What to do and see in Faubourg Marigny & Bywater, Louisiana (LA): The Best Gift & Specialty Shops

August 8, 2021 Florencio Paulino

Laissez les bons temps rouler! In New Orleans the good times are perpetually rolling down Bourbon Street, which, thanks to the city’s annual Mardi Gras celebration, has quite a party animal reputation. Once you’ve soaked up the scenery of the historic French Quarter, tour the elegant Garden District and meet the colorful characters of Frenchmen Street. Experience the city's supernatural vibe at the Voodoo Museum or by taking a guided ghost or vampire tour through taverns, alleyways, and cemeteries.
Restaurants in New Orleans

1. LA46

2232 Saint Claude Ave, New Orleans, LA 70117-8421 +1 504-220-5177 http://www.Louisiana46.com
Excellent
100%
Good
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Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 1 reviews

LA46

2. Crescent City Conjure

2402 Royal St Mandeville & Royal, New Orleans, LA 70117-7811 +1 504-421-3189 [email protected] http://Www.crescentcityconjure.us
Excellent
100%
Good
0%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
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Terrible
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Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 4 reviews

Crescent City Conjure

Authentic Hoodoo, Conjure and Witchcraft Store. Offering Tarot Readings, Oils, Baths, Candles, Soaps and Curios!

3. Botanica Macumba

3154 St Claude Ave, New Orleans, LA 70117-6643 +1 504-657-0059 [email protected] http://botanicamacumba.com
Excellent
100%
Good
0%
Satisfactory
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Poor
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5.0 based on 1 reviews

Botanica Macumba

Botanica Macumba is a New Orleans based spiritual supply shop, event space, and cafe. While specializing in products serving practitioners of Vodou, Lucumi, Candomble, and Quimbanda, Botanica Macumba also has products serving a variety of other traditions, devotions, and practices. Services are available upon request.

4. Louisiana Music Factory

421 Frenchmen St, New Orleans, LA 70116-2039 +1 504-586-1094 http://www.louisianamusicfactory.com/
Excellent
67%
Good
27%
Satisfactory
3%
Poor
0%
Terrible
3%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 66 reviews

Louisiana Music Factory

An excellent record store specializing in music with New Orleans origins.

5. Island of Salvation Botanica

835 Piety St, New Orleans, LA 70117-6255 +1 504-948-9961 http://www.feyvodou.com/index1.htm
Excellent
84%
Good
5%
Satisfactory
5%
Poor
0%
Terrible
6%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 19 reviews

Haitian art, ritual candles, incense and fortune telling in the heart of The Bywater.

Reviewed By Topherlicious - Worcester, United States

I've been shopping at this magical store since it was over on Piety st! I've always felt warm and welcomed. The products are unique (you really have to check them out)! I've had readings done by Sallie ~~ They have facilitated me on my path in life and I am truly grateful! A fine store indeed!!

6. American Aquatic Gardens and Gifts

621 Elysian Fields Ave, New Orleans, LA 70117-8509 +1 504-944-0410 http://www.americanaquaticgardens.com/
Excellent
79%
Good
14%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
7%
Terrible
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Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 14 reviews

American Aquatic Gardens and Gifts

7. Euclid Records

3401 Chartres St, New Orleans, LA 70117-6203 +1 504-947-7348 http://www.euclidnola.com
Excellent
81%
Good
13%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
6%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 16 reviews

Euclid Records

Reviewed By legaltreble - Atlanta, United States

Not many record stores make space for, or organize, the Broadway musical records I collect - but this place did! Really had to limit myself to only buying four. And there was plenty else to keep my husband occupied downstairs. And you can't undervalue a bag with reinforced handles. They really care about doing records right here.

8. New Orleans Healing Center

2372 Saint Claude Ave, New Orleans, LA 70117-8351 +1 504-940-1130 [email protected] http://www.neworleanshealingcenter.org/
Excellent
67%
Good
22%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
11%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 9 reviews

New Orleans Healing Center

Across from St. Roch Market, this center provides services, products and programs that promote the spiritual, cultural, economic and well being of the New Orleans community. The center hosts over twenty different businesses including Vodou and spiritual stores, restaurants, performance halls, art exhibits and unique clothing, jewelry and pottery stores. Experience this true New Orleans culture.

3020 Royal St, New Orleans, LA 70117-6741 +1 504-945-0633

Closed due to damage suffered in Hurricane Katrina.

10. La Madama Bazarre

2350 Saint Claude Ave, New Orleans, LA 70117-8353 +1 504-236-5076 [email protected] http://www.lamadamabazarre.com
La Madama Bazarre

LA MADAMA BAZARRE INVADES ROYAL STREET New fine-art gallery spotlights morbidly sexy twists on Louisiana arcana Something wickedly alluring this way comes . . . There are many New Orleans galleries that purvey traditional, sentimental images of Louisiana, but La Madama Bazarre lets loose a stellar consortium of underground artists whose multimedia work is alternately spiritual, delicately pretty, ethereally mystical and overtly sensual - drawing upon and reveling in all the glorious contradictions and cultures of New Orleans and its environs. Outsider art? Lowbrow? Underground? It doesn't really matter. Beauty and strangeness abound in equal doses at La Madama Bazarre. Sculptress Lateefah Wright's stoneware-clay two-headed dolls gaze at you with an almost sentient eeriness - then surprise you again when they turn out to be music boxes. Meanwhile, Jason London Hawkins' Southern gothic reveries and Christopher Morrison-Slave's expressionist and oddly tranquil acrylic swampscapes are contrastingly moody and somberly lulling. Jimmy "Rocket Man" Descant slyly comments on local culture and/or corruption with assemblages that are framed in the literal shape of the state of Louisiana and filled with imaginative juxtapositions of found-art baubles, trinkets and kitsch. Patti Meagher and Althea Holden do their shape-shifting through the magic of glasswork. Photographer Sean Yseult sees Storyville in a new (red) light with her timelessly elegant E.J. Bellocq-inspired portraits, while doll maker Christy Kane and photographer Darla Teagarden evoke the mystique and allure of female mythology. And yet, for all the subversively playful diversity of the art at La Madama Bazarre, the new gallery still manages to frighten sensitive souls. "Some people walk in and get scared and turn around and walk right out," says proprietress Jennifer Kirtlan about her artists' often-macabre themes. It's no surprise that an undercurrent of outsider rock & roll rebellion runs through much of the work at La Madama Bazarre - many of the gallery's artists are well-known figures in the local and national underground music scenes. Sean Yseult first came to attention as bassist with hard-rock extremists White Zombie and currently plays with Star & Dagger. Artist Johnny Brashear has played with Rock City Morgue. Dollmaker and photographer Christy Kane and gallery proprietress Jennifer Kirtlan used to conjure shadows together in the dream-rock trio Hazard County Girls. After originally opening La Madama Bazarre on St. Mary Street in the Lower Garden District in October 2013, Kirtlan recently relocated the gallery to 910 Royal Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Ensconced in a classic 1837 brick building, La Madama Bazarre is situated across the street from the Cornstalk Hotel and next to Cafe Amelie and its historic Princess of Monaco courtyard. The gallery's bubblegum-pink interior and white-frosting borders add a sweetly adorable contrast to the nightmarishly fantastic images, sculptures and other visual upendings that play across the walls of this most bizarre bazaar.

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