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Tuesday, September 22, 2009
GGGGreat Site.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Shop with us on Refinery 29

For up to the minute information on style and fashion from independent stores and designers be sure to check out Refinery 29. Auto. also has an online shop there.
FROM REFINERY 29:
The Goods: An eclectic selection of merch ranging from Judy Ross pillows to Missoni towels, Jane D'Arensbourg jewelry, and a Sleeping Pig sculpture thought to be good luck.
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Lucky Magazine: Lucky Breaks Online

We have a promotion running with Lucky Magazine through November 2 from the Missoni Home Collection.
Missoni Jarris Cushion
The Deal: Save 25 percent. Regular price: $180. Lucky Breaks Online price: $135.
How to get it: Go to thisisauto.com and enter "lucky7" at checkout.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
O-Check Graphic Journals
New York Times Article about Roman & Renata
See and hear an Audio Slide Show
A Space Above Work
ROMAN LUBA first saw Renata Bokalo at a Ukrainian summer camp in upstate New York. He was 8 years old. She was 4.
They live in a one-bedroom above their home-design store, Auto. LOVINGLY DECORATED A wall holds an assortment of artwork, some from their Ukrainian roots, next to a 1950s couch.
“My mother was the nurse,” said Ms. Bokalo, who is now 34, “and I hung around with her in the nurse’s office, so all the kids knew me.”
“I definitely remember her,” said Mr. Luba, 38.
Both are first-generation Ukrainian-Americans, and the freezer in their lovingly decorated one-bedroom rental in the West Village contains only ice, vodka and frozen pirogi made by Mr. Luba’s mother.
After meeting at summer camp, Mr. Luba, who grew up in Philadelphia, and Ms. Bokalo, who grew up in New Jersey, went their separate ways.
As adults they became reacquainted through mutual friends. And in 1996 Ms. Bokalo joined Mr. Luba in the sprawling apartment he rented in what used to be law offices on a then-desolate stretch of Court Street in downtown Brooklyn. She was an agent representing illustrators. He was a graphic artist. All their friends lived in Manhattan, and it was nearly impossible to entice them across the river for visits.
A lot of these friends were product designers, and in 1999 the couple decided to open a business selling the works of artisans they knew — a ceramicist, glass blower, pillow maker, textile designer and leather worker.
Their inexperience made them fearless. “We were young and wanted a change,” Ms. Bokalo said.
Mr. Luba said, “We were ready for any risk.”
They found a storefront in Manhattan on Washington Street, between Gansevoort and Horatio Streets. At the time, the nearby meatpacking district still dealt in meat — both bovine and human, in the form of sex clubs and prostitutes. They opened their store, called Auto, the same year that Pastis, the French bistro, and Jeffrey, the luxury-goods store, opened nearby. They had no idea they were pioneers in what would soon become a hot destination.
“We commuted in from the suburbs, meaning Brooklyn, everyday, and somehow everything worked out,” Ms. Bokalo said.
A very noisy family lived above the store. “From below it sounded like they were bowling,” Ms. Bokalo said.
When the family moved out, Ms. Bokalo and Mr. Luba rented the apartment to use as an office. By September 2001, they had ripped out part of the kitchen and were preparing to install office-type fixtures when they took a trip to Paris. Mr. Luba had an engagement ring in his pocket that he planned to spring on Ms. Bokalo. Then, of course, came the terrible news that the Twin Towers had been destroyed.
They returned to a neighborhood that was cut off from the world by barricades. Their business sank, and they had to lay off the entire staff of two. It took six weeks for Mr. Luba to actually bring out the ring and propose.
They decided to consolidate, and in October, they moved into the apartment originally intended as an office.
Because they were saving for their wedding, which they planned to hold at the summer camp where they first met, they didn’t fix up the place before moving in. “We moved before painting or doing any other work,” Ms. Bokalo said.
The next spring, they were married at the camp. Guests danced to live polka music, ate Ukrainian treats, gathered around a bonfire and fell asleep in tents.
Over time the couple’s business, like the city, thrived again, and they turned their new apartment into a striking home. The walls are now a deep gray that seems ominous on a rainy day as wind whips through the potato vines and oxalis that Ms. Bokalo tends in planters outside their second-story windows. Their nine-month-old wire-haired vizsla, named Edie, lies on a stylish dog bed designed by Utility Canvas — from the store, of course.
The functional kitchen has cheap white cabinets and restaurant-supply-store stainless steel shelves with a butcher-block counter, and a Rancilio espresso machine that Ms. Bokalo chose after doing a lot of research on how to get the best demitasse.
The couple cook a lot, or, rather, he cooks and she cleans. She also shops, preferring the Abingdon Square and Union Square farmer’s markets to the gourmet stores in the area. When they run out of her mother-in-law’s pirogi, they pick some up at Café Glechik in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn.
“We are very particular about our food,” Ms. Bokalo said. “We buy fish when we are going to serve fish — we shop as we need it.”
At one recent Ukrainian Easter celebration they served stewed kielbasa, ham, sausage, eggs, cured meats and other delights. “Pretty much everything but vegetables,” Mr. Luba said.
Sometimes they have friends over for dinner at their round white dining room table, which is lighted by a David Weeks sconce. Unstained Billy-brand shelves stacked against the living room wall do nothing to betray their Ikea roots, suggesting instead a more expensive store.
“I think that filling the shelves is the secret to that,” Mr. Luba said.
Another wall holds artwork, ranging from an oil portrait of a rooster that Mr. Luba had on the wall when he was a child to works by modern Ukrainian artists to a severe portrait of Mr. Luba’s father in the corner, next to a 1950s couch from Ms. Bokalo’s aunt.
Personal mementos, like the couple’s wedding invitation, in Ukrainian and English, have also been worked into the mix. Pillows designed by Judy Ross, bedding by John Robshaw, and flatware by John Pomp, all of which they sell downstairs in Auto, fill out the room. In the bedroom, three oil paintings of Ukrainian women by Ms. Bokalo’s grandmother rise up the wall in a line.
In 2005, they expanded their empire by renting the storefront next door, and the two Auto stores are now linked by the garden, which is not directly accessible from their apartment.
On a peaceful night they’ll open one of the security grates and return to the garden table, which Mr. Luba pieced together from an old Knoll base, and nice planks. They speak in Ukrainian as they enjoy the night sounds.
It’s the camp upstate, downtown.Saturday, September 12, 2009
Fall Yard Sale Online Edition
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Timeout New York listed the Auto. Yard Sale. Splendid.

Decent yard sales in the city—and most suburbs—are hard to come by, so when there’s one this amazing, you’d better go! This design shop is marking down items—including home pieces , baby products, jewelry and gifts—all up to 70 percent off. Scoop up Thirtyfour leather satchels, whittled from $285 to $150; Missoni multicolored bath and hand towels, sliced from $45 to $30; and Lucia Nenickova handmade belts, halved to $100.803–805 Washington St between Gansevoort and Horatio Sts (212-229-2292). Subway: A, C, E to 14th St; L to Eighth Ave. Thu 10–Sat 12 11am–7pm; Sun 13 11am–6pm.
Read more:http://www3.timeoutny.com/newyork/tonyblog/2009/09/your-weekly-sample-sale-update-part-one-20/#ixzz0QkGfWqqZ
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
A Spectacular Sale

Auto.'s Fall Yard Sale
Home
Anupuma, Cote Table, Graphic Image, Ingrid Cusson, John Derian, Etro, Fomato Stationary, John Pomp Glass, John Robshaw, Judy Ross Textiles, Matteo, Missoni Home, Plover Organic Bedding, Sweet Bella, Unison Bedding
Baby
Egg Baby, Kit + Lili, Momma Couture, Oeuf, Pink Chicken, Shirin Kids, Winter Water Factory
Clothing/Accessories
A Fortes, Christina Lehr, Dutzi, Epice scarves, Hermitwear Tees, Lucia Nenickova, Matta, Meg Cohen, Mischa Lampert, Paul Smith, Pollux, Sleeping Partners, Sphere One by Lucy Downes, Thirty Four, Tracy Watts, Virginia Johnson
Jewelry
Andrea Corson, Jane D’Arensbourg, Ike and Court, Kim Gilby, Nathalie Uhl, Tam Tran
When
Thursday through Sunday
September 10-13, 2009
Where
803 & 805 Washington St
(btwn Gansevoort + Horatio Sts)
Across from the entrance to the Highline.
Time
Thursday through Saturday 11am-7pm,
Sunday 11am-6pm
Subway
A,C,E or 1,2,3 to 14th St. or L to 8th Ave
Payment
Cash and major credit cards
Food
Street Sweets truck will be parked in the front of the sale.
www.streetsweetsny.com
Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Thank You Outblush.com for the great descriptive write up(see below).
Stop Talking Card Set
Sometimes big gifts come in small packages. We like to send a strong message without saying much at all with this adorably witty Stop Talking Card Set ($10). Slightly sarcastic undertones never hurt anyone and, for the right recipient of this gift set, one could even be flattered by such humorous stationery.


