultaneously.

    Note: Here’s a link to Indieperfumes, which goes into these sorts of topics in depth…

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Canal Rubber

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    In a way, Canal Street is New York City at its best and its worst. On a hot summer day, with the grit, grime, trash, crowds, and traffic, it is really is quite abhorrent. Yet it is and has been home to some of the city’s truly unique and really useful merchants, not just catering to tourist traffic. Some of the stores are (or were) real meccas: Pearl Paint (5 stories of art supplies), Electric Trading (motor and fan suppliers), Industrial Plastics (just out of business), Canal Hardware (out of business), along with jewelry, Chinatown, street vendors, counterfeit consumer products, electronics, lighting supplies, surplus metals, audio equipment, etc. (and there is plenty of cheap schlock too).

    One of my favorites is Canal Rubber. I doubt that there is another place like it in the country, with its amazing inventory of rubber goods displayed at retail. The service can be brusk “New York style” – understandable with the tremendous volume of customers, many of them unknowledgeable about rubber and what they want or need. They have been in business since 1954, serving industrial and retail customers. These independent specialty shops are what have made New York so remarkable and, sadly, are fast disappearing. If you are in New York City, I recommend a stroll down Canal Street. But be forewarned – this is a FUNKY place, not one that is polished or glamorous.

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • Love Saves The Day

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    This place in the East Village on Second Avenue has been around since it first became the fun thing to wear nostalgic clothing ironically. They’ve now expanded their holdings to memorabilia, vintage toys, and accessories, layer upon layer, decade upon decade. They have a rather fierce sign at the door, “unattended children will be sold into slavery,” probably because it would be the perfect place for kids to go wild, play dress up, and pretend, endlessly.

    Every inch is covered with old cocktail and prom dresses, antique toys, and references to and memorabilia of famous rock and roll figures from times gone by (inside photo). Madonna shopped here for the look she wore in her first movie – the tattered lace glove and rosary as jewelry look. Rents have risen astronomically, so they will be moving at the end of this year, around October, to another location somewhere along East Seventh Street. So, if you get the chance to visit before that, you will experience the original LSD in all its overheated and psychedelic glory. Kind of doubt they will be able to reproduce quite the effect they have grown here over decades…
    L

    Update: Love Saves the Day has since closed and moved to Pennsylvania.

    Posted on by Brian Dubé


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