![]() The place we arrived at was Unique Hype Collection, an almost magical place frequented by a select ‘in-the-know’ few.Ī reseller of mostly Supreme, the store feeds the bustling city with highly sought-after clothing, sneakers and accessories. I was taken into the depths of Chinatown, down back streets and some stairs to a tiny basement with no name or signage. Next stop was New York, where Isaac was keen to pay a visit to another ‘secret shop’. ![]() Contributing to youth culture has always been what we naturally have done.” – Oliver Mak, co-founder of Bodega Our founders and core team are artists, vandals, poets and musicians. During our visit in Boston, I also learnt a great deal about baseball from listening to customers and staff have a heated discussion about a game that was happening later that day. This little store has been so successful that it now has a fantastic ecommerce site and the founders are planning to open a second shop in Los Angeles later this year. Not everyone wants to buy fashion and sneakers but everyone needs soap, so although it is exclusive and esoteric, Bodega also has a real egalitarian feel to it. “It reinforces the client’s experience of discovery, while at the same time strengthens the image of our partner brands.” “We deal with hard-to-find and exclusive products and reinforced that message by hiding the sales floor in an unadvertised space,” Oliver tells me. It has since evolved into a must-visit destination for those in-the-know consumers seeking premium fashion and style. Through careful product curation and exclusive collaborations with the likes of Vans and Pintrill, Bodega has become another one of those cult retail brands that are so popular with today’s super-connected young consumers.īodega was created in 2006 by friends Oliver Mak, Jay Gordon and Dan Natola as a centre for their passion for discovering unique items from around the world. The boutique, which also sells a limited amount of own-label product, reminded me of a smaller, down-to-earth version of the Colette store in Paris. ![]() Press a button on a vending machine selling chocolates, though, and it slides back to reveal a very small, secret store selling cult Japanese fashion brands, accessories and the most covetable sneakers from around the world. On the face of it, the store is just a tiny kiosk selling drinks, magazines, soap, sandwiches and the like. No one that I know living in Boston has ever heard of it, but with Isaac as my guide we sought it out.Įntering the store, I felt as though I had stepped into the Banksy film Exit Through the Gift Shop – though this was more like ‘Enter through the convenience store’. Isaac is one of my best sources for all things new, so our first stop in Boston was a store called Bodega. It helps to travel the USA with a curious 16-year-old who loves fashion, film and brands.
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