Gambit Details: May 2021

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New Orleans

HOME + STYLE + DESIGN M AY 2 0 2 1

inside

OLD IS NEW P. 4 // WATER FEATURES P. 8 // NAPKINS P. 10 // DOG DECOR P. 12 // GARDEN DISTRICT P. 14


Contents

NEW ORLEANS GIFTS • LOCAL ARTISTS & DESIGNERS

H E R E’S TO

All the Moms! H E LP H E R SAY IT WITH A TEA TOWE L

VOLUME 2 | NUMBER 5 |

4 8

www.shopaliceandamelia.com

4 432 MAGA Z I N E ST | N OLA 70115 | 5 0 4-5 02-620 6

W E D – S AT 10AM – 5PM SUN 12PM – 5PM 504.354.9158 1 1 6 0 M A G A Z I N E S T. S H O P O N L I N E AT CONSIGN-CONSIGN.COM

Make Mom’s Day A

SpecialA

ORDER YOUR MOTHER’S DAY ARRANGEMENTS TODAY!

10 12 14

May 2021

IN WITH THE OLD

Home accessories with a past

MAKE A SPLASH

Spruce up your space with water features

SPLENDID SERVING

Festive napkins for entertaining

CANINE COLLECTIBLES

Dog-themed decor

SPOTLIGHT ON THE GARDEN DISTRICT

Oak-lined streets and a range of architecture styles are represented in this neighborhood.

A statue at the home of Mark Romig and David Briggs P H OTO B Y C H R I S G R A N G ER

ON T HE COV ER : Katherine Gelderman’s garden P H OTO B Y C H R I S G R A N G ER

P U B L I S H E R | Jeanne Exnicios Foster S E N I O R V I C E-P R E S I D E N T, S A L E S A N D M A R K E T I N G | Sara Barnard A DV E R T I S I N G D I R E C T O R | Sandy Stein C R E A T I V E S E R V I C E S D I R E C T O R | Dora Sison S P E C I A L S E C T I O N S E D I T O R | Sarah Ravits C O N T R I B U T O R S | Zana Georges, Kaylee Poche P R E-P R E S S C O O R D I N A T O R | Jason Whittaker G R A P H I C D E S I G N E R S | Maria Boue, Catherine Flotte, Emma Veith, Tiana Watts

GAMBIT DETAILS

MAY 2021

A DV E RT I SI NG I NQU I R I E S |

2

Voted 'Best Real Estate Office' by Gambit Readers for 10 years!

504.483.3150

Create your peaceful dream home today!

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1239 Baronne Street New Orleans, LA 70113 504.291.2022 • wcnola.com Licensed in Louisiana, USA

~11,600 sf lot on Bancroft Drive Contact Us - Lydia Cutrer, Listing Agent (504) 517-6696 (m) (504) 533-8701 (o) lydia@theownlife.com

Client-Driven Real Estate

Rare opportunity to build your custom home on the tranquil Bayou St. John! Envision yourself relaxing on the waterfront in your spacious yard as the sun sets or entertaining friends and family. Enjoy the beauty and recreation at City Park, just moments away!

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20,000 Sq.Ft. Warehouse • Everything in Stock • Financing Available• 6 Months Interest Free

Kitchen Cabinets • Vanities • Granite • Marble Quartz • Quartzite • Sinks

NEW Pure White Shaker

$1625

Special price for 10X10 SF Room

Grey Shaker

$1785

Special price for 10X10 SF Room

Slab Door

Available in White, Walnut Wood Grain, Oak Wood Grain, Dark Wood Grain

Free Quote • Free Layout Design • Receive a Free Sink w/ purchase of 25 sq. ft. countertop (sink valued at $190)

Vanilla Cream

$1705

Special price for 10X10 SF Room

METAL SHELF RESTS

MEMBERS & SUPPLIERS

METAL BRACKET REINFORCEMENTS

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GAMBIT DETAILS

INSIDE ½ PLYWOOD

MAY 2021

HIGH QUALITY YOU CAN TRUST

3


IN

Mallard centerpiece |

$50 from Consign Consign (1160 Magazine St., 504-354-9158; consign-consign.com).

WITH THE

Old

HOME ACCESSORIES WITH a past

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Chair |

$495 from Dop Antiques. PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Vintage Jazz Fest poster | $350 from Consign Consign. PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Pottery vase |

$82 from Consign Consign.

Jar | $195 from

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Dop Antiques (300 Jefferson Hwy., 504-373-5132; dopantiques.com). PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Handblown glass bowl |

Candelabra |

$69 from Consign Consign.

$44.50 from Consign Consign. MAY 2021

GAMBIT DETAILS

4

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Buffet | $1,450 from Dop Antiques.

Jars | $395 from Dop Antiques.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES


Armoire |

$2,250 from Dop Antiques. PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Candlesticks |

$225 from The OW (8237 Earhart Blvd., 504-302-9893; theoccasionalwife.com).

IN

WITH THE

Old

PHOTO PROVIDED BY THE OCCASIONAL WIFE

Antique tins |

$40 for green and $30 for cream from Eclectic Home (8211 Oak St., 504-866-6654; eclectichome.net). PHOTO PROVIDED BY ECLECTIC HOME

Mid-Century buffet | $2,595 from Dop Antiques.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Decorative shell |

$16 from Consign Consign. PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

New Shipment Just Arrived! Ne d! Wholesale Prices to the Public

300 JEFFERSON HWY (504) 373-5132 WWW.DOPANTIQUES.COM

@Dopantiques

GAMBIT DETAILS

Container from Europe delivered monthly

MAY 2021

20,000 Square Feet of fine Antiques, Furniture, Lighting, Accents gn & Custom Furniture Design

5


IN

WITH THE

Old

Vintage Jazz Fest poster | $350 from Consign Consign.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Metal jar |

$245 from Dop Antiques.

Globe light |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Price upon request from Dop Antiques. PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Porcelain vase |

Dresser |

$100 from Consign Consign.

$1,595 from Dop Antiques. PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Wicker chair | $495 from Dop Antiques.

GAMBIT DETAILS

MAY 2021

PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

6

Sequin rosette pillow | $48.75 from Consign Consign.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Rocking horse |

$950 from Dop Antiques. PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Marble mantel clock |

$350 from Consign Consign. PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN


IN

Bench |

$595 from Dop Antiques.

WITH THE

PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

Old

1990 cookbook | $20 from The OW

PHOTO PROVIDED BY THE OCCASIONAL WIFE

Commode |

Blue planter |

$618.75 from Consign Consign.

Similar items from Consign Consign. PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

PHOTO PROVIDED BY CONSIGN CONSIGN

Rocking chair |

$395 from Dop Antiques. PHOTO PROVIDED BY DOP ANTIQUES

New and USED

FURNITURE & BUILDING SUPPLIES SAFAVIEH FURNITURE AT BOTH RESTORES UP TO 30% OFF RETAIL

LOTS OF OUTDOORR FURNITURE!

Give

NEW LIFE to your Furniture u

eplace shion R

ment

RNAR

R TU 24 HOU

SHOPKENNERRESTORE.COM • SHOPNOLARESTORE.COM TO DONATE: 504-943-2240

We ll make your furniture We’ll fu feel like N E W again. 3044 GALLERIA DRIVE • METAIRIE, LA 70001 • 504.831.5244 • BENSONSUPHOLSTERY@GMAIL.COM

GAMBIT DETAILS

2425 WILLIAMS BLVD — KENNER 2900 ELYSIAN FIELDS — NEW ORLEANS

MAY 2021

ather e L l c Fabri rella Sunb OUND

Foam C

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MAKE

Splash

Spruce up your space with water features

GAMBIT DETAILS

MAY 2021

By SARAH RAVITS

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Photos by CHRIS GRANGER

Other than a steady supply of mint juleps and lots of air conditioning, pools are one of the few life hacks New Orleanians can use to mitigate the heat and humidity that begin to take over our city this time of year. “Summers are terrible here, so to be able to enjoy being outside is a tricky thing,” says David Abadie, landscape architect and owner of Magnolia Landscaping Architecture. Pools help make the summer heat bearable, he says. Pools will also undoubtedly play a crucial part in bringing people together — especially after a long, tough year of social distancing. “You don’t have to have a special occasion or a theme or anything like that,” says Abadie. “You can just say, ‘Hey, we’re having a pool party; come on by.’ That’s all you have to say. Everybody likes to have access to a pool. Everyone wants to be invited to a pool party.” If your yard doesn’t have space for a pool or your budget won’t allow it, other, smaller water features can add comforting and picturesque elements. “Fountains can be enjoyed year-round,” Abadie says. With the right lighting — such as underwater lighting — they can be enjoyed any time of day, he adds. Abadie also notes the sound of water has a calming effect on many people. “It’s pretty amazing,” he says. “Water is magical and soothing.”

TOP LEFT: Mike and Angel Patron’s backyard in Mandeville features a pool, water fountain and elevated seating areas. ABOVE: A secluded pool at the Marigny home belonging to Csaba Lukacs and David Lummis


MAKE

Splash FAR LEFT: The home of Pres Kabacoff and Sallie Ann Glassman features a picturesque lap pool. LEFT: A pool made for entertaining at the New Orleans home of Mark Romig and David Briggs

Mother’s Day H E A D Q UA RT E R S !

Why remove your old bathroom and kitchen fixtures? RE-GLAZE THEM!

504-348-1770 NOW OFFERING MILITARY, VETERAN, FIRST RESPONDER AND SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNTS

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708 BARATARIA BLVD. |

MOST JOBS DONE IN HOURS

southernrefinishing.com

C ERTIFIED FIBERGLASS TEC HNIC IAN

GAMBIT DETAILS

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL

MAY 2021

CERAMIC TILE FORMICA CAST IRON CU LTU RED M A RBLE FIBERGLASS

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Splendid S ERVING Festive napkins

FOR ENTERTAINING

Juliska blue rose napkin |

$15 each from Judy at the Rink (2727 Prytania St., 504-891-7018; judyattherink.com).

Tulusa hand-blocked cloth dinner napkins |

$58 for four at Hazelnut (5525 Magazine St., 504-891-2424; hazelnutneworleans.com).

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HAZELNUT

Pineapple napkins |

$6 from Alice and Amelia (4432 Magazine St., 504-502-6206; shopaliceandamelia.com).

Crazy Southerner napkins |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY ALICE AND AMELIA

$7.99 from NOLA Gifts and Decor (5101 W. Esplanade Ave., Metairie, 504-407-3532; nolagiftsanddecor).

Pill capsule napkins |

$36 from Perigold (perigold.com).

Hemstitch cocktail napkins |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY PERIGOLD

$38 for six at Hazelnut.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HAZELNUT

PHOTO PROVIDED BY NOL A GIFTS AND DECOR

Laura Park Brooks Avenue cocktail napkins |

$10 from Judy at the Rink.

GAMBIT DETAILS

MAY 2021

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

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Caspari striped pink cocktail napkin | $5.50 from Judy at the Rink.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

Scalloped square coasters |

$33 for four from Judy at the Rink.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

Easy on the Ice cocktail napkins |

$42 for four from Hazelnut.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HAZELNUT


Caspari hummingbird trellis cocktail napkins | $5.50 each from Judy at the Rink.

Cloth napkins |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

$38 from West Elm (2929 Magazine St., 504-895-2469; westelm.com).

Splendid S ERVING

Juliska indigo striped napkins |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY WEST ELM

$15 each from Judy at the Rink.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

Field of Flowers chambray napkins |

$15 each from Judy at the Rink.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

Hole in One cocktail napkins |

“Please leave by 9” napkins |

$48 from Maisonette (2727 Prytania St., 504-437-1850; maisonetteshop.com).

$6 from Alice and Amelia.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY ALICE AND AMELIA

PHOTO PROVIDED BY MAISONETTE

Mother's Day T H O U G H T F U L G I F T S C R E AT E D B Y L O C A L A R T I S T S

MAY 2021

MON - SAT 10AM - 5PM 2727 P R Y TA N I A S T • (5 04 ) 891-70 1 8 • W W W. J U D YAT T H E R I N K . C O M

GAMBIT DETAILS

OPEN

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Canine

COLLECTIBLES Dog-themed decor

Seletti Rio dog lamp |

$352 from Amara (amara.com). PHOTO PROVIDED BY AMAR A

“Hair of the Dog” book |

$9.95 from Judy At The Rink (2727 Prytania St., 504-891-7018; judyattherink.com).

Dessert plate by Carole Akins |

$14 from Anthropologie (333 Canal St., 504-5929972; anthropologie.com).

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

PHOTO PROVIDED BY ANTHROPOLOGIE

Dog door hanger |

$39.99 from MJ’s (1513 Metairie Road, Metairie, 504-835-6099; mjsofmetairie.com). PHOTO PROVIDED BY MJ’S

Doodle art |

$37 from Hazelnut (5525 Magazine St., 504-891-2424; hazelnutneworleans.com).

Dogs welcome pillow |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HAZELNUT

$86 from Perigold (perigold.com). PHOTO PROVIDED BY PERIGOLD

Buddy closeup Scottie plate |

GAMBIT DETAILS

MAY 2021

$75 from Gump’s (gumps.com).

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PHOTO PROVIDED BY GUMP’S

Napkins | $40 for set of four from Hazelnut.

Mug |

$18 from Relish (600 Metairie Road, Metairie, 504-309-3336; relishneworleans.com). PHOTO PROVIDED BY RELISH

“From Crook to Cook” by Snoop Dogg |

$24.95 from Judy At The Rink.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HAZELNUT

Coco the dog figurine | $90 from Amara.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY AMAR A


Canine

Dog tote bag |

$12 from Alice & Amelia (4432 Magazine St., 504-502-6206; shopaliceandamelia.com).

COLLECTIBLES

Pug throw pillow | $64 from Hazelnut.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HAZELNUT

PHOTO PROVIDED BY ALICE & AMELIA

Dog bone round frame |

$42 from Horchow (horchow.com).

PHOTO PROVIDED BY HORCHOW

Dackel black dog |

$240 from Eclectic Home (8211 Oak St., 504-8666654; eclectichome.net).

“Dog Astrology” |

PHOTO PROVIDED BY ECLECTIC HOME

White bulldogs |

$16 and $40 from Judy at the Rink.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

$14 from Anthropologie. PHOTO PROVIDED BY ANTHROPOLOGIE

$60 from Judy at the Rink. PHOTO PROVIDED BY JUDY AT THE RINK

MAY 2021

Treat jar by Nambe |

Have a Blessed Mother’s Day

Bronze bulldog door knocker |

$109 from Pottery Barn (3301Veterans Memorial Blvd., Metairie, 504-219-0168; potterybarn.com).

Mon-Fri 10am-6pm | Sat 10am-4pm Curbside & Delivery Still Available!

5101 W. ESPLANADE • 504.407.3532 at Chastant • Metairie

3001 ORMOND BLVD • 985.603.4011 at entrance to Ormond Estates • Destrehan

Nameplate | $28 from Perch (2844 Magazine St., 504-899-2122; perchhome.com).

PHOTO PROVIDED BY PERCH

w w w.nolagiftsanddecoronline.com @nolagiftsanddecor

GAMBIT DETAILS

PHOTO PROVIDED BY POTTERY BARN

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Garden District

SPOTLIGHT ON

the

Oak-lined streets and a range of architecture styles are represented in this neighborhood. By KAYLEE POCHE

GAMBIT DETAILS

MAY 2021

Named for its large lots — at least by New Orleans standards — built with room for gardens, the Garden District is known for its historic mansions and walkable oak-lined streets. During the spring, you can smell the fragrant gardenias, jasmine and privets in bloom. Situated between Uptown and the Lower Garden District, the city’s Historic District Landmarks Commission defines its boundaries as Magazine, Josephine, Carondelet and Delachaise streets, with much of St. Charles Avenue carved out into its own separate historic district.

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Though as with everything in New Orleans, that’s up for debate. For instance, historian Robert Cangelosi, who teaches Preservation Studies at Tulane University, says he generally defines the borders of the neighborhood as Magazine Street and St. Charles, Jackson and Louisiana avenues. The area is home to a few private schools, including Louise S. McGehee and Trinity Episcopal, as well as several elaborate churches like Christ Church Cathedral and Our Lady of Good Counsel. Other neighborhood landmarks include Commander’s Palace, Lafayette Cemetery No. 1, one of the city’s oldest cemeteries and the Magazine Street corridor lined with shops and food spots. The Garden District’s homes range in architectural style. About a third of the buildings in the neighborhood are Italianate style, which begins in New Orleans in the 1840s and lasts until World War I, according to Cangelosi. He says the second most popular style is the Colonial Revival style, followed by the Greek Revival style. Some of the neighborhood’s more modest homes have Victorian fronts. “It’s this jewel of historic housing,” says Andrea St. Paul Bland of the Garden District

Neighborhood Association. “Virtually every architectural style from 1832 to 1950 is represented, every American architectural style is represented in the Garden District.” Cangelosi says while the neighborhood has lots of homes built before the Civil War, most were built following the war. Some of the oldest homes have belonged to the same families for generations, and while there are a lot of older people in the area, there have been young professionals with families moving in recent years, Bland says. The neighborhood is significantly whiter and wealthier than the rest of the city. According to The Data Center, which compiled data from a 2015-2019 American Community Survey, 90.1% of residents were white, compared to 30.7% of Orleans Parish residents, and 5% were black, as compared to 58.9% of parish residents. The average household income in the Garden District is $200,399, compared to $71,938 in the whole parish. Similarly, 6.2% of residents in the neighborhood live in poverty, compared to 23.7% parishwide. According to the Data Center, average rent (including electricity, gas, water, sewer and fuel) in the area is $1,470. Owners occupy 62.7% of units in the

PROVIDED PHOTO

Wendy Simmons’ residence

VIRTUALLY EVERY ARCHITECTURAL STYLE FROM 1832 TO 1950 IS REPRESENTED, EVERY AMERICAN ARCHITECTURAL STYLE IS REPRESENTED IN THE GARDEN DISTRICT.

— Andrea St. Paul Bland OF THE GARDEN DISTRICT NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION

Neighborhood

RESTAURANTS & BARS

BOIL Seafood House (3340 Magazine St.) Columns Hotel (3811 St. Charles Ave.) Commander’s Palace (1403 Washington Ave.) Coquette (2800 Magazine St.) District Donuts (2209 Magazine St.) French Truck Coffee (2917 Magazine St., Suite 104) Gracious Bakery + Cafe (2854 St Charles Ave.) Jack Rose (2031 St. Charles Ave.) Joey K’s (3001 Magazine St.) Lilly’s Cafe (1813 Magazine St.) Little Korea BBQ (2240 Magazine St., Suite 103) Molly’s Rise and Shine (2368 Magazine St.) The Ruby Slipper Cafe (2802 Magazine St.) The Rum House (3128 Magazine St.) The Vintage (3121 Magazine St.) Stein’s Market and Deli (2207 Magazine St.)


SPOTLIGHT ON the Garden District, and 40% of those who own property in the area own it outright and are no longer paying off their mortgage. NEIGHBORHOOD HISTORY Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, a French explorer who established the settlement of New Orleans in the early 1700s, originally owned the land that now makes up the Garden District. It eventually came into the hands of Marie de Marigny who sold it to American investors in 1832, and they began dividing the land into large lots, Cangelosi says. “They wanted to have homes away from their work,” Bland says. “Most of them worked in what is our proper downtown now, and they wanted to have beautiful homes with some land around them and gardens. Hence, it became the Garden District.” Around that time, people from the northern United States, England and Ireland came to settle in the area. Jackson and Louisiana avenues had horse-drawn carriages and steam powered streetcars that would bring people to work downtown.

Cangelosi says the area’s original layout had two houses facing one street and two houses facing another street, with no additional houses on the side streets. Over time, people sold off their yards and carriage houses, increasing the density of the area. “There’s really only one block on Prytania Street that still maintains that urban setting there, which is quite different from the density of the Creole faubourgs,” Cangelosi says. PROFILES IN PRESERVATION Bland chairs the neighborhood association’s Profiles in Preservation Project, which the group started in September 2019 to do a deep dive on the neighborhood’s history and historic homes. She said she saw the need for a comprehensive history of the area when listening in on local tours in the area. “I’ve had thousands and thousands of people walk by my ... house, and they look up, and they see a beautiful house, and they want to know more,” she said. “They have a tour guide … (but) I’ve listened to what they say and it’s not based on fact. It’s just a bunch of malarkey, and they want to tell a

good story so they make things up — ghosts, witches, vampires.” The association hired local historians Howard Hunter, Sally Reeves, Hilary Irvine, Heather Veneziano, Kelly Calhoun and Nora Goddard to research the neighborhood. People in the neighborhood can opt to participate in the program, which involves installing historical markers in front of their houses and creating their own hardback book detailing their home’s history. So far, 80 households have signed on, according to Bland. Bland says the next phase of the project is to launch an interactive app that features a map of the neighborhood, where people will be able to pull up the history of a house and landmark and listen to someone from the neighborhood read it. “I want people to know New Orleanians, our voices, what we sound like, how enthusiastic we are, telling stories about the inhabitants of the homes over time,” she says. The association plans to roll out the app in September and release a coffee table book on the neighborhood’s historic homes in 2022.

Garden District

PHOTO BY VERONICA DOMINACH/ THE TIMESPICAYUNE | THE NEW ORLEANS ADVOCATE

The Columns Hotel, designed by one of New Orleans’ great architects, Thomas Sully, is the only remaining example of a large group of Italianate houses that he designed in the late 1880s.

Sullivan | Gallery A Curated Selection of the Best Finds from The Occasional Wife Estate Sale Store FURNITURE HOME GOODS DESIGNER COLLECTABLES ONE-OF-A-KIND PIECES

1963 Austin Healey $1,800 Coffee Table

OPEN WED - SAT 12-5PM

3827 Magazine Street

504-895-6720

3719 MAGAZINE ST., NOLA | TUESDAY-SATURDAY 10AM-6PM

GAMBIT DETAILS

Skyscraper Circa 1930 $425

MAY 2021

Art Deco Side Table $325 Indonesian wood & granite

F E AT U R I N G WOOD A N D M E TA L ARTWORK BY LO C A L A R T I STS

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