2.08.2010


You are welcome to enter the PASTEC boutique and go around and have a look, take your time and choose the right gift for yourself or someone you care for ...
All the way down on your right, you will see there is a big antique wooden tailor’s table just where I' am sitting (Sara Spinelli) and working at my own creations. You will find vintage postcards and hair nets from a “puces market” in Brussels, or if you just turn around there are silk-screened Gitto totes from India or Bayaa Decca scarfs with sequins as well as colored wool mélange scarfs just next to the window. Have a look at the beaded Bayaa Decca pillows in dusty lavender. Or ask me if I can show you Monica Castiglioni’s beautifull silver and bronze rings. I am here to help you, if you need me, or just go around and choose whaterver you like and I'll be glad to tell you from which part of the world it comes from ...


After more than twenty years in business, Sara Spinelli shuttered her Soho accessories shop this past spring. Apart from the ever-climbing rent, the longtime New Yorker felt a change in the feel of the neighborhood. "There used to be so much individuality," she says. "Now it's a big shopping mall." Spinelli reopened in the East Village earlier this summer, honing her sprawling stock down to a giftable smattering of jewelry, home décor, handbags, and artistic objets d'art compiled throughout journeys to India, Italy, Belgium, and Morocco. The selection changes monthly — corresponding with visits from her international cache of friends and designers — and many pieces are one-of-a-kind, like piecemeal silk-screened tote bags, chunky silver and gemstone-studded rings by Pitango, and delicately faded vintage postcards from Brussels. Click ahead to see Pastec's latest incarnation. Lauren Murrow
Since 1989, Italian-born Sara Spirelli has been showcasing home furnishings, gifts, and unusual apparel unearthed during her world travels in this Soho boutique. She can often be found seated at the sewing machine in a nook near the register, where she stitches variously sized fabric shopping bags for shoppers to cart home their purchases (regulars amass small collections). Collaged place mats from India, silky bunches of roses made of feathers, recycled paper bowls from Vienna, and gold-flecked dishes from Morocco are arranged on a long dining-room table, and one-of-a-kind leather bags adorn the walls. A couch beneath the skylight in back is piled with colorful throw pillows. Spirelli’s eclectic taste mixes the old and new, with room for both vintage postcards and Elodie Blanchard’s cushions printed with words like “Harry Potter” and “American Idol”—the top ten Google searches of each year. The original clothing features dresses and tunics with tucks at the hem or elongated sleeves, the work of French designers V. Barkowski and Catherine André. Cases display Monica Castiglioni’s sinewy sterling-silver earrings and chunky bronze rings from Milan. Vivid spools of ribbon from India are furled in rows near the doorway—an appropriate garnish for the handmade wares.