kimair
frozen
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excepts and pics from wwd...i love the website...have to check out the store next time i'm back east
Girlshop, an early Internet fashion boutique and one of the first retailers to turn a profit online, is opening its first real-world store today in the Meatpacking District here.
As on the Web site, it’s all about creative chic, with a focus on unknown designers and glam decor fashioned from eBay finds.
Girlshop president Todd Richter has wanted to open a boutique for years, and founder and chief executive officer Laura Eisman first wanted to find the right location. They think they’ve got it at 819 Washington Street, on a block filled with the sound of hammering as several stores prepare to open across from what will be Andre Balazs’ The Standard hotel.
“We felt it was important to have a physical presence, so customers can relate to a real live place,” said Eisman, who launched the Web site in 1998 when Lands’ End was one of the few retailers selling apparel over the Internet.
She said the store is likely to attract tourists from the hotel, who can shop the Web site once they’re home. Girlshop has a mailing list of 30,000 in the New York area, and the site has a loyal following. The site’s unusual viewpoint and tone has spawned shopping tours, a personal shopping service, designer sample sales in its corporate offices and a book called “The Girlshop Guide to NYC Shopping.”...
The store’s merchandise won’t be identical to the Web site, but both focus on up-and-coming designers. “It’s our duty” to find things under the radar, said Eisman, who added that she doesn’t believe in dictating trends. As on the Web site, most of the clothes will be sold on consignment. Prices will range from $80 for a T-shirt to $800 for a coat; prices on the Web site are lower, from $30 to $400.
The store, which was filled on Tuesday with embellished tops and dresses and ornate jewelry from lines such as Kenneth Jay Lane, Plenty, Lotta Stensson and Cigana, also carries a selection of men’s and children’s clothing.
One of the areas in which the store distinguishes itself is its approach to denim. Instead of carrying every style of ubiquitous lines like Seven and Citizens of Humanity, buyer Candace Mohr, a veteran of Patricia Field and Bond 07 by Selima, has picked a few key silhouettes, such as trousers, pegged and cropped jeans styles from newcomers Nudie, Lowfli, Fins and Pam Capone.
“Denim at this point I think is overwhelming,” said Eisman. “I can’t go to Barneys or Bloomingdale’s because I feel overwhelmed by the selection. I feel our job is to edit. I would like to present something different.”
