This past fall, designer William Cooper opened William White Emporium on Canal Street as a physical extension of his clothing and interiors brand, William White. An alum of Ralph Lauren and former creative director of ASH NYC, Cooper approaches the emporium less as a conventional store than as a proposition: grocery and café, newsstand and clothing, home goods and furniture, arranged without hierarchy.
The interiors are industrial but polished, encouraging browsing rather than directing it. The premise is one of range rather than nostalgia—an interest in what happens when categories blur and discovery is left intact. In an era of single-lane retail, the emporium embraces multiplicity, inviting visitors to browse and maybe leave with something they didn’t know they were looking for. Everything on view, including the furniture, can be bought straight off the floor.
That range is reflected in the offering. The emporium carries William White clothing: a concise, unisex collection made from fine Italian and Japanese fabrics, cut and sewn in New York City’s Garment District. Furniture designs—including a recent collaboration with Cabana Magazine—sit alongside an edited selection of ceramics, glassware, baskets, and lighting. Each category holds its own, reinforcing the idea that good design isn’t confined to a single discipline but moves easily between them.
Photography by Brett Wood courtesy of William White.










For more of our favorite NYC shops and locations, see our posts:
- Shopper’s Diary: 11 Best New (and Newish) NYC Houseware Shops
- Gem Home: Wunderkind Chef Flynn McGarry’s New NYC Café, Vintage Store, and Grocery
- Material Interiors: A Shoppable Apartment in New York, Design Luminaries Edition
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