Don't tell New York Metropolis, but when it comes to men's shopping, sunny SoCal has eclipsed the Large Apple tree.

Sure, New York has the reward of existence America's official fashion capital, not to mention four singled-out seasons (come fall, racks in the 5 boroughs are lined with the kind of hefty outerwear which helps line retailers' pockets). Just Tinseltown has its own particular assets, similar a distinct approach to dressing that's more about preserving a certain laissez-faire lifestyle than, say, self-preservation during harsh meteorological conditions. Blame the year-circular sunshine, the lucrative tech industry, or its place at the very middle of where the entertainment and media industries intersect, but right now is an amazing time to be a mode-minded guy in Los Angeles. Don't believe usa? Hither are 14 stores that have men's style on lockdown.

Bode

Bode store interior

At four times the size of its dark jewel box location in New York, Bode's LA store is capacious and blusterous. Skylights bring in California'southward warm glow and the rich wooden cabinet-lined walls make information technology experience like stepping into an enormous (and elegant) version of your grandparents' attic. The design befits the clothing's vibe—upcycled or made from found textiles in vintage workwear silhouettes. It'southward what's made the make and its designer, Emily Adams Bode, such a hit. In our supremely digital, mass-produced globe, her work is folksy and lo-fi, in the best of possible ways. She and her hubby Aaron Aujla, of the cult furniture and blueprint firm Green River Project, took inspiration from mid-century municipal buildings and and so put it through a Wes Anderson lens to get something anachronistic with the perfect amount of kookiness. That lived-in charm is all over the store, from the rugs to the chaise covered in a turn-of-the-century tapestry.

Accost: 7007 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90038
Telephone: +1 213-595-5696
Website: bodenewyork.com

Camp Loftier

Camp High interior & hoodie

Camp High

From sometime Burton creative manager Greg Dacyshyn comes Camp High, a habiliment brand built less on garments and more than on a spiritual philosophy of sorts. If that sounds highfalutin, it's not—the label consists mostly of plush, tie-dyed sweatpants and hoodies printed with psychedelic mantras and iconography, something perfect for the high-vibe, low-fundamental coastal hippies that populate ritzy enclaves like Malibu and Venice Embankment. Camp Loftier's store, which opened tardily final twelvemonth in the tony Pacific Palisades neighborhood, is stuffed with these relaxed and optimistic pieces (John Mayer is a fan) and has a very mellow, yoga studio free energy to it. And as the past year has taught us, sweats can certainly exist stylish; simply check out Dacyshyn'due south own Instagram account for further proof. As the kids say, it's a vibe.

Accost: 15117 Due west Sunset Boulevard, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
Website: camphigh.com

Dries Van Noten

Dries Van Noten store exterior

Dries Van Noten

Belgian designer Dries Van Noten chose Los Angeles as the location of his start American flagship (over the more expected pick of New York). And the store, a two-story set of moody rooms on La Cienega, is a dazzling, elegiac beauty. At turns elegant and sophisticated and fifty-fifty a bit contemplative, the shop has surprises at every corner. Upstairs is where the menswear lives, everything from floaty embankment caftans to languid tailoring, to the whimsical seasonal goodies (this season the clothes are decked out in photos the designer and his team took of Antwerp, where he lives). In that location's plenty of space for shoes and sunglasses and an area dedicated to archival pieces from by collections that tin can be added to your own personal athenaeum. In addition to womenswear, the downstairs includes a rotating series of guest designers, artists and makers of all kinds while the "Petty House" at the back of the building'due south parking lot houses a gallery showing works from the likes of Rene Ricard and Peter Shire. Become and plan to spend many hours there.

Address: 451 North La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90048
Phone: +1 310-880-6125
Website: driesvannoten.com

Union

Union LA is one of the best menswear stores in Los Angeles.

Jeffrey Ong

This longstanding store has helped shape the LA menswear scene since 1991, when it became the West Declension outpost for the original New York location. The store in the Large Apple has since closed, but under the guidance of Chris Gibbs, the La Brea Boulevard shop continues to attract influential style enthusiasts. Mayhap its about important contribution is ignoring the hierarchical boundaries of men'due south retail—separating high fashion from gimmicky from streetwear—and instead mixing it all together—trusting that guys would figure out and in fact, encompass the mix. Now, pretty much every store does that. That Union was based on a foundation of streetwear has only helped it firmly claim its reputation every bit sartorially clairvoyant in a very difficult-to-predict industry. In the last year, the store has also opened a second location in Tokyo, launched its own in-firm line, and collaborated with Vans, Adidas Spezial, and, to much hype, Hashemite kingdom of jordan. In other words, for a fashion stalwart, they look like they're just getting started.

Accost: 110 South La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90036
Phone Number: +1 323-549-6950
Website: store.unionlosangeles.com

H. Lorenzo

With its stark interior and emphasis on up-and-coming labels and brands that lean toward the avant-garde, H. Lorenzo has been offering dramatic alternatives to the laidback, surf- and skate-inspired aesthetic that has been the city's default aesthetic position since its first shop opened in the early on '80s. Just last twelvemonth, its founders took that well-established know-how and opened up a men's standalone boutique. At that place, they've connected their talent for conveying an array of boundary-pushing pieces from labels that yous oasis't heard of even so (retrieve A-Cold-Wall, Y/Projection, 99% Is) and more than familiar names (Comme des Garcons Homme Plus, Walter Van Beirendonck, Craig Light-green), with a sprinkling of cool-kid classics from Maison Margiela, Acne Studios and hometown hero John Elliott. Anyone from a Hollywood Goth to a streetwear enthusiast to your average Hollywood slickster looking for something streamlined and stylish will find something here. All in all, the store's mix underscores that local style is all about balancing extremes.

Address: 8700 Due west Dusk Boulevard, West Hollywood, CA 90069
Phone Number: +1 310-652-7039
Website: www.hlorenzo.com

The Bloke LA

A notoriously coincidental city, The Gars is a bit of an outlier for the guy who notwithstanding feels best in a classic two-slice adjust (or some variation thereof). Located in the tony hamlet of Pasadena in the outer reaches of LA's infamous sprawl, the shop features brands that perfectly encapsulate the nouveau prep feeling taking over the men's market place equally streetwear'southward ubiquity all of a sudden feels a little old hat. Labels like Band Jacket, Rowing Blazers and Drakes sit aslope more than casual sartorial fare and fun doodads like model cars, vintage magazines and the like. The store even offers bespoke services, courtesy of local tailor Jonathan Behr, starting at $3,200.

Address: 380 South Lake Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91101
Phone Number: +i 626-773-1119
Website: thebloke.com

Simply One Centre

Hidden from passersby in a building that once served as Howard Hughes' Los Angeles digs is i of the city's most inventive and luxurious stores, Just 1 Eye. For those tuned-in enough to know most this discreet shopping destination, a sense of mystery is office of the allure. One time inside, shoppers will discover an assortment of art, manner and other ephemera unlike anywhere else in the city. While it stocks familiar names like Calvin Klein and Gucci, it besides sells pieces from lesser-known brands similar OAMC and Julien David. But most impressive are the man-cave-friendly collectibles, which ranges from rare concert wear that tin can set you back five figures, to fine art and home decor pieces (including a Ron Arad chair priced at $130,000). You'll besides find limited-edition prints, and an invitation-only "seduciary" billed as a passage into the pleasures of the private listen.

The shop will be moving from its electric current location in due class. Where to? Finding out is part of the fun.

Address: 7000 Romaine Street, Los Angeles, CA 90038
Phone Number: +i 323-969-9129
Website: justoneeye.com

Maxfield

Housed in a severe physical-and-glass structure on Melrose (direct across from the trendy steakhouse Craig'southward) is the now-iconic Maxfield. Under the watchful heart of Tommy Perse, the store stocks luxury brands with an emphasis on a stark rock-n-roll sense of chic (call back sharply tailored goods from Saint Laurent, Givenchy and Balenciaga) more cut-border eye-catchers (Rick Owens, Junya Watanabe) and haute streetwear made by locals (Rhude, Amiri). Additionally, there are dwelling goods, timepieces and high-end jewelry, one-off projects or collaborations and, more recently, special installations. It's not uncommon to see a stylish celeb or, increasingly, basketball actor, getting their fix at the West Hollywood shopping palace (or snapping a selfie with the sculpture out front end).

Address: 8825 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90069
Phone Number: +1 310-274-8800
Website: world wide web.maxfieldla.com

Rose Bowl Flea

Rose Bowl flea

R.K. Canning Attractions

Every second Sunday of the month, vintage aficionados set their alarms for the wee hours and head north to Pasadena for the best vintage shopping in boondocks. Even earlier sunrise, booths at this enormous flea market are buzzing with activity. Each vendor has his or her specialty, be it 90s streetwear, hard-to-discover Supreme or workwear that would make a Gold Blitz miner dark-green with envy. It's truthful treasure hunting, a magical circus that disappears by late afternoon. Because of that, whatever you find feels like it was meant for you. Prices vary but there are deals to exist establish, especially for early birds or those who buy in bulk. It's undoubtedly ane of the best shopping experiences in California, a can't-miss for those who love manner of any kind.

Address: 1001 Rose Bowl Bulldoze, Pasadena, CA 91103
Website: rgcshows.com/rose-basin

Virgil Normal

Joel Kvernmo

Housed in a onetime moped shop where East Hollywood and Silverlake meet, just effectually the corner from the popular breakfast spot Sqirl is Virgil Normal—named so because it sits near the corner of the streets Virgil and Normal. A self-described "friendly shop for friendly people," is owned by stylist Shirley Kurata and freelance designer Charlie Staunton, the shop features an eclectic mix of hipster workwear from brands like Carhartt WIP, Brain Dead, Monitaly, Stan Ray, Ben Davis and its own highly covetable in-house brand. The store also sells hard-to-find zines, household trinkets (ahem, crystals), and fun accessories like tote bags or graffiti-inspired art.

Address: 4157 Normal Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90029
Phone Number: +i 323-741-8489
Website: www.virgilnormal.com

Mohawk General Shop

Kate Berry for Mohawk General St

Kevin and Bo Carney oversee a small and influential network of stores in Los Angeles, self-described "general stores" with locations ranging from due east (Silverlake) to west (Venice, where a location comes consummate with a lovely outdoor infinite and sometimes plays host to rotating fine art installations). The vibe of the store—with ethereal selections from luxury brands like Lemaire, Dries Van Noten, Comme des Garcons Shirt and Issey Miyake—is subtle to the point of meditative. Homewares, like candles, dishes, soaps, art books and rare magazines are displayed in the same sophisticated only unfussy mode. All of which serves every bit a nice counterbalance to some of LA's showier spots; this one is elegant but infused with an unmistakable sense of beachside ease.

Address: 4017 West Dusk Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90029
Phone Number: +1 323-669-1602
Website: www.mohawkgeneralstore.com

Dover Street Marketplace

Photo ©Eric Staudenmaier

Equally is its wont, Comme des Garcons' retail megaplex Dover Street Market—which already has outposts in New York, London, and Tokyo, to name a few—chose a trendy yet far-flung neighborhood for its Westward Coast debut. In LA, that's a corner of the downtown-adjacent Arts District. Tucked away in a discreet-looking white industrial building is 15,000-square-anxiety of infinite defended to the wild and sculptural visions of Comme des Garcons designer (and fashion legend) Rei Kawakubo. The store, however, is also known for its dedication to discovery and surprise, and within the expansive warehouse space, you'll discover shop-in-shops selling buzzy high-end household names similar Balenciaga, Gucci, Prada and Margiela, equally well every bit cult favorites like Noah, Sacai, Evan Kinori. At that place'south likewise no shortage of brands with absurd-child street cred, like Stussy (which is based just downwards the road in Orange Canton), Brain Dead, Awake and Bianca Chandon.

Address: 606-608 Regal Street, Los Angeles, CA 90021
Phone Number: +1 310-427-7610
Website: losangeles.doverstreetmarket.com

American Rag

Located on La Brea, American Rag has long hosted trendy, casual brands that are difficult to find at more mainstream boutiques. The sense of discovery, and an emphasis on brands that are based locally, gives the store a informal, comfortable feel. Additionally, there'due south a denim bar side by side door because, well, jeans are to LA every bit suits are (were?) to New York. And, as LA is known for its incredible vintage scene, there'due south a highly-curated option of peachy pre-owned wares mixed in too.

Address: 150 South La Brea Artery, Los Angeles, CA 90036
Phone Number: +one 323-935-3154
Website: americanrag.com

RTH

mannequin displays at RTH

RTH

Recently relocated from LA proper to Palm Springs, RTH channels all that is mystical well-nigh SoCal—Native American beadwork, desert vibes fringed leather, oversize tunics, distressed denim, Southwestern talismans—and brings it together in a way that feels utterly urbane but also slightly outdoorsy. Call up of this store as offer a sophisticated vision of the city'southward Wild W origins.

Address: 191 South Indian Canyon Drive, Palm Springs, CA 92262
Phone: +one 760-699-8410
Website: rthshop.com