Tuesday, 19 October 2010

NEW YORK, JUST LIKE I PICTURED IT!

Posted by Fashion Editor at Large

The corner of Howard and Broadway in Soho

I'm in New York for a break to visit friends and catch up on fashion and retail developments at my leisure, rather than in the rush of a here-on-business schedule. In all the years I have been coming here (since 1998) I have never done proper touristy things, just hung out and had fun with my many friends who live and work here. 

We're staying with my ex-girlfriend Sonja Nuttall who is the creative director of the Urban Zen Foundation. Sonja works closely with Donna Karan, and has just returned from Haiti with DK where she oversaw delivery of 70,000 tents and equipment to help rehouse the many homeless on Haiti. In the last year she and Donna have raised $1.3 million to help Haiti. Hearing her stories are humbling. I love the way she took her successful career as a fashion designer into an area of social responsibility.


Sonja & Donna

WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO:
First impressions of New York is that the fire is not in the belly of this city like it used to be. It feels like the buzz has moved off the island to Brooklyn. All the major stores on Manhattan are just as you would expect: glossy, grand and, ultimately full of very safe stock. It is very conservative here. It is also verrry expensive. I paid £150 for a brunch for four people and nearly fell off my chair with shock when the bill came. In previous years the same price in $$ would have been £90; still expensive for what we bought.
Stores like Scoop sell designer versions of casual, everyday clothes I would pick up in COS, or TopShop. The service is in another league, as one would expect in NYC. Unlike at home in UK where most shop staff feel like they are employed as glorified shelf fillers, and act as such, here shop staff seem genuinely happy to serve and help.  

We've been here a since Sunday, so far we have...
1. Had an amazing but pricy brunch at Pastis
2. Eaten a Japanese feast at Omen
3. Had the best slap-up lunch ever at ABC Kitchen.
3. Walked and walked and walked....and looked and looked around at this sort of stuff

NYC street art

The corridor window outside the store Kiosk that we stumbled on in Spring Street, Soho



The doorway and sidewalk sign pointing the way to Kiosk


4. Visited Opening Ceremony - the only store I have visited so far (and I've done all of Soho, and Fifth Avenue departments stores Bergdof, Saks, Bendels) that had truly original product on offer. Will be doing a more detailed post in couple of days on my store experience there.
5. Discovered Kiosk (see shots above), what feels like a guerilla store, but one that is somewhat established. Every item is displayed museum style with a card describing it's origin and the story of the curators introduction to it. Extremely creative & unique concept, and going there is a thrilling experience ticking all the unexpected discovery boxes you hope for if you're me.
6. Went to the top of the Rockerfeller Centre. Brilliant views of Central Park, Empire State Building and all Manhattan

Today was windless, warm and sunny. We saw a wasp up there! Incredible view of Empire State Building looking south


Fucking around


Looking north to Central Park from the top of 30 Rock

7. Taken a round trip on the Staten Island Ferry to appreciate the views of the Statue of Liberty and Battery Park and the downtown skyline from the water.


Back view of the Staten Island Ferry terminal at Battery Park
Later: High Line, Boom Boom Room, Brooklyn

Photos: Fashion Editor at Large

6 comments:

  1. Welcome to the best city in the world! Go see St. John the Divine on the Upper West Side. It has amusing stained glass windows with modern references in them. Then you'll be right by Columbia University's cute campus too.

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  2. Oh gosh, my stomach just flipped looking at the photos and reading about you being there. I went with my girlfriend a couple of years ago for my 21st and it really was unbelievable. I guess if you've been often for the last 12 years, the novelty of it being a huge film set wears off, but as you say there are always new things to discover! Kiosk looks great and can't wait to hear about Opening Ceremony! x

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  3. tehee i pretended to be in paris during fashion week wich was quite easy following you on twitter and now it's as i'm in new york myself reading your blog gazing at the stunning photographs over my morning coffee. so thank you! have the greatest time over there,
    * n

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  4. Thank you so much for sharing your trip to NYC! It makes me me miss it even more than I already do. I am so happy to have found your blog and truly appreciate your honesty and insight.

    Xox.
    Megan
    http://anotherzoeday.blogspot.com

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  5. Another reason why New York is so awesome is that there's tons to do, and it lends itself to so touristy things, or to shopping marathons, or to art & culture days when you just do galleries, museums and maybe a play; to entertainment industry and celeb watching, when you can attend the taping of one of the many shows, a movie premiere, or see movies and tv series being shot...

    It's nice, isn't it, to find that just when you think you know the place, you can do something that shows you a completely different side of it :-)

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  6. I know and love New York and have been visiting for many years and totally agree that some of the fire in the belly has been lost. It is very expensive and in all my visits, I rarely see the kind of stuff I want to buy right here in London. That said, its still magical, crazy, the people are lovely and most of the time, service is exemplary.

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