WWD Digital Daily

La DoubleJ Spices Up Bloomingda­le’s Home Floor

The Milan-based brand founded and run by J. J. Martin is known for its maximalist approach to ready-to-wear and homeware.

- BY DAVID MOIN

In the case of bringing the Milan-based La DoubleJ home collection to Bloomingda­le's in New York, tenacity paid off.

“I've been working at Bloomingda­le's for three-and-a-half years and ever since I started I wanted to get La DoubleJ into the store,” Kelley Carter, fashion director of home at Bloomingda­le's, told WWD. “This is a strategic partnershi­p and it's a big deal. We only expect to expand on it. It took a lot of work, and a lot of following up. I am very persistent.”

For the past few weeks Bloomingda­le's has been finessing a La DoubleJ home shop inside the 59th Street flagship, applying the final touches last week. Featuring the Milanese brand's latest homeware collection­s crafted by artisanal firms in Italy, the 200-square-foot shopin-shop on the seventh floor is a highvibe, bistro-like concept inspired by the La DoubleJ store in Milan. There's a wide selection of 18-karat gold-trimmed porcelains, handblown Murano glassware, Ancap printed porcelains, Napoli colorblock­ed napkins, linens, and lots of exuberant colors and prints for those bent on entertaini­ng with flair.

The space, La DoubleJ's first shop-inshop at Bloomingda­le's, is awash in the brand's signature burgundy hues with bistro tables set with pieces mixed and matched, custom-printed carpet, and bamboo cabinets merchandis­ed with the wide product array.

“La DoubleJ fills a gap of what we were missing,” said Carter. “It brings energy and vibrancy to our assortment which mixes elegant patterns and materials in a modern, sophistica­ted and whimsical way. We were definitely looking for a fresher approach to setting the table.”

She said there's sufficient space in the shop to show the breadth of product. “There are so many mix-and-match ways to put the table setting together and layer on patterns, prints and color. The bistro concept is really fun too.”

“Many people get intimated by a lot of pattern and print so you kind of have to massage it. If it's too much pattern for you, the good thing is you can layer in the white plates,” said J. J. Martin, founder of the La DoubleJ ready-to-wear and home brand.

Asked why it took a long time before agreeing to the Bloomingda­le's shop, Martin replied, “We were really focusing on Harrods, Lane Crawford and Net-aporter and we were doing a lot of business ourselves,” selling directly to customers. “When we decided to go in with Bloomingda­le's, it was because we then wanted to have more of a foothold in terms of image and our own brand recognitio­n.”

Bloomingda­le's tabletop floor is largely populated by traditiona­l heritage brands and some younger brands so La DoubleJ, with its fashion-forward orientatio­n, stands out.

“The customer that comes to us for our homeware has no budget constraint­s,” said Martin. “It's a true luxury customer. La DoubleJ ready-to-wear is also a luxury product, but our products are much less [expensive] than the Guccis and Pradas. We tend to be positioned as accessible luxury in ready-to-wear, whereas in homeware we're in that luxury notch.”

Martin started her business in 2015 initially by selling vintage fashion. She developed a ready-to-wear brand about a year later and went into the home business in 2017, which has consistent­ly added categories, including candles most recently.

“Everything we do is 100 percent made in Italy,” and typically product is getting increasing­ly hard to find, Martin said.

“It's really important for me to find these historic patterns and glassware.”

She noted that all of her plates are porcelain with 18-karat gold trim and made in Verona, Italy. Among her bestseller­s currently: a set of four dessert plates crafted in collaborat­ion with porcelain maker Ancap with handpainte­d 18-karat gold trim, priced $320; a pair of table linens in solids for $90; a rainbow-colored glass set of four created with Venetian glassmaker Salviati that's handmade in Murano glass, priced $550, and regionally inspired scented candles for $180.

In America, said Martin, “We are for sure looking for more shops-in-shop opportunit­ies. It's a game-changer when you can show the setting for a full fivecourse Italian meal. America is our numberone market, with just over half of our total sales.” The next biggest market is Europe, followed by the Middle East, she said.

Matches and Net-a-porter are key clients, though the business with Bloomingda­le's will grow. La DoubleJ homeware will also be sold at Bloomingda­le's South

Coast Plaza store in Costa Mesa, Calif., which is renovating. It will also be sold at Bloomingda­le's Aventura, Fla., stores. Bloomingda­le's does not sell La DoubleJ ready-to-wear, but wants to.

Staging events is part of building the business and showcasing its value in entertaini­ng. “Homeware gives you the occasion to sit down and have dinner with your customers experienci­ng the product,” said Martin. She has hosted special-event dinners at Capitol, a luxury boutique in Charlotte, N.C.; Sant Ambroise on Lafayette Street in Manhattan, and once La DoubleJ took over the pool area of Passalacqu­a, a luxury retreat on Lake Como.

During the 2022 Christmas season,

“we turned this dusty old-school cafe,

Caffe Roma in Manhattan's [Little Italy] neighborho­od, into a wonder room of print,” right down to the napkins and coffee-to-go cups, Martin noted.

She holds the role of co-chief executive officer with her business partner and ex-husband Andrea Ciccoli, CEO of The Level Group, the e-commerce partner of a range of luxury brands including La DoubleJ. The brand's first store opened in Milan in 2021, located on central Via Sant'Andrea, near Chanel and opposite Bottega Veneta, and a few steps away from Via Montenapol­eone. Last year, shops-inshop openings included the Fondaco dei Tedeschi in Venice, and in Comporta, a town in Portugal, while Harrods in London expanded its existing La DoubleJ shop.

For the Salone del Mobile, the Milan furniture fair next April, “We're planting our flag in the homewear business,”

Martin said, noting that currently, it represents just 12 percent of her total business. She'll be showing both her latest home designs as well as pieces from past collection­s that “continue to live on,” as she said. “We're actively building our assortment” with evergreen pieces as well new collection­s.

“The goal of our homeware is always to add a splash of joy into your home and let that raise your vibration,” said Martin, who considers herself a “maximalist” in her approach to style. “It's so nice when we can actually take over a whole space and just show the impact that that bold color and poppy print and this frequency pattern can lend to a space. Plus the tables are all laid out differentl­y, so you have a ton of inspiratio­n on how to mix and match our homeware families.”

 ?? ?? La DoubleJ at Bloomingda­le's 59th Street.
La DoubleJ at Bloomingda­le's 59th Street.
 ?? ?? Cucina Italiana tabletop at La DoubleJ.
Cucina Italiana tabletop at La DoubleJ.
 ?? ?? J.J. Martin
J.J. Martin

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