Christmas Windows in the City

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michaelman2

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Joined
Apr 25, 2005
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Lauderdale by the Sea, FL
Joe and I resumed our holiday tradition(s) this year and while in the city a walk over to Bergdorf Goodman to see the windows. They have a team that works on the holiday windows all year. When you see the windows and realize everything is hand done/made/created. Any beading, mosaic tile laid, paper mache, origami,all handcrafted.These windows are alway spectacular! Photos attached. Hope you enjoy as much as we did.

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Awesome!

I'm glad that some retailers in surviving urban shopping districts still place value on window dressing, which has pretty much become a lost art.

 

Thanks for posting!
 
Ralph, so true. The team at Bergdorf’s is literally a full time department with 15 or so full time artisans. You are right, there was a time when window dressing and display windows were very highly regarded. These photos really don’t do justice to the intricate and detailed work of these artisans. In the movie “ Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf Goodman”. They go into much detail about the team and how important they are to this iconic store.
 
Saw the windows at Bergdorf Goodman last week when I went in for the Radio City Christmas Show and they were magnificent as always! Saks flagship Fifth Avenue store still also has beautiful windows and they have the light show on the front of the Fifth Avenue facade across from Rockefeller Center. Never fails to make me feel like a kid again. Back in the 60's growing up in Brooklyn, it was always an event to go "downtown" to Fulton Street and look at the Christmas windows at our department stores. Abraham & Straus (sister store of Rich's, Bloomingdale's, Filene's, Burdine's, Bullock's, etc... - all now known as Macy's) was the largest and favorite and always had very elaborate windows with mechanized figures, puppet shows and of course the 2 story revolving tree in the rotunda at the central elevator bank.
 
Radio City Christmas

Angus…. We loved the new show… I think they use every show technology possible in this show. From lasers to drones…show was fantastic. Yes, Saks windows were nice as well. Macy’s were good. I think Bergdorf’s is really the only store with a major emphasis on the windows. You are correct, back in the day decor and holiday decorations, windows and fixtures were so nice. Took a lot of time and effort. It was so worth it.

The Neil Diamond musical “ A Beautiful Noise” is incredibly fun and nice and “ Some Like it Hot” is fantastic. So many new great young up and coming stars.
 
San Francisco's Union Square shopping district remains a holiday destination, and I presume Neiman Marcus still does up a tree in their Union Square store, formerly occupied by City of Paris, which did a fabulous tree in the store's rotunda every year.  Around 1980, City of Paris sadly closed after 130 years and NM did a ruthless demo of the building, which CoP had built and occupied since the late 19th century, but NM did retain the rotunda portion and continued the tree tradition, which San Franciscans had come to expect at that venue, but I doubt they follow anything remotely resembling the traditional process that City of Paris did.

 

I've attached a picture of the 1955 tree in the City of Paris rotunda, all four stories' worth of it.

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That pic of the City of Paris tree and rotunda was stunning. Another store famous for its holiday windows was the iconic, and now sadly defunct Lord & Taylor. People would line up on Fifth Avenue for hours just to look. And in typical L&T fashion, someone brought out complimentary coffee to those waiting in the cold for either the store to open or see the windows. Looking at the picture of City of Paris, and remembering other stores like B. Altman & Co, Newark's Hahne & Co, Hartford's G. Fox & Co., etc., you just don't see architecture and craftsmanship like that anymore. At least Neiman's kept the rotunda.. And let's not forget the magnificent building that once housed the I. Magnin & Co. Union Square flagship along with the flagship locations of Chicago's Marshall Field & Co, and Philadelphia's John Wanamaker. Having visited all of those stores during holidays past was quite an experience. The decorations and windows were absolutely insane!!!
Most everything now is nothing more than a white box. What Macy's did to the Abraham and Straus Brooklyn flagship was heartbreaking. Admittedly the store had been neglected by Federated Dept. Stores leadership for too long and needed serious capital improvements. But every interior Art Deco detail has been removed and even the once grand elevator lobby eliminated, creating a very "progressive" look. Also, the store is now four selling floors instead of eight - with the upper floors leased out for office space. But then, if Macy's only other option was to close the Brooklyn store and sell the building, I guess it's a compromise. And it is the only remaining full line department store (out of five or six that originally existed) operating on the once fashionable Fulton Street stretch. Recently visited there and while the vibe is distinctly different, it is still a very viable shopping street. So I can conclude that all isn't lost...
 

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