| Explore New York |
Shops and
Markets |
  New York Shopping 2004/05
  Zagat Survey 2005 New York
City Gourmet Marketplace



|
New York's
shops cater to every possible taste, in any combination
and in many cases at any time of the day or night. As
such, they're a great reason for visiting the city, even
if the invasion of chains, like Barnes & Noble,
Filene's Basement and even the world's largest K-Mart
have caused some worry. Nevertheless, many of the oddest
and oldest stores remain, and nothing beats discovering
a quirky, independent shop that may specialize only in
vintage cufflinks or rubber stamps.
Remember that
an 8.25 percent sales tax will be added to your bill;
this is bypassed sometimes when paying cash in a market
or discount store. Finally, wherever you're shopping, be
careful. Manhattan's crowded, frenzied stores are ripe
territory for pickpockets and bag-snatchers.
Antiques
New York is the premier antique source in
the country, excellent for browsing, with museum-quality
pieces available (typically costing a fortune) as well
as lots of interesting, fairly priced stuff at the
junkier end of the market. New York is the premier
antique source in the country, excellent for browsing,
with museum-quality pieces available (typically costing
a fortune) as well as lots of interesting, fairly priced
stuff at the junkier end of the market. Prime locations
are the East and West Villages, SoHo, Chelsea, Lower
Broadway and the Upper East Side.
-
Chameleon 231 Lafayette St
(between Spring and Prince sts) tel 212/343-9197.
Interesting collection of antique lighting
fixtures dating from the nineteenth century to the
1960s. Many from New York residences.
-
Chelsea Antiques Building 110 W
25th St (between 6th and 7th aves) tel 212/929-0909.
Better quality, better condition, and higher
prices than above listings. 150 dealers on twelve
floors offer exceptional estate treasures and
collectibles. Open Mon-Fri 10am-6pm, Sat-Sun
8.30am-6pm.
-
The Showplace
40 W 25th St (between 6th Ave and Broadway) tel
212/741-8520. Indoor market of more than 100
dealers of antiques and collectibles plus an espresso
bar. Mon-Fri 9am-6pm, Sat & Sun
8.30am-5.30pm
Books
Book lovers bemoan the steady
disappearance of New York's independent bookstores, and
attribute their loss to the phenomenon of Barnes &
Noble superstores, but there's still no shortage of
places to find books , no matter how esoteric your
tastes may be.
SUPERSTORES AND CHAINS
-
Barnes & Noble 4 Astor
Place (at Broadway and Lafayette) tel 212/420-1322.
385 5th Ave (at 36th St) tel 212/779-7677. 675 6th Ave
(at W 22nd St) tel 212/727-1227. 600 5th Ave (at W
48th St) tel 212/765-0592. 750 3rd Ave (at 47th St)
tel 212/697-2251. 2289 Broadway (at W 82nd St) tel
212/362-8835. 240 E 86th St (at 2nd Ave) tel
212/794-1962. 1280 Lexington (at E 86th St) tel
212/423-9900. 1972 Broadway (across from Lincoln
Center) tel 212/595-6859 and 33 E 17th St (Union
Square) tel 212/253-0810. Major US chain, many of
its stores with attendant Starbucks cafés.
Presentations by authors take place about five
evenings a week.
-
Borders Books and
Music 461 Park Ave (at 57th St) tel
212/980-6785. 550 2nd Ave (at 32nd St) tel
212/685-3938. This Ann Arbor-based chain rivals
Barnes & Noble for selection, though not
saturation.
GENERAL INTEREST AND NEW
BOOKS
-
St
Mark's Bookshop 31 3rd Ave (between 8th and 9th
sts) tel 212/260-7853. Wonderfully eclectic
selection of new titles from mainstream to way
alternative.
-
Shakespeare & Co 939
Lexington (at 69th St) tel 212/570-0201. 716 Broadway
and Washington Place tel 212/529-1330. 137 E 23rd St
tel 212/570-0201 and 1 Whitehall St tel 212/742-7025.
New and used books, paper and hardcover, with some
great fiction and psychology selections. There's also
a branch in Brooklyn, at the Brooklyn Academy of
Music.
-
Three
Lives & Co 154 W 10th St and Waverly Place tel
212/741-2069. Excellent literary bookstore that
has an especially good array of books by and for
women, as well as general titles. There's an excellent
reading series in the fall.
SECONDHAND BOOKS
-
Argosy
Bookstore 1 16 E 59th St (between Lexington and
Park aves) tel 212/753-4455. Unbeatable for rare
books, it also sells clearance books and titles of all
kinds, though the shop's reputation means you may find
mainstream works cheaper elsewhere.
-
Strand
Bookstore 828 Broadway (at 12th St) tel
212/473-1452. With about eight miles of books and
a stock of 2.5 million+, this is the largest book
operation in the city - and one of the few survivors
in an area once rife with secondhand bookstores.
TRAVEL AND OTHER SPECIALTY
BOOKSTORES
-
The
Complete Traveler 199 Madison Ave (at 35th St) tel
212/685-9007. Manhattan's premier travel bookshop,
excellently stocked, new and secondhand - including a
huge collection of Baedekers.
-
Oscar
Wilde Memorial Bookshop 15 Christopher St (between
Gay St and Greenwich Ave) tel 212/255-8097,
www.oscarwildebooks.com . Aptly situated
gay and lesbian bookstore - probably the first in the
city - with rare book collection, signed and first
editions and framed signed letters from famous
authors.
DEPARTMENT
STORES
-
Barney's 600 Madison Ave (at 61st
St) tel 212/826-8900. Mon-Fri 10am-8pm, Sat 10am-7pm.
Though a proper department store, Barney's
actually concentrates on clothes, particularly men's,
with the emphasis on high-flying, up-to-the-minute
designer garments and women's wear.
-
Bergdorf Goodman 754 5th Ave (at
57th St) tel 212/753-7300. Mon-Fri 10am-8pm, Sat
10am-7pm, Sun 11am-6pm. Come if only to ogle the
windows, which approach high art with their
rhinestone-encrusted diaphanous dress displays.
Everything about Bergdorf's speaks of its attempt to
be New York City's most elegant and wealth-oriented
department store. The men's store is across 5th Ave.
-
Bloomingdale's 1000 3rd Ave (at
59th St) tel 212/705-2000. Mon-Fri 10am-8.30pm, Sat
10am-7pm, Sun 11am-7pm. It has the atmosphere of a
large, bustling bazaar, packed with concessionaires
offering perfumes and designer clothes.
-
Henri
Bendel 712 5th Ave (between 55th and 56th sts) tel
212/247-1100. Mon-Wed, Fri & Sat 10am-7pm, Thurs
10am-8pm, Sun noon-6pm. This store, more gentle in
its approach than the biggies - its refinement thanks
in part to its classy reuse of the Coty perfume
building, with windows by Rene Lalique - has a name
for exclusivity and top modern designers.
-
Lord
& Taylor 424 5th Ave (at 39th St) tel
212/391-3344. Mon, Tues & Sat 10am-7pm, Wed &
Fri 10am-8.30pm, Thurs 9am-8.30pm, Sun 11am-7pm.
The most venerable of the New York specialty
stores, in business since 1826 and to some extent the
most pleasant, has a more traditional feel than Macy's
or Bloomingdale's. Still good for classic designer
fashions, petites, winter coats, household goods and
accessories and the more basic items.
-
Macy's 151 W 34th St (on Broadway
at Herald Square) tel 212/695-4400 or 1-800-289-6229.
Mon-Sat 9am-9pm, Sun 11am-7pm. Quite simply, the
largest department store in the world with two
buildings, two million square feet of floor space and
ten floors (four for women's garments alone).
Unfortunately, most merchandise is of mediocre
quality, although real fashion is steadily returning.
-
Saks
5th Avenue 611 5th Ave (at 50th St) tel
212/753-4000. Sun-Wed, Fri & Sat 10am-6.30pm,
Thurs 10am-8pm. The name is virtually synonymous
with style, and, although Saks has retained its name
for quality, it has also updated itself to carry the
merchandise of all the big designers. The first floor
is lovely when decorated with sparkling white branches
at Christmas time.
-
Takashimaya 693 5th Ave (between
54th and 55th sts) tel 212/350-0100. Mon-Sat 10am-8pm,
Sun noon-5pm. This beautiful Japanese department
store offers a scaled-down assortment of expensive
merchandise, simply displayed, and exquisitely wrapped
purchases. The café, The Tea Box , on the lower
level, has an assortment of teapots and loose tea.
SHOPPING MALLS
-
South
Street Seaport 12 Fulton St tel 212/732-7678.
Mon-Sat 10am-9pm, Sun 11am-8pm. The barn-like
building and its historic surroundings of ships, docks
and old warehouses are fascinating and fun, the river
views from the deck are lovely, and The Sharper Image
stocks some terrifying and ingenious toys for adults.
-
Trump
Tower 725 5th Ave (between 56th and 57th sts) tel
212/832-2000. Mon-Sat 10am-6pm, Sun noon-5pm.
Donald Trump's retail triumph was constructed in
his own image. This gaudy caterer to the wealthy
offers a range of exclusive boutiques set around a
deep, marbled atrium with a several-story goldtone
waterfall - a tourist attraction in itself.
Diamond District
The strip
of 47th Street between Fifth and Sixth avenues is known
as the Diamond District . Crammed into this one
block are more than 100 shops: combined they sell more
jewelry than any other block in the world. The industry
has traditionally been run by Hassidic Jews, and you'll
run into plenty of black-garbed men with payess
(sidelocks) here.
Some good
starting points are Andrew Cohen, Inc (579 5th Ave, 15th
floor), for diamonds; Myron Toback (25 W 47th St), a
trusted dealer of silver findings; and Bracie Company
Inc (608 5th Ave, suite 806), a friendly business
specializing in antique and estate jewelry. Once you
buy, there's AA Pearls & Gems (10 W 47th St), the
industry's choice for pearl and gem stringing; and, if
you want to get your gems graded, the Gemological
Institute of America (580 5th Ave, 2nd floor)
Food
and Drink
Food - the buying as much
as the consuming of it - is a New York obsession. Though
you can find a deli on pretty much any corner, it's in
the gourmet markets and specialty shops - cheese, bread,
smoked fish, what have you - that the city really
shines.
GOURMET MARKETS
-
Around
the Clock Center, Chelsea Market 75 9th Ave
(between 15th and 16th sts) tel 212/243-6005. A
complex of eighteen former industrial buildings, among
them the late nineteenth-century Nabisco Cookie
Factory.
-
Balducci's 424 6th Ave (between
9th and 10th sts) tel 212/673-2600. The longtime
rival of the Upper West Side's Zabar's, this is a
family-run store that's no less appetizing - though
some say it's slightly pricier.
-
Dean
and Deluca 560 Broadway (between Prince and Spring
sts) tel 212/226-6800. One of the original big
neighborhood food emporia. Very chic, very SoHo and
not at all cheap. There's also a café on Prince St.
-
Fairway 2127 Broadway (between
74th and 75th sts) tel 212/595-1888.
Long-established Upper West Side grocery store
that for many locals is the better-value alternative
to Zabar's. They have their own farm on Long Island,
so the produce is always fresh, and their range in
some items is enormous. Fantastic organic selection
upstairs.
-
Russ
& Daughters 179 E Houston St (between Allen
and Orchard sts) tel 212/475-4880. Technically,
this store is known as an "appetizing" - the original
Manhattan gourmet shop, set up about 1900 to sate the
appetites of homesick immigrant Jews, selling smoked
fish, caviar, pickled vegetables, cheese and bagels.
This is one of the oldest.
-
Zabar's 2245 Broadway (between
80th and 81st sts) tel 212/787-2000. The
apotheosis of New York food-fever, Zabar's is still
the city's most eminent foodstore. Choose from an
astonishing variety of cheeses, cooked meats and
salads, fresh baked bread and croissants, excellent
bagels, and cooked dishes to go. Not to be missed.
CHEESE AND DAIRY
-
Alleva
Latticini 188 Grand St (at Mulberry St) tel
212/226-7990. Oldest Italian cheesery in America;
also a grocer. Makes own smoked mozzarella and
ricotta.
-
Joe's
Dairy 156 Sullivan St (between Houston and Prince
sts) tel 212/677-8780. Family store considered New
York's best bet for fresh mozzarella in several
varieties.
-
Murray's Cheese Shop 257 Bleecker
St (between 6th and 7th aves) tel 212/243-3289. A
variety of more than 300 fresh cheeses and excellent
fresh panini sandwiches, all served by knowledgeable
staff. Free tastings on Sat afternoons.
FISH AND SEAFOOD
-
Barney
Greengrass 541 Amsterdam Ave (between 86th and
87th sts) tel 212/724-4707. "The Sturgeon King" -
an Upper West Side smoked-fish brunch institution
since 1908 that also sells brunch-makings to go.
-
Citarella 2135 Broadway (at 75th
St) tel 212/874-0383. The largest and most varied
fish and seafood source in the city, now with gourmet
baked goods, cheese, coffee, meat, and prepared food.
-
Petrossian 182 W 58th St (at 7th
Ave) tel 212/245-2214. This celebrated shop
imports only the finest Russian caviar, alongside a
range of other gourmet products - smoked salmon and
other fish mainly - as well as pricey implements to
eat it all with.
HEALTH FOOD, VEGETARIAN AND SPICE
SHOPS
-
Aphrodisia 264 Bleecker St
(between 6th and 7th aves) tel 212/989-6440. For
herbs, spices and seasoning oils only, this place is
hard to beat.
-
Healthy Pleasures 93 University
Place (between 11th and 12th sts) tel
212/353-3663; 489 Broome St (between West Broadway
and Wooster St) tel 212/431-7434; and 2493 Broadway
(between 92nd and 93rd sts). These giant stores
have juice bars, incredible salad-bar selections and
all manner of healthy delights. The bottom floor of
the Broadway branch is entirely kosher.
-
Kalustyan's 123 Lexington Ave
(between 28th and 29th sts) tel 212/685-3451. The
best of the groceries in the tiny Little India
district of Manhattan. Good spice selection.
TEA AND COFFEE
-
Empire
Coffee and Tea Co 568 9th Ave (between 41st and
42nd sts) tel 212/268-1220. This store for the
serious addict has been fueling New York's caffeine
habits since 1908.
-
Porto
Rico Importing Company 201 Bleecker St (between
6th Ave and MacDougal St) tel 212/477-5421; 40 1/2 St
Mark's Place (off 2nd Ave); and 107 Thompson St
(between Prince and Spring sts). Best for coffee,
and local rumor has it that the house blends are as
good as many of the more expensive coffees. The
Thompson St branch has a smaller selection and is
primarily a café.
LIQUOR STORES
Prices for
all kinds of liquor are controlled in New York
State and vary little from one shop to another. We've
listed a few that have an especially good selection or
tend to be a touch less expensive. A state law forbids
the sale of hard liquor and wine on Sundays;
supermarkets may sell beer, but not wine or spirits.
-
Astor
Wines and Spirits 12 Astor Place (at Lafayette St)
tel 212/674-7500. Manhattan's best selection and
some of the city's most competitive prices. Good
kosher and organic wine section.
-
Chelsea Wine Vault 75 9th Ave (in
Chelsea Market) tel 212/462-4244. These incredibly
knowledgeable folk will sell, store and even teach you
about wine.
-
Warehouse Wines and Spirits 735
Broadway (between 8th and Waverly Place) tel
212/982-7770. The top place to get a buzz for your
buck, with a wide selection and frequent reductions on
popular lines.
Music
While the top music
megastores in New York are the British chain HMV, Tower
Records and the Virgin Megastore, specialty pop music
stores are clustered in the East and West
villages.
CHAINS
-
HMV 2081
Broadway (at 72nd St) tel 212/721-5900. Also 1280
Lexington Ave (at 86th St) tel 212/348-0800; 57 W 34th
(at 6th Ave) tel 212/629-0900; and 565 5th Ave (at
46th St) tel 212/681-6700. The most pleasant and
most fun of the megastores.
-
J&R
Music World 23 Park Row (between Beekman and Anne sts)
tel 212/238-9000. A large downtown store with a
decent selection and good prices.
-
Virgin
Megastore 1540 Broadway (at 45th St) tel 212/921-1020;
and 52 E 14th St (Union Square) tel 212/598-4666.
SPECIAL INTEREST AND
SECONDHAND
-
Fat Beats
406 6th Ave, 2nd floor (between 8th and 9th sts) tel
212/673-3883. The name says it all. It's
the source for hip-hop on vinyl in New York
City.
-
Footlight
Records 113 E 12th St (between 3rd and 4th aves) tel
212/533-1572. The place for show music, film
soundtracks and jazz. Everything from Broadway to Big
Band, Sinatra to Merman. A must for record collectors.
-
Vinyl
Mania 60 Carmine St (between Bleecker St and 7th Ave)
tel 212/924-7223. This is where DJs come for the
newest, rarest releases, especially of dance music.
Hard-to-find imports too, as well as homemade dance
tapes.
Sporting
Goods
The sporting goods scene is dominated
by chains such as Foot Locker, The Athlete's Foot,
Sports Authority and Modell's, though there are a few
other options - "theme park" sports clothes stores, as
well as stores tightly focused on one sport. Use them
for merchandise as well as a wealth of information about
that sport in NY.
SUPERSTORES
-
Niketown 6 E 57th St (between 5th
and Madison aves) tel 212/891-6453. You can enter
this sneaker temple through Trump Tower, literally
hearing crowds cheer as you pass through the door.
Every thirty minutes, a screen descends the full five
stories of the store and shows Nike commercials.
-
Reebok
Store 160 Columbus Ave (between 67th and 68th sts)
tel 212/595-1480. Not as dazzling as Niketown, but
it does show ads on two big screens, houses the Reebok
Sports Club and features European Reebok lines not
found anywhere else in the States.
SPECIALTY STORES
-
Bicycle Habitat 244 Lafayette St
(between Spring and Prince sts) tel 212/431-3315.
This unassuming store is frequented by bike
messengers. Buy a bike here, and they'll service your
brakes forever.
-
Mason's Tennis Mart 56 E 53rd St
tel 212/755-5805. New York's last remaining tennis
specialty store - they let you try out all racquets.
|
| Clothes, Fashion and Accesories |
If
you are prepared to search the city with sufficient
dedication you can find just about anything, but it's
the designer clothes and the snob values that go with
them that predominate. Secondhand clothes , of the
"vintage" or "antique" variety, have caught on of late.
If you're looking for things to complete your look,
plenty of shoe stores are available, especially around W
8th Street; and there's no shortage of make-up emporia
as well.
Ann Taylor 575 5th Ave (at
47th St; flagship store) tel 212/922-3621.
Mid-priced business and elegant casual clothing for
women. More than ten branches throughout the city.
Benetton 597 5th Ave (at
48th St) tel 212/317-2501. Italian chain offering
youthful, contemporary, casual, bright-colored clothing
for women, men and children.
Brooks Brothers 346
Madison Ave (at 44th St) tel 212/682-8800. Something
of an institution in New York, this flaghsip store,
founded in 1915, offers classic conservative style,
selling tweeds and quietly striped shirts and ties.
Burberry's 9 E 57th St
(between 5th and Madison aves) tel 212/371-5010.
Classic plaids and tweeds, with a distinctly British
feel to the conservative design.
Diesel 770 Lexington (at
60th St) tel 212/308-0055. One of five US stores
that sell this Italian-designed label. Funky, some
vintage-inspired clubwear, lots of denim. The two floors
include a café.
Eileen Fisher 103 5th Ave
(between 17th and 18th sts) tel 212/924-4777. This
is the largest of their five NY shops full of loose and
elegantly casual clothes for women. Their outlet is on
9th St between 1st and 2nd aves tel 212/529-5715.
Gap 60 W 34th St and
Herald Square (flagship store) tel 212/643-8960.
Branches are on every other corner of the city;
check the phone book for locations. Circular sale racks
in the back of many stores offer terrific reductions.
Anna Sui 113 Greene St
(between Prince and Spring sts) tel 212/941-8406.
Bagutta 402 West Broadway
(at Spring St) tel 212/925-5216. A confluence of top
designers including Helmut Lang, Prada, Gaultier, Plein
Sud, Dolce & Gabbana.
Beau Brummel 421 West
Broadway (between Prince and Spring sts) tel
212/219-2666.
DKNY 655 Madison Ave (at
60th St) tel 212/223-3569.
Dolce & Gabbana 825
Madison Ave (between 68th and 69th sts).
Emporio Armani 110 5th Ave
(at 16th St) and 601 Madison Ave (between 57th and 58th
sts).
Gianni Versace 647 5th Ave
(between 51st and 52nd sts) tel 212/317-0224 and 815
Madison Ave (at 68th St) tel 212/744-6868.
Giorgio Armani 760 Madison
Ave (at 65th St) tel 212/988-9191.
Gucci 685 5th Ave (at 54th
St) tel 212/826-2600.
Helmut Lang 80 Greene St
(at Spring St) tel 212/925-7214.
Hermes 11 E 57th St
between 5th and Madison aves) tel 212/751-3181.
Pleats Please 128 Wooster
St (at Prince) tel 212/226-3600.
Canal Jean Co 504 Broadway
(between Spring and Broome sts) tel 212/226-1130.
Enormous warehousey store sporting a prodigious
array of jeans, jackets, T-shirts, dresses, hats and
more, new and secondhand. Young, fun and reasonably
cheap.
Diesel StyleLab 416 West
Broadway (at Spring St) tel 212/343-3863. The
ultrahip top-shelf branch of this Italian chain has
taken New York by storm.
New York Firefighter's
Friend 263 Lafayette (between Spring and Broome sts)
tel 212/226-3142. Get those NY Fire Dept tees and
trucks here; an NYPD section is next door.
Old Japan 382 Bleecker St
(at Perry St) tel 212/633-0922. Gorgeous, authentic
Japanese clothes and trinkets, with a fantastic
selection of antique kimonos.
X-Large 267 Lafayette
(between Prince and Spring sts) tel 212/334-4480.
Check out the Mini line for women, X-Large for men.
Cutting edge streetwear for B-boys and gals. Sonic
Youth's Kim Gordon and the Beastie Boys' Mike D are part
owners.
Allan & Suzi 416
Amsterdam Ave (at 80th St) tel 212/724-7445.
Beautiful far-out fashion from the last several
decades. Claims to have singlehandedly restarted the
platform shoe craze.
Darrow Vintage 7 W 19th St
(between 5th and 6th aves) tel 212/255-1550.
Designer and never-worn vintage, with a friendly and
helpful staff. Popular with top models.
The Fan Club 22 W 19th St
(between 5th and 6th aves) tel 212/929-3349. An
amazing selection of vintage clothes, many from movies,
TV and theater, with a good supply of Marilyn Monroe
frocks usually on display in the front window. The store
benefits three AIDS charities.
Love Saves the Day 119 2nd
Ave (at 7th St) tel 212/228-3802. Cheap vintage as
well as classic lunchboxes and other kitschy nostalgia
items, including valuable Kiss and Star Wars dolls.
Screaming Mimi's 382
Lafayette St (between 4th St and Great Jones) tel
212/677-6464. One of the most established vintage
stores in Manhattan. Vintage clothes (including
lingerie), bags, shoes and housewares at reasonable
prices.
Tokio 7 64 E 7th St
(between 1st and 2nd aves) tel 212/353-8443.
Attractive secondhand and vintage designer
consignment items - a little pricier than most, but a
good selection.
Housing Works Thrift Shop
143 W 17th St (between 6th and 7th aves) tel
212/366-0820. Upscale thrift shop where you can find
secondhand designer wear in very good condition. All
proceeds benefit Housing Works, an AIDS social service
organization.
- DISCOUNT CLOTHING
- Dave's Army & Navy
Store 581 6th Ave (between 16th and 17th sts) tel
212/989-6444.
The best place to buy jeans in
Manhattan. Helpful assistants, no blaring music, and
brands other than just Levi's.
- Loehmann's 101 7th Ave
(between 16th and 17th sts) tel 212/352-0856.
New
York's best-known department store for designer
clothes at knockdown prices. No refunds and no
exchanges, but there are individual dressing rooms.
- SHOES
AND OTHER ACCESSORIES
- Kate Spade 454 Broome
St (at Mercer St) tel 212/274-1991.
All the rage,
these boxy fabric bags with the little logo-label are
a generic assertion of "Manhattan chic."
- Kenneth Cole 353
Columbus Ave (at 77th St) tel 212/873-2061.
Classic and contemporary shoes, beautiful bags,
excellent full-grain leather. Call for more locations.
- Mary Quant Colour Concept
Shop 520 Madison Ave (at 53rd St) tel
212/980-7577.
Mod make-up in every conceivable
shade, all with the so-cool 1960s' flower motif.
- Otto Tootsi Plohound
137 5th Ave (at 20th St) tel 212/460-8650 and 38 E
57th St (near Park Ave) tel 212/231-3199. If you want
to run with a trendy crowd, these shoes will help.
Very current designs.
- Robert Marc 575 Madison
Ave (between 56th and 57th sts), tel 212/319-2000, and
four other locations.
Exclusive New York
distributor of designer frames like Lunor and Kirei
Titan; also sells Retrospecs, restored antique eyewear
from the 1890s to the 1940s. Very expensive and very
hot.
- Sephora 636 5th Ave (at
51st St) tel 212/245-1633.
Breathtaking
"warehouse" of perfumes, make-up and body-care
products. You have to see (or smell) it to believe it.
- Steve Madden 150 E 86th
St (between Lexington and 3rd aves), tel 212/426-0538;
540 Broadway (at Prince St), tel 212/343-1800; 2315
Broadway (near 86th St), tel 212/799-4221; and 41 W
34th St (at 6th Ave), tel 212/736-3283.
Very
popular copies of up-to-the-minute styles, well-loved
for their ability to take on New York's "shoe-killing"
streets.
| |