Interview with a Local: Anna Ward, Artists & Fleas Market Manager

If you’re a Brooklynite, you have likely been to Artists and Fleas. If not, according to Founders Amy and Ronen, Artists & Fleas is, “Part community gathering spot, part hipster haven, Artists & Fleas has hosted thousands of artists and vendors since opening its doors. It’s a place where buyers find unique designs, artists and vintage collectors in an atmosphere that’s in the tradition of old world marketplaces with a firm foot in what is contemporary, original and hip.” 

They first opened their doors in an empty warehouse in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and have since expanded to Chelsea Market in NYC, downtown Los Angeles as well as Venice. 

According to their website, “In a city full of creative, enterprising individuals, there was no place that gave talented individuals the opportunity to set up and sell for a day in friendly, fun and welcoming space exposed to the rich and diverse pedestrian traffic of Williamsburg. Part community gathering spot, part hipster haven, Artists & Fleas has hosted thousands of artists and vendors since opening its doors. It’s a place where buyers find unique designs, artists and vintage collectors in an atmosphere that’s in the tradition of old world marketplaces with a firm foot in what is contemporary, original and hip.”

Artists & Fleas has a been a friend to Like A Local Tours for several years. They have some exciting special events coming up, so we took a few minutes to talk with Anna Ward, Market Manager for Artists & Fleas. 

How did you come to end up as the Market Manager for Artists & Fleas?

People always ask me that, thinking that I’ll tell a tale of being a maker myself and moving into managing the market – but I actually come from a web/comm/social media background, and I happened to see the job listing and applied for it! The rest is history.

Can you tell us a little bit more about your background? 

I was always into the performing arts, competed in many state-wide drama festivals, and was a ballerina throughout high school and into college. My mother is a painter, and I think growing up with her inspired me to want to work with artists and makers. From an early age I was modeling for art classes that she taught, helping to work booths at local art events, reorganizing her gallery space, and contributing to her business in a variety of ways. I love that now my job is to help artists with the business side of things – which is usually the part that they find most challenging.

 Anna Ward pictured above.
Anna Ward pictured above.

What do you love about Artists & Fleas?

So many things! I love the ever-changing, ever-growing vendor community and the fact that no matter how many makers I see come and sell at the market (thousands by now!) I can still be completely floored by a new product, concept or art piece. I love that our business model allows for constant innovation, and that when we see something that doesn’t work we can change it and improve upon it immediately. We’re a small, agile company so if we try out an activation that doesn’t result in what we were hoping, we learn from it and move forward. And in general, I love the incredible flow of creativity that surrounds me every single day.

I know you frequently work on special programming and events. Can you tell us about anything coming up?

We have an incredible food series going on right now called “Artists & Eats”. It’s a series of 7 themed weekends featuring innovative food brands selling everything from hot sauces to handmade kimchi to vegan rueben sandwiches. There’s two weekends left in the series – “Taste of Home” on February 25th & 26th will feature traditional foods from around the globe, and “It Takes Two” will feature collaborations between brands (think: chili pepper extract and cookie dough!)

See below for details!

As you know, we are all about local … can you share your favorite bar and restaurant in NYC?

My favorite bar is George & Jack’s, just a few blocks from the market in Williamsburg. It’s an uber-local spot with a diverse crowd, free popcorn and a juke box. What more could you ask for?

My favorite restaurant is Lucali, a tiny, old-world pizza place in Carroll Gardens whose clientele ranges from local grandmas to celebrities (Jay Z & Beyonce are regulars!) and everyone in between. It’s usually on a 3+ hour wait but I promise it’s worth it – I’m not kidding when I say it’s the best pizza I’ve ever had!

Can you share a favorite NYC moment?

I remember one day that I started out with breakfast in Carroll Gardens, went to have my makeup done for a friend’s GlamSquad audition in midtown, headed up to Harlem for a salon at a family friends’ brownstone on NYC women’s sentiments on the current political climate, and finished off the day with dinner in the East Village. Every part of the day was so incredibly different from the rest, and that’s what I love about New York City… every experience here is so unique, but the ease of transportation makes it so that you can pack a ton of different experiences into just one day.

UPCOMING EVENTS AT ARTISTS & FLEAS:

February 25 and 26:  Taste of Home: Family traditions from around the Globe. Some of us can’t jet home for the weekend, so we find other ways to capture what it feels like to be with our families. Taste of Home takes you on a culinary journey around the country and the world to taste the traditions of entrepreneurs from all over. This event includes any food item that’s not easy to find in NYC, old family recipes, cultural favorites and more.

On March 4 and 5:  It Takes Two: Better together. It Takes Two to tango – especially when it comes to the latest and greatest food trends. Because chocolate wouldn’t be the same without peanut butter, or bacon without eggs, or cheese without crackers… you get the picture. This category brings the best of the best together for some all-star collabs that are sure to delight. This event brings two or more entrepreneurs together to create something truly extraordinary!

Warm Up with Live Music in Brooklyn

One of the best things to do in NYC and Brooklyn is catch live music. Especially in winter. Whether you’re down for a romantic night of jazz or want to see some up and coming indie bands, Brooklyn has a venue for everything. We put together an exhaustive list of all our favorite music spots. Here we profile the intimate venues.

NEW! St. Mazie, Williamsburg (pictured): Step back into the 20s at the quaint St. Mazie Bar & Supper Club with live music, classic cocktails and a speakeasy-like cellar restaurant.

National Sawdust, Williamsburg: National Sawdust (NS), an unparalleled, artist-led, non-profit venue, is a place for exploration and discovery. A place where emerging and established artists can share their music with serious music fans and casual listeners alike. Cuisine: Ryder, one of Brooklyn’s best restaurants right now is housed inside the venue.

Baby’s All Right, Williamsburg: Cool haunt offering live music most nights, plus gourmet bar fare, creative drinks & weekend brunch.

House of Yes, Bushwick: We cannot say enough about this venue! If you want a night of dancing and spectacle, buy tickets now! Funky venue showcasing dance, circus, theater & cabaret performances in a former ice warehouse. (Pictured above)

Rough Trade, Williamsburg: Brooklyn outpost of the famous London venue. Record store in the front (with great vinyl listening stations) and concert venue in the back.

Brooklyn Night Bazaar, Greenpoint: Weekend night flea-market scene with live bands, food stands, beer & wine, art galore & Ping-Pong.

Others: Brooklyn Bowl (live music most nights, tickets required), Output (nightclub with an easy door – just buy tickets – featuring big name DJs)

Large venues:

Barclay’s Center

King’s Theater

 

Medium sized venues: 

BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music)

Williamsburg Music Hall

The Bell House

The Hall at MP

NYC on the cheap!

We came across this article from Australian travel website Traveller and wanted to share our favorite recommendations for ways to experience New York City on the cheap.

New York city guide on a budget: The best things to see and do in New York on the cheap

By Rob McFarland // Jan 13 2017

The city’s tourism body, NYC & Company, has a series of guides to help travellers on a budget (nycgo.com/free) and initiatives such as the ever-expanding network of free Wi-Fi enabled LinkNYC kiosks have made the city even easier to navigate.

 Magnetic: Manhattan island in New York City.   Photo: Predrag Vuckovic
Magnetic: Manhattan island in New York City.   Photo: Predrag Vuckovic

CHEAP SLEEPS

Accommodation will probably be your biggest expense but the flip side is that it’s also where you can make the greatest savings. Peak season in New York is during the US summer (July and August), so visiting in winter (particularly January and February) can save you a small fortune.

Hotel rates are generally cheapest on a Sunday and they also fall around major US public holidays such as Memorial Day (last Monday in May), Independence Day (July 4) and Labor Day (first Monday in September).

Your best chance to score a bargain is to stay in one of New York’s “other” boroughs. Over the last few years many stylish and affordable properties have opened in Brooklyn, Queens and The Bronx which still offer convenient access to Manhattan.

Hop over the East River to Long Island City in Queens and you’ll find the Z Hotel, a funky 100-room property with a swish rooftop and hypnotising views of the Manhattan skyline (rooms from $US125). In Brooklyn’s up-and-coming Bushwick, check out BKLYN House Hotel, a cool, minimalist spot with free breakfast and murals by local artists (from $US125). Even New York’s most maligned suburb, The Bronx, now has the Opera House Hotel, an upscale boutique property that’s only a 25-minute subway ride from Times Square (from $US130). See zhotelny.com; bklynhousehotel.com; operahousehotel.com

If you’re determined to stay in Manhattan, several chains offer tiny rooms at tiny rates. Check out Pod’s two properties on 39th Street and 51st Street (from $US95), CitizenM’s stylish 230-room hotel near Times Square (from $US150), The Jane’s sleeper carriage-inspired rooms in the Meatpacking District (from $US85) and Yotel’s futuristic 669-room property on Tenth Avenue (from $US140). See thepodhotel.com; citizenm.com; thejanenyc.com; yotel.com

Thanks to a new law that has made it illegal to rent out New York apartments for less than 30 days, Airbnb options in the city have dwindled. Fortunately, there’s a raft of hotels that offer apartment-like facilities so you can still save money by self-catering. Options include Aussie favourite Hotel Beacon on the Upper West Side (from $US165); Marriott’s long-stay brand, Residence Inn (which has four Manhattan properties with rooms from $US145); Starwood’s long-stay contender, Element (from $US150), and Hyatt’s first extended stay property, the Hyatt House New York/Chelsea (due to open in January 2017). See beaconhotel.com; residenceinn.marriott.com; elementtimessquare.com; newyorkchelsea.house.hyatt.com

THINGS TO DO

People walk along the High Line Park. The High Line is a popular linear park built on the elevated former New York Central Railroad spur in Manhattan. Photo: pidjoe

It’s practically compulsory to take a trip on the free Staten Island Ferry, which offers dazzling views of Lower Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty as it shuttles between Battery Park and the city’s fifth borough. Also worth checking out are the East River Ferry that hops between Manhattan and Brooklyn ($US4 on weekdays, $US6 on weekends) and the Ikea ferry that runs from Wall Street to the company’s store in Red Hook, Brooklyn (free at weekends, $US5 on weekdays). See siferry.com; eastriverferry.com; nywatertaxi.com

AFFORDABLE ATTRACTIONS

Admission to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Natural History is by “suggested donation”, so you don’t technically have to pay anything. Many other museums have free or discounted entry on certain days. For example, the 9/11 Memorial & Museum is free after 5pm on Tuesdays, the Museum of Modern Art is free after 4pm on Fridays and the Frick Collection is “pay what you wish” on Sundays from 11am to 1pm. For a comprehensive list, see nycgo.com/free

If you’re going to be hitting a lot of the big-ticket attractions, buy a pass. The most popular offerings are the New York CityPASS, the New York Explorer Pass and the New York Pass. Each offers different deals on different attractions so do your homework first. See citypass.com; smartdestinations.com; newyorkpass.com

For sheer architectural splendour, it’s well worth visiting the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, the world’s largest gothic cathedral, which features a single stained-glass window with more than 10,000 pieces of glass. Equally inspiring is St Patrick’s Cathedral, whose intricate marble facade conceals a Louis Tiffany-designed altar and a spectacular rose window. See stjohndivine.org; saintpatrickscathedral.org

In January the city is holding its first NYC Attractions Week, with two-for-one admission to more than 70 attractions, tours and shows across all five boroughs. Big name participants include the Brooklyn Museum, the Lincoln Centre and the One World Observatory. See nycgo.com/attractions-week

While you can explore Grand Central Terminal on your own, why not take advantage of the free 90-minute tour led by an urban historian every Friday at 12:30pm? The same goes for Central Park and the High Line, which both have regular free tours by expert guides. See grandcentralpartnership.nyc; centralparknyc.org; thehighline.org

Read more: http://www.traveller.com.au/new-york-cover-story-dont-let-the-buck-stop-you-gtpvdo?cid=email_membership_20170112#ixzz4YWBHxTFi 

Follow us: @TravellerAU on Twitter | TravellerAU on Facebook

How to celebrate Valentine’s Day in NYC

They say Paris it the most romantic city. We agree but also think NYC isn’t far behind. Here are our favorite ways to spend a romantic day and night in the Big Apple:

1. Visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art or the Guggenheim, then make your way through Central Park down to the Plaza Hotel and warm up with tea or champagne. It’s about a 1.5 mile walk so you can always hop in a cab on 5th Avenue and sneak some smooching in if you get chilly. 

2. Take our Flatiron Food Tour or Williamsburg Bites Food Tour – both are enough food for lunch and a great way to explore two exciting neighborhoods. In Flatiron, grab a cocktail at Raines Law Room after the tour. The super sex ambiance and hidden entrance are perfect for romance. In Williamsburg, after the tour, grab a cocktail at Hotel Delmano, another hidden spot with romantic candlelight vibes. 

3. Do the classic dinner and a movie. Or if you want to up the ante, see dance at Joyce Theater, opera or classical music at Lincoln Center. 

4. Take in an experiential theater show such as Sleep No More or Then She Fell. We have been to both several times and cannot recommend them enough! Sleep No More takes place inside the McKittrick hotel which you can visit for dinner or drinks. They are also having special activities for Valentine’s Day. Visit sleepnomore.com. 

Super Bowl Sunday! Our picks for where to watch!

While our team didn’t make it, we still love watching the Super Bowl with friends, great beer and great food. If you’re not planning to watch at home, there are amazing options to watch in NYC or Brooklyn! Here are our top picks. Oh! And we recommend enjoying our Sunday Funday Boozy Brooklyn Tour first!

  1. Brooklyn Winery, Williamsburg:See the New England Patriots take on the Atlanta Falcons on our 9 foot Atrium screen with surround sound. Sit back and enjoy the game while savoring our Super Bowl menu complete with Pita Nachos, Buffalo Chicken Bites, Sliders, Crispy Brussels Sprouts, and more! Drink specials for the evening include “The End Zone” specialty cocktail, Bucket of Beer, and Strongbow Cider.Come early to grab a seat and watch the game (or, let’s be honest, the commercials) in comfort!  Seating will fill up fast. Doors open at 5pm.
  2. Nitehawk Cinema, Williamsburg: $30 saves your seat and can be used as a food voucher.
  3. The Gander, Flatiron: Tickets are $65 per person. Includes food and beer.
  4. Syndicated, Bushwick: (pictured) $10 a seat in the dining room (sold by the table) and $15 per in the theater. Loaded Tater Tots and Bacon Nachos with Superbowl specials such as hot wings and BBQ pork ribs all day and night.
  5. Clinton Hall, Financial District: specials on their beers and burgers. It is a beer hall after all and their burgers are excellent. During commercials you can play giant jenga or their giant chess board outside.
  6. Brooklyn Bowl: beer and food specials plus full concert sound throughout the venue! (It’s pretty cool).

NYC Restaurant Week

NYC Restaurant Week runs from January 23 – February 10. There are over 400 restaurants participating for lunch and dinner. Here are our top 5 picks for dinner! PS – Make your reservations asap and check back for last minute openings often.
BKW by Brooklyn Winery — new in Crown Heights. The chef is making waves. Excellent vino!

Sant Ambroeous, West Village — on every list of best new restaurants. Solid Italian in a cozy but chic atmosphere.

Blenheim, West Village — also on every list of best new restaurants. Wonderful farm to table. Quite expensive so restaurant week is a great bargain!

Craftbar, Flatiron — this Tom Colicchio outpost has been around a while but it’s still classic NYC fine dining (although not as formal as some of his other restaurants) in a lively atmosphere.

La Pecora Bianca, NoMad — inventive Italian in a unique setting. Just love the fresh vibe of this place!

See the full list here and make reservations.

2 for 1 Tickets! Attractions Week in NYC!

January 6, 2016 — Get 2-for-1 tickets to 74 museums, tours and more during first-ever NYC Attractions Week. Use offer code AWW17 to redeem.

Living in New York is never boring — so many trendy things to stand in line for! — but there are probably a few places you’ve always meant to visit but just haven’t gotten around to.

Now, you have no excuse: Beginning Jan. 17 through Feb. 5, over 70 museums, cultural spots and tours across the five boroughs are offering two-for-one admission during the first-ever NYC Attractions Week.

RELATED: Brunch with Harry Potter at Nitehawk Cinema

“If you’re looking for those shorter lines at museums and attractions, kind of having that attraction to yourself, this is perfect,” says Christopher Heywood, senior vice president of global communications at NYC & Company, the inter-borough tourism agency that also organizes Restaurant Week (reservations open Jan. 9) and Broadway and Off-Broadway weeks.

“The first quarter is particularly slow here — the crowds subside, the hotels are not as full, the restaurants could use the extra help — so it’s a great time to showcase the city.”

Not having to jockey with as many visitors makes it easy to “burn through your bucket list” (the agency’s slogan for Attractions Week) like going to the top of the Empire State Building, taking a behind-the-scenes tour of at Radio City, and even hopping on the ferry to the Staten Island Museum, whose exhibit on the history of American sports is a great way to get excited for spring training season.

Or take in the Rolling Stones retrospective Exhibitionism, mug with celebrities at Madame Tussauds, finally use that gold toilet at the Guggenheim and be one of the glamorous crowd at the Metropolitan Opera.

RELATED: Under the Radar 2017 will blow your mind with the best of new theater

Also featured are tons of tours that aren’t just of the iconic sites — what better way to learn a little history than on a pizzeria crawl with A Slice of Brooklyn?

It’s easy to forget how much is on our doorsteps, but it’s even easier to get out and see it when most everything is just a Metrocard swipe away. And with hotel rates hovering around $200, it’s a good time to consider a staycation, too.

Enjoy 2 for 1 on Like A Local’s Williamsburg Bites Food Tour and Flatiron Food Tour!

Vice Munchies: Saturday Night Pizza

Wanna know the real history of pizza in NYC & Brooklyn? Watch this episode of Viceland TV featuring Frank Pinello of Best Pizza (one of the stops on our Williamsburg Bites Brooklyn Food Tour):

Dec 26, 2016 — New York is the birthplace of many things, but for our purposes we are sticking to pizza. Frank starts with a quick history lesson from Scott Wiener, the owner of Scott’s Pizza Tours. Then we hit the streets to see and taste the history for ourselves. The best thing about pizza is that it’s relatively young, and you can still eat pizza from the ovens of the people that brought this incredible food from Italy and put it on the map. We meet the granddaughters of the man that literally brought pizza over from Naples, and see the ovens that he used. We hit all the best slices, from Greenwich Village to Soho, and then finish in Brooklyn at Luigi’s Pizza—a place untouched by time.

Click here to watch the video: https://munchies.vice.com/en/videos/pizza-show-new-york

NYE in NYC

New York City is one of the best cities on Earth (if not THE best) and celebrating NYE here should be on everyone’s bucket list. Just make sure you have your transportation plans set (we recommend the subway).

Here are our top 5 picks for out of this world parties:

1. Diamond Horseshoe. The venue is amazing and with 5 hours of open bar for $99, you can’t go wrong! There are suer to be some great performances and hopefully the secret rooms are open. This is an especially convenient option if you’re staying in midtown!

2. BROOKLYN: Dances of Vice Parisian themed party at the Grand Prospect Hall. This troupe does not disappoint! Tickets here. TimeOut NY also has similar parties in their NYE roundup. (We also recommend the party at Brooklyn Bazaar — dropping 3,000 lbs of confetti from shredded 2016 love/hate notes.)

3. Get your classic NYC club fix and NYE spectacle all in one at Lavo. General admission starts at $149.

4. The East Village’s Bathtub Gin is a solid spot especially for the speakeasy or cocktail connoisseur. More info here (as well as a list of just about every hot spot in the city).

5. It’s not cheap but NYE at the Top of the Standard featuring Gladys Knight would be a once in a lifetime experience! Tickets are $272 per person but perhaps you can bring a couple flasks! Tickets and more info here. OR, head upstairs at The Standard East Village for primo viewing of the fireworks (and a less expensive option). Details in their newsletter.

For your morning after, head to Nitehawk Cinema for great flicks (including La La Land, Moonlight and Manchester by the Sea) + food all day. There’s even an 11:30am showing of When Harry Met Sally. Sigh.

Holiday Gift Guide

We love to gift creative!

RECOMMENDED FROM OUR WILLIAMSBURG BROOKLYN & NYC TOURS:

Click on the image to go to the shop or see below. 

[metaslider id=1875]

RECOMMENDED GIFTS

FROM OUR WILLIAMSBURG BROOKLYN TOURS:

Pudge Knuckles // 3 pack of 12 oz East Coast Thriller coffee beans for $42

Chocolate from Mast Brothers // $8 for their regular size 2.5 oz bar // Our faves are the Maple and Sea Salt

Odd Fellows Ice Cream // everyone needs a cozy sweatshirt right? Use code monkey2016 for 10% off!

Brooklyn Brewery // glassware, tees and much more from this iconic craft brewery! We can’t think of anything more Brooklyn. Free shipping on orders over $35.

Heatonist // for the hot sauce aficionado. They have a curated 10 pack for $150. Or buy by the bottle $8 – $20. In hot we trust!

FROM OUR NYC TOURS:

Beecher’s Cheese // need we say more?

Bread’s Bakery // So. Many. Amazing. Pastries.

Schnippers // Gift Cards for the burger-obsessed.

Eataly  // We personally would love to be gifted a cooking class, but they have lots of great food items as well.

EXPERIENTIAL GIFTS:

Give the gift of a Brooklyn Food Tour or NYC Food Tour! Use code Holiday20 for 20% off Like A Local Tours gift certificates!

See the tour that inspired the Netflix Hit Show, The Getdown! Hush Hip Hop Tours. Use code RAPNYC17 for 10% off!

Check out our other partners on our Tours page (just scroll down): WindowsWear, Wall Street, Gangster Tours and more.

SEASONAL MARKETS & EVENTS:

Bulletin now has a brick & mortar store! Or shop online (they are offering free shipping!).

If you’ve been on our Sunday Funday Brooklyn Tour, then you’ve been in Artists & Fleas. Brooklyn purveyors set up shop. Expect to find trendy and noncommercial holiday-themed gifts vetted by A&F to ensure that every item from the 30-plus vendors is locally made and well crafted. 

There’s always Brooklyn Night Bazaar with shopping, food, ping pong, live music and more! 

A One-Stop Artisanal Goods Shop in Chinatown (recommended by the NY Times)

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