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Chinatown, the Theater District, & South End : Shopping

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  • Whimsical housewares fill this shop known for its hand- dipped and scented candles. Aromas include root beer, popcorn, and “home” (which smells like apple pie).

  • The hand can be quicker than the eye, especially with the aid of various patented tricks and props available at Hank’s. Magician staff demonstrate the wares.

  • People come from miles around to this antiques dealer specializing in furniture in the Arts & Crafts and Mission styles as well as exquisite New England art pottery from the early decades of the 20th century.

  • “It’s April Fool’s every day,” says the sign at Jack’s, which has sold the likes of whoopee cushions, fake spills, Groucho Marx glasses, and hand buzzers since 1922.

  • Designer Kim Pham has been creating timeless ready-to-wear and custom-tailored Asian fashion for more than two decades. Embroidered silks are a specialty. Also the place to get scarves and bags.

  • This is home to an exhaustive selection of fresh, frozen, canned, and dried foods essential to cuisines from Singapore to Seoul.

  • This tiny basement shop sells and frames contemporary prints from China among other things, and will carve your name in a stone seal for $10 per character.

  • This all-purpose martial arts store carries robes, belts, books, magazines, videos, plus a few swords and other weapons.

  • Harking back to the South End’s days as a Middle Eastern immigrant neighborhood, this grocery sells southern and eastern Mediterranean essentials, from preserved lemons to rare Moroccan argan oil.

  • There’s a vast selection of teas from across Asia and half an aisle of ginseng products (both Asian and American). Get your herbalist’s prescription from the Chinese apothecary here.

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