So I'm going to new york pretty soon and I was hoping to check out some of the clothes stores they have. My style is very much hipster vegan coffee shop. I really like under stated stuff without logos, earthy colors, stripes. I'm particularly interested in finding some nice coats and t shirts.
Beacon's closet had some nice pieces the last time I went but the staff wasn't great
The Armoury NY perhaps? They tend to focus more on classic menswear thoug.
>>12332417
Do they have mens wear?
I'll lend you a bump, friend
I've always wanted to go to New York
also going soon to brooklyn/manhattan. so watdo?
Was ist das schriftart?
I mean, the main shopping spots in Manhattan are all in Soho if you're looking for brand-name shit. Stuff like Uniqlo and Urban Outfitters is there, but I'm not sure why'd you need New York for those kinds of spots.
NoLita is just east of the Soho area and its riddled with all sorts of boutique shops, but get ready to drop a lot of money.
The East Village is also good for clothes shopping if you're looking for thrift stores. They've got a good Buffalo Exchange and other spots like No Relation. That being said, the vegan-hipster-coffee-shop look is kind of dying down in comparison to the art-school kids who are just getting tired of the whole Normcore look or the "I want to be Elias Bender" look.
>>12332447
As for Beacon's closet, it's pretty much canon that you have to hate your life to work there. They also have no idea how to price things a lot of the time, which means that some of it is expensive junk, and some of it is absolute gold and will cost you practically nothing. And yes, they have men's wear. I think there's a location in Greenwich Village, Bushwick and Williamsburg? There might be one more but I don't know where.
Also hang around the Morgan Street stop on the L train. That's Bushwick and it's got a lot of cool thrift stores within a few blocks of each other. L Train Vintage is good. So is Urban Jungle.
>>12334198
Sweet, thanks.