After planting its ‘radiant stores’ in Milan, Dallas, Palm Beach, and Capri, La DoubleJ has now brought its high-vibration glamour to New York, taking over a historic five-story townhouse just off Madison Avenue christened the Lighthouse. The Milan-based label’s first U.S. flagship is less a shop than a full-blown spiritual department store, where retail therapy and actual therapy happily coexist.
Conceived as a multi-level energy station powered by what founder J.J. Martin calls ‘the power of light,’ the Lighthouse invites devotees into an ecosystem where enlightenment and consumption are presented as perfectly compatible companions. On the top floor, restorative sound baths unfold inside the Light Temple and private spiritual activations cater to the expanding La DoubleJ Sisterhood.
Naturally, there is shopping too. Fashion, homeware, and accessories are strategically aligned to cocoon visitors in a halo of positivity, ensuring that the path to higher consciousness is paved with exuberant prints, joyful table settings, and, naturally, the occasional credit-card swipe. Fittingly, the resort collection is titled The Power of Light, echoing the guiding principle behind the Lighthouse and Martin’s conviction that true beauty begins with inner luminosity, a quality infinitely more compelling than the relentlessly manipulated ideals of contemporary perfection.
That philosophy translated into a wardrobe designed not merely to be seen, but to radiate. If enlightenment had a dress code, it might look something like La DoubleJ’s exuberant lineup of sequined occasion dresses, lurex-infused chiffons that catch every flicker of movement and light, liquid silk-satin creations twisted and draped into goddess-like silhouettes, or dramatic capes cut from jewel-patterned jacquards. Fringes swish, paillettes shimmer, and threads of gold gleam with unapologetic optimism. The cumulative effect is somewhere between disco diva and glamorous oracle.
Indeed, it would take a determined commitment to melancholy to remain gloomy while wrapped in one of Martin’s celebratory creations. La DoubleJ’s dresses function less as garments than as mood-enhancing devices—the fashion equivalent of serotonin, only considerably more photogenic.