SHOP THE CITY
New York
PHOTOGRAPH OF ANDY WARHOL SKATEBOARD COURTESY OF MOMA DESIGN STORE
TURNTABLE LAB
Hip-hop was born in the
South and West Bronx in the
mid 1970s. One story about
how it got its name was that
Keef ‘Cowboy’ Wiggins of
Grandmaster Flash and the
Furious Five teased a friend
joining the army with a ‘hip
hop hip hop’ beat to imitate
a marching step. Turntable
Lab in the East Village has
a rare stock of hip-hop vinyl.
http://www.turntablelab.com
HAT CLUB
The baseball cap was first worn by
the Brooklyn Excelsiors in the 1860s,
but took more than a century to
become a fashion item off the field.
T h e Ya n ke e s, h o m e t o B a b e Ru t h,
Yogi Berra and Joe DiMaggio, did
m o re t h a n a nyo n e t o m a ke t h e c a p
popular. Local underdogs the Mets
a l s o h a ve a n N Y l o g o, b u t fis h - t ail e d.
http://www.hatclub.com
EXIT9 GIFT EMPORIUM
This LED yellow cab keyring comes with
honking sound effects. There are 13,
official NYC yellow taxi licences, and the lead
country of birth for drivers is Bangladesh.
http://www.shopexit9.com
There
have been
yellow cabs
in New York
City since
1908
MOMA SHOP
Of all the artists whose
work might be
appropriated
for a museum gift shop,
Andy Warhol would
arguably have the least
cause to complain.
This skateboard is
inspired by his game-
changing painting series,
32 Campbell’s
Soup Cans.
http://www.store.moma.org
20 October 2019