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New York Shopping and Stores

NYC.com's New York Shopping guide features expert reviews and recommendations for all New York stores, ranging from boutiques to department stores to fashionable SoHo destinations to vintage to Times Square shopping. And don't miss our all-new Best of New York Shopping guide, packed with dozens of features!

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American Apparel — Chelsea

Chelsea

American Apparel has, within their business model, knitting, dyeing, cutting, sewing, photography, marketing, distribution, and design, all happening in the company's facilities in Los Angeles. The company operates the largest garment factory in the United States at a time when most apparel production has moved offshore. American Apparel leverages art, design and technology to advance the business process, while continuing to pioneer industry standards of social and environmental responsibility in the workplace.

John Bartlett

Chelsea

Casual wear in West Village with eco and animal friendly conscience. So don't wear your sable if you plan on shopping here!

American Apparel — Upper East Side

Upper East Side

American Apparel has, within their business model, knitting, dyeing, cutting, sewing, photography, marketing, distribution, and design, all happening in the company's facilities in Los Angeles. The company operates the largest garment factory in the United States at a time when most apparel production has moved offshore. American Apparel leverages art, design and technology to advance the business process, while continuing to pioneer industry standards of social and environmental responsibility in the workplace.

Urban Outfitters — Upper West Side

Upper West Side

Urban Outfitters bills themselves as "a global retailer with a boutique approach" and the "biggest small retailer in the world." With chic urban wear for the discerning hipster, UO become the store The Gap was in the '90s and what Old Navy has tried to pull off ever since.

American Apparel — Brooklyn

Brooklyn Heights

American Apparel has, within their business model, knitting, dyeing, cutting, sewing, photography, marketing, distribution, and design, all happening in the company's facilities in Los Angeles. The company operates the largest garment factory in the United States at a time when most apparel production has moved offshore. American Apparel leverages art, design and technology to advance the business process, while continuing to pioneer industry standards of social and environmental responsibility in the workplace.

American Apparel — Columbus Circle

Upper West Side

American Apparel has, within their business model, knitting, dyeing, cutting, sewing, photography, marketing, distribution, and design, all happening in the company's facilities in Los Angeles. The company operates the largest garment factory in the United States at a time when most apparel production has moved offshore. American Apparel leverages art, design and technology to advance the business process, while continuing to pioneer industry standards of social and environmental responsibility in the workplace.

Urban Outfitters — Upper East Side

Upper East Side

Urban Outfitters bills themselves as "a global retailer with a boutique approach" and the "biggest small retailer in the world." With chic urban wear for the discerning hipster, UO become the store The Gap was in the '90s and what Old Navy has tried to pull off ever since.

American Apparel — Tribeca

Tribeca

American Apparel has, within their business model, knitting, dyeing, cutting, sewing, photography, marketing, distribution, and design, all happening in the company's facilities in Los Angeles. The company operates the largest garment factory in the United States at a time when most apparel production has moved offshore. American Apparel leverages art, design and technology to advance the business process, while continuing to pioneer industry standards of social and environmental responsibility in the workplace.

Aeropostale — Brooklyn

Downtown Brooklyn

Aeropostale attempts to get in on Downtown Brooklyn's upscaling ahead of rising rents and the Atlantic Yards with this second-largest in the city location. Aéropostale, Inc. is a pecialty retailer of casual apparel and accessories, principally targeting 14 to 17 year-old young women and men through its Aéropostale® stores and 4 to 12 year-old kids through its P.S. from Aéropostale™ stores. The Company provides customers with a focused selection of high-quality, active-oriented, fashion and fashion basic merchandise at compelling values. Aéropostale® maintains control over its proprietary brands by designing, sourcing, marketing and selling all of its own merchandise. Aéropostale® products can only be purchased in its Aéropostale stores and online at www.Aéropostale.com

Buffalo Exchange — Williamsburg

Williamsburg

Buffalo Exchange is unique because clothing and accessories are bought, sold and traded directly with store customers, resulting in an ever-changing inventory includes designer labels, vintage, jeans, leather, current basics and one-of-a-kind items. Each hand-picked used item selected for its desirability, with many items going for an average of $15.

Dr. Martens

SoHo

When the Dr. Martens boot first catapulted from a working-class essential to a counter-cultural icon back in the 1960s, the world was pre-internet, pre-MTV, pre-CD, pre-mp3s, pre-mobile phones... hey, they'd only just invented the teenager. In the years before the boot's birthday, 1st April, 1960, kids just looked like tribute acts to their parents, younger but the same. Rebellion was only just on the agenda for some - for most kids of the day, starved of music, fashion, art and choice, it was not even an option. But then an unlikely union of two kindred spirits in distinctly different countries ignited a phenomenon. In Munich, Germany, Dr Klaus Maertens had a garage full of inventions, including a shoe sole almost literally made of air; in Northampton, England, the Griggs family had a history of making quality footwear and their heads were full of ideas. They met, like a classic band audition, through an advert in the classified pages of a magazine. A marriage was born, an icon conceived of innovation and self-expression. Together they took risks. They jointly created a boot that defined comfort but was practical, hard-wearing and a design classic. At first, like some viral infection, the so-called 1460 stooped near to the ground, kept a low profile, a quiet revolution. But then something incredible started to happen. The postmen, factory workers and transport unions who had initially bought the boot by the thousand, were joined by rejects, outcasts and rebels from the fringes of society. At first, it was the working-classes; before long it was the masses. Skinheads were the first subculture to adopt the boot in the early 1960s, spilling out of the East End of London, then across Britain and the world; initially non-racist and obsessive about their fashion, by the time the skinhead movement was corrupted with elements of right-wing extremism, Dr Martens had already morphed into a torchbearer for a brave new world. The late 1960s and 1970s saw the boot adopted by - not thrust upon - nearly all the 'tribes': Mods, glam, punks, ska, psychobillies, grebos, Goths, industrialists, nu-metal, hardcore, straight-edge, grunge, Britpop... Then pop started to eat itself. The internet spread like an epidemic, reaching fifty million users in eighteen months - a feat that took radio forty years. The first mobile phone text was sent in 1992; within three years, email was like oxygen. Everything had changed. There were no tribes anymore. At least, "not like they used to make 'em." You don't see one tribe fighting another anymore, a haircut does not define a person to four albums by three bands. The tribe is down to one person. You. A one-man army. The personal revolution manifests itself in a million ways. So-called 'indie' and 'punk' record labels of the 1970s and 1980s were created to cut out the suits. They were called 'labels' because of the round adhesive label smack bang in the middle of the vinyl. Vinyl? CDs? Now, you don't even need a label. Record, mix, master and post on the web from your own empire. Hit the charts from downloads alone. There is no one left to cut out. It's all down to you. Of course, just because we can all now 'create', doesn't mean we are all actually any good. But the cream floats to the top, whatever the mode of transport. Same with Dr. Martens. Decades have come and gone, brands have exploded and then imploded, but the 1460 is still there, unique, individual, original. Anti-fashion defined in eight holes. What's seen as information overload to the older generation is just everyday surfing to the new generation. In one weekend edition of The New York Times, there is more information than a seventeenth century man was exposed to in his entire life. Dr. Martens haven't been around since the 1600s, but in terms of ‚'brands' that mean something, that last, that reinvent and evolve, they pre-date pretty much everything. By the mid-1990s, Dr. Martens had festered in the minds of youth without a single penny of 'marketing spend', longer than the majority of global brands had even existed. There is no comparison. This is not a brand, it is a way of thinking, a mode of expression. The problem with 'brands' is that they dictate. They might offer the must-have item of the season, but they design it, shape it, form it and sell it. You have no say, other than handing over your money. Look at the word: 'brand'. That's what they do to cattle. Rebel. Create your own brand. Dr. Martens have always been different. No other brand has been mutated, customised, fucked up and freaked out like DM's. Without asking or being able to stop it. It happened to them. They were just fascinated bystanders on a journey that has raced through every crevice of subculture, every twist and turn of youthful creativity and now, here, with a generation who have always had email, mp3s and downloads, it is as relevant and vibrant as ever. Because although the tribes no longer stride through London or New York, although individuality is the music for the masses, although fashion is just another way of defining yourself, the Dr. Martens 'brand' has come full circle, it is a blank canvas on which a generation can paint their personality. You can wear your grunge shorts, your emo hair, your punk tatts, your metal piercings and your pride on your sleeve, all at the same time, there are no limits, no boundaries, no pigeon-holes to fit into. To be creative sometimes you have to rebel. To rebel you have to have something to rebel against. Driving fast, drinking cheap beer and smashing windows isn't rebellion. The best form of rebellion is individualism. Thinking for yourself. Information overload is the most fantastic element of modern life. You can have it all. You don't need to align yourself with one band, one tribe, one venue, one gig; you can share your console with a complete stranger twenty thousand miles away; you can post your demo on a site that has a greater population than most countries. But you need anchors in this sea of creativity. You need things you can rely on. Things you can recruit to your army. Friends, whether they add you or not. Tunes loaded, down. Ideas loaded, up. Fashions that express. Possessions that matter. Things that inspire self-expression, not commodities that spoon-feed an identity. Dr. Martens anchor you, liberate your creativity, inspire and fuel your identity. Our heritage fits your future; your future is our future.

Jimmy Choo — Fifth Ave

Midtown

Next to Mr. Louboutin on the top tier of shoe design is Mr. Jimmy Choo. One of the original companies to stray into the high, high, high fashion shoe market, Jimmy Choo delivers gorgeous, imaginative stilettos (and a couple pairs of flats) that any fashionista would drool over.

Gotham Bikes

Tribeca

Super-friendly and uber-knowledgeable staff will point you to a bike that you'll fall in love with, as well as a collection of accessories to make your cycling more enjoyable or—better yet—stylish.

Cosabella

SoHo

Cosabella is famous for its use of vibrant, cutting-edge colors. They believe that a woman’s lingerie should be able to reflect her every mood. The collection is available in more than 30 colors and each season new and exciting colors are introduced. Cosabella was founded in 1983 by Ugo and Valeria Campello. Designed at its headquarters in Miami, Florida and manufactured in Italy creating a great mix of American design and Italian artisanship.

Corrado Bread & Pastry

The finest selection of bread & pastries from the top bakers in the tri-state area. Try their delicious chocolate mousse cake or raspberry mousse cake. Enjoy an individual piece or take a whole cake home! Surely you deserve to try one of life's guilty pleasures. From strawberry shortcakes to Irish soda bread to cookies and brownies-they've got it all!

Bang & Olufsen — Upper West Side

Upper West Side

Purveyors of only the finest—and most expensive—high-fidelity audio equipment, Bang & Olufsen serves the discriminating audiophile with perfection, while carrying enough reasonably priced goodies to bring in the average shopper.

FLOS

SoHo

The first State-side brick-and-mortar of the famous Italian lighting company, with all the well-lit space you'd expect.

Queen Jane Day Spa — Midtown

When ancient Eastern therapies combine with advanced Western technology, the results are undeniable. We provide an environment of total relaxation, while offering services that deliver their promises. At Queen Jane Day Spa, we are dedicated to providing the highest quality services at an exceptional value. All spa services are provided by New York State licensed professionals, who customize beneficial treatments using the highest quality products from GM Collins, designed to cater to each client's specific needs and total body wellness.

Spruce & Bond — NoHo

Hair removal that you may (at least according to them) look forward to! Offering customized wax, laser and brow treatments from highly trained specialists, helping you to stay smooth and confident.

Frank's Bike Shop

Lower East Side

Not as flashy as the other bike shops in the city, Frank's concentrates on getting you on the perfect bike without making you spend a pretty penny. All facets of cycling are addressed and all needs are filled, with bikes that range from discount-priced to higher-end models (still reasonably priced, all told).

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