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‘By Appointment Only' in New York: 6 Hidden Shops Worth Visiting
‘By Appointment Only' in New York: 6 Hidden Shops Worth Visiting

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

‘By Appointment Only' in New York: 6 Hidden Shops Worth Visiting

You didn't come to New York to wander fluorescent aisles hunting for someone to unlock the fitting room. You came for the locked-door city — where nothing's labeled, the elevator grumbles and whoever buzzes you in has already decided how the afternoon should go. You might leave with a sterling silver carabiner, a fossilized dinosaur foot or a record that makes everything else on your shelf sound flat. Or maybe it was just a book you didn't know you were missing until it looked back at you. But don't bother dropping by. These places don't do foot traffic. You email. You call a landline. You wait. Maybe you DM. There's no signage, no small talk, no piped-in jazz. What there is: hand-forged armor, prehistoric bones with six-figure price tags, music that's never been digitized, a jewelry showroom with the logic of a toolbox, and — if you're buzzed in — a private library (with all the books for sale) that reads like someone's inner filing system. This isn't retail. It's an invitation-only obsession. And if you knock with purpose, that helps. 889 Broadway, Union Square, Manhattan Globus Washitsu Up a nondescript elevator near Union Square, through a quiet hallway and a final sliding door, is something few New Yorkers expect to find above Broadway: a Kyoto-style tatami room meticulously built by the investor and longtime Japanophile Stephen Globus. Think shoji screens, hinoki beams, seasonal scrolls — nothing here is an approximation. It's the real deal. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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