Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It added Gilt Groupe Japan, Gilt Fuse, and travel site Jetsetter in 2009. [10] It later added, Gilt City and Gilt Home in 2010 and Gilt Taste in 2011. [11] In 2009, growth equity firm General Atlantic led a series C funding round, joined by previous investor Matrix Partners. [12] [13] By February 2014, Gilt Groupe was preparing for an IPO. [14]
Pages in category "Defunct department stores based in New York City" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Syms Corp (styled as SYMS) was an off-price retail clothing store chain, founded by Sy Syms in 1958. Its headquarters was in Secaucus, New Jersey, where it became a public company, traded on the New York Stock Exchange (SYM) in 1983. The company also owned Filene's Basement, which it acquired in June 2009.
Women’s History Museum’s most recent show took place Thursday, a day before New York Fashion Week officially began, and was titled “Indestructible Doll Head.”
Loehmann's was an American retail company which started as a single store in Brooklyn, New York and grew to a chain of off-price department stores in the United States.The chain was best known for its "Back Room", where women interested in fashion could find designer clothes at prices lower than in department stores.
At 75,000 square feet (7,000 m 2) and containing a 500-seat community room for civic meetings, the Huntington location was the largest branch store at the time, [10] though still much smaller than the 225,000 square feet (20,900 m 2) of the Brooklyn store.
A New York man was indicted Tuesday for allegedly hiring someone to kill his estranged husband, a wealthy art dealer, who was found brutally stabbed in Brazil last year. Daniel Sikkema, 54, was ...
Abe Stark poses with "Watermelon Queen" Mimi Fellers at the Brooklyn Terminal Market. Stark's name first became familiar because of the advertising gimmick for his clothing store, a sign placed directly under the Ebbets Field scoreboard in right-center field in 1931, and seen by millions in movie newsreels and then on television.