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BKLYN Dry Goods
By forgoing the traditional brick & mortar formula & instead hosting monthly pop-up events around the country & by developing an online marketplace, BKLYN Dry Goods strives to bring the market a tightly merchandised, thoughtfully executed collection of menswear, objects & curiousities offered at extremely fair prices. By focusing on domestically-made product & the world’s top heritage brands, we hope to bring attention to the craftsmanship apparent in these products as well as the lasting quality & enduring relevance today amid society’s short attention span & disposable mentality.
We are excited to join Deck the Halls this year as we celebrate our first anniversary with our biggest co-op pop-up ever bringing along with us a like-minded roster of brands to Deck the Halls including Outlier, KikaNY, Graham Withers & AANDD. Additionally, we’ll be launching a number of exclusive products to Deck the Halls including a bag alongside denim designer, Loren Cronk & a series of canvas accessories with Layer X Layer. -
MociunMociun was founded in 2006 with a small collection of hand print womens garments. Over the past five years the company has expanded adding digitally printed fabrics and fine jewelry. As Mociun continues to grow sustainable production and business practices are always considered, as they are as important as good design. Mociun strives to use recycled, organic and alternative materials. Whenever possible all Mociun products are made using local production in hopes to give back to the economy and community that has helped Mociun thrive.
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CITY GRIT
CITY GRIT is a culinary salon hosting food culture-based events in Nolita. The brainchild of award winning chef Sarah Simmons, these events are anchored by supper-club style dinners from perennial host Simmons with her signature Southern influence as well as a guest-chef series’ of well-known and emerging chefs looking to showcase their culinary talents in New York City. CITY GRIT will be selling holiday treats, gourmet gift baskets and mulled wine at the market. -
Study NY
Study NY is an ethical clothing line working to change the perception of sustainable design. Founded in the Fall of 2009, it is designed and produced in New York City and with fair labour artisans around the world. Study was the recipient of the Ecco Domani Fashion Foundation Award for Sustainable design in 2011.
Making fashion without making waste. -
Fort Standard
Fort Standard is a contemporary design studio founded in 2011 by Gregory Buntain and Ian Collings. Having studied Industrial Design together at New York’s Pratt Institute and The Bauhaus University in Weimar Germany, their work is a fusion of craft-based backgrounds and timeless materials paired with progressive design prowess and emerging technologies. Focusing on domestic products and furniture, their attention to detail, materials and connections generate value through design executed in a refreshing “warm-contemporary” aesthetic. -
We Are Here by Emily Shapiro
I consider myself an artist, designer and alchemist. Alchemy is a power or process of transmuting a common substance usually of little value, into a substance of great value. When creating my art, I begin with a variety of materials that have no relation to one another. During the fabrication process, I make decisions and instill ideas and energy into the materials that creates new purpose, new thoughts, and new combinations. -
Erin Considine
New York-based artist and third-generation craftsperson Erin Considine was first exposed to the art of metalwork in 2001 at North Carolina’s Penland School of Craft. Intrigued by the seemingly endless possibilities of the material, Considine went on to focus on Metals, Small Scale Sculpture and Sustainability at the Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. After re-locating to New York, she launched her sustainably-minded line in 2009, merging her skill as a metalsmith and a life-long passion for fiber.
By marrying two such diverse materials, Erin is able to continuously experiment with technique and form. Her natural-dye baths make use of ingredients like turmeric, hibiscus, logwood, and onion skin. She tests new textile construction methods with every collection, incorporating weaving, crocheting, and the Japanese braiding style of kumihimo into an ever-expanding roster of creation tools. Her metal forms are mined from the dregs of industrialism- whether it by repurposing dead-stock jewelry findings or sculpting models inspired by the antique metier. Her commitment sustainability to ensures that almost every step of the production process is completed by hand in New York, primarily by Erin herself.


