• Category Archives Stores
  • FAO Schwartz

    This famous toy store on 59th and Fifth Avenue (read their history here) has life-size stuffed animals that are very realistic and expressive, made in collaboration with the American Museum of Natural History. Some are based on endangered species. They also have mechanical toys, such as child-size sports cars. It’s worth going in even without a child, just to take in the experience of the myriads of rare types of animals posed around en masse (see more photos here).

    The big cats are heavily represented, and they even have a section devoted to many of the famous dog breeds, also life-size, so you could conceivably try having one at home before or instead of having a real one…


  • Peeps

    In the USA, there is a big connection with Easter and candy, especially chocolate in the form of eggs and bunnies, jelly beans, and marshmallow Peeps. This candy store across from Bloomingdale’s was customizing candy baskets today and was very crowded with families and children (interior photos here).

    Peeps are a strange American phenomenon, and we hoped to photograph a nice display of them, but even though they were featured prominently in their window display and ads, the shop was nearly sold out, as are most stores just before Easter. So we continued our quest around town to find more in other likely places, but there were very few left to be had. We eventually tracked down a handful of lonely boxes of traditional yellow ones closer to home. So if you want to see them in their full splendor and read about their history, click here.


  • Spiderman

    The Sony Building on 550 Madison Avenue has a giant, cold air inflated, very realistic Spiderman in the act of crawling on the glass enclosed atrium. This is a public space inside their corporate building but also feeds into their SonyWonder Technology Lab site, geared mostly for kids, where they showcase computer games and other technology that Sony intends to debut in the near future, interactively.

    Sony did very well with the Spiderman films, and many feel that they are the best comic book superhero films made so far. They had very serious writers, such as Michael Chabon, as well as some Oscar award winners on the screenplay. And, of course, how can you miss with Spiderman as the main character? They plan to do a total of five or six, so it seems that Spidey will be in place for the foreseeable future – here’s a link to the next one, Spiderman 3, which is sure to have a lot more good shots of NYC from the viewpoint of someone scaling skyscrapers as necessary.


  • Prada

    The Prada Store on Prince Street and Broadway, designed by Rem Koolhaas, is a combination of an ultra-modern interior housed in a brooding late-Victorian exterior. We’ve bookmatched the steep in/out and up/down entrance. An extravagant $40 million was spent on a 23,000-square foot space in a building worth less than half of that. The two floors are connected with a half-pipe wooden curve made of exotic zebrawood.

    Formerly a branch of the Guggenheim Museum, it is now a museum/gallery of exquisite products available to those who have the means to indulge…pairs of shoes on each stair step draw your attention and keep you moving on to the next. Many people pass through simply to experience the fabulousness inherent in just being there. In January, a terrible fire in the building wiped out the new collection, but they seem to have recuperated without pausing. See this link for an in depth article.


  • Live Poultry Market

    Amazing for Manhattan, isn’t it? This Live Poultry Market is at 198 Delancey in the Lower East Side, a neighborhood which now also has very trendy shops and residences. The contrasts in this city can be astounding – I couldn’t resist going down there and showing that there’s more to New York than even many residents know. Most New Yorkers whom I have told about this are quite surprised. Apparently the poultry is slaughtered on premises. I was put off somewhat by the place; rather shocking for a city dweller. More photos here.

    Update (2008): To my understanding, this place is now closed.


  • Girl Props

    Here’s Girl Props on Prince Street, close to West Broadway, a major thoroughfare downtown and shopping mecca in SoHo. Here, shown during a short lull in traffic, is an accessory supply store filled with staples for those of us who need that last-minute feather boa or rhinestone tiara or pair of velvet gloves or fishnet hose, to help us be properly attired for whatever occasion life offers us which we suspect may require zebra stripes or hot pink…we cannot live by bread alone…or even at all, considering the constant dieting that goes on in NYC…

    Update: Girl Props has since closed.



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