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Shop Toast’s new Brooklyn store, Anthropologie in Soho, more NYC events

Shop Toast’s new Brooklyn store, Anthropologie in Soho, more NYC events

Each week, Alexa is rounding up the buzziest fashion drops, hotel openings, restaurant debuts and celeb-studded cultural happenings in NYC. It’s our curated guide to the very best things to see, shop, taste and experience around the city. 

What’s making our luxury list this week? Stores galore: British invasion in Brooklyn and Scandinavians in Soho, plus an over-the-top art installation in NoMad.

The British take Brooklyn — lifestyle and home goods brand Toast has officially set up shop in Boerum Hill. Courtesy of Toast

Beloved British brand Toast has chosen Boerum Hill, Brooklyn as the site of its first U.S. shop. A historic stretch of Atlantic Avenue, no less. To the uninitiated, Toast is a 27-year-old lifestyle and home goods brand that “aspires to a slower, more thoughtful way of life.” Think: flowy designs, natural fabrics, craftsmanship, traditional techniques. No trendy anything, which means pieces you’ll have in your closet (or on your shelf) for many years. Bonus: an in-house repair specialist offering free mending on Toast pieces.

367 Atlantic Avenue, Toast.com

Experience color and whimsy with Joana Vasconcelos’ installations at NYC’s Roche Bobois NoMad showroom. Courtesy of Roche Bobois

Fans of the renowned Portuguese artist Joana Vasconcelos can experience one of her legendary installations in New York City at the Roche Bobois NoMad showroom. The woven large-scale work is an explosion of color and organic forms (in the same family as the pieces she recently created for Dior) and dominates several areas of the showroom, including the one with her furniture designs for the company. “Amazonia” as it is called, is part of the “Valkyrie” series, named after the Norse goddess of war, and on view through October.

200 Madison Avenue, RocheBobois.com

Stockholm export Nordic Knots has opened its first international location in Soho. Courtesy of Nordic Knots

Nordic Knots, a Swedish rug and textile company adored by fans of Scandinavian design, has opened its first shop outside of Stockholm. It’s a 1,500-square-foot wonder, designed by Studio Giancarlo Valle, in an 1884 building on the corner of Greene and Canal Streets. Founders Liza Laserow and Fabian Berglund once lived in New York, and came up with the idea for the company during that time. They say that Soho was a “natural and obvious” choice for their showroom, the perfect place to display their “bold, minimal designs.”

6 Greene Street, NordicKnots.com

Brazilian twin artists Otavio and Gustavo Pandolfo are debuting their latest works at Lehmann Maupin starting tomorrow. Courtesy of Osgemeos Studios

Identical twins Otavio and Gustavo Pandolfo are the duo known as Osgemeos (Portuguese for “the twins”), whose latest works debut at Lehmann Maupin on June 22nd. For more than thirty years the brothers, who hail from Brazil, have gained renown as graffiti artists who “created an entire universe of fantastical yellow characters rendered in thin outlines, enlarged faces, and simplified features,” according to a statement from the gallery. “Cultivating Dreams” is their sixth solo show with Lehmann Maupin and features 13 new paintings and a site-specific immersive installation that “transforms the gallery space into a multi-layered experience designed to provoke the sense of awe and wonder encountered in a lucid dream state.”

Through August 16th, 501 West 24th Street, LehmannMaupin.com

Anthropologie’s beloved boho styles return to West Broadway with a new, 8,000-square-foot location. Courtesy of Anthropologie

After an eight year absence, Anthropologie is back on West Broadway, just a bit north of its original location (now a Gucci store). The approximately 8,000-square-foot space is housed in a building that dates to 1910 and was billed as the “first gallery building in Soho” (Leo Castelli’s famed gallery was here in the 1970s). Today the storefront boasts the by-now-familiar maximalist layers of color, texture and patterned clothing, shoes and accessories that are Anthropologie’s signatures. Also in the brand’s fifth store in the city are an edited selection of beauty and home goods (although we wish there was more of the latter, specifically furniture).

420 West Broadway, Anthropologie.com

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