SNAP GUIDE

New York: Chelsea, Flatiron, & Union Square

SEE Barbara Gladstone Gallery
515 W. 24th St., 212/206-9300, gladstonegallery.com
Chelsea is the center of contemporary art in the U.S., and this gallery is at the forefront. Expect any media, from photographs to installations, to be on view in this massive exhibition space. Other names to look out for: Greene Naftali (526 W. 26th St., Ste. 822), and Virgil de Voldère (526 W. 26th St., Ste. 416).

SEE RMA (Rubin Museum of Art)
150 W. 17th St., 212/620-5000, rmanyc.org
An impressive new 70,000-square-foot museum dedicated exclusively to Himalayan art. Born out of the private collection of Shelley and Donald Rubin, it brims with authoritative passion-key paintings, sculptures, and textiles feature mostly Tibetan Buddhist, Bon, and Hindu imagery. There's also a café and a store selling books and Himalayan crafts such as yeti dolls. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors.

EAT Craft Bar
900 Broadway, 212/461-4300
The cheaper sibling of Craft, run by an award-winning chef who's rekindled many a romance with hard-to-find seasonal ingredients such as ramps, morel mushrooms, and white peaches. You get your choice of fish, meat, or pasta from the pared-down main menu, but you can make a meal of the Mediterranean-influenced appetizers, which include a mustardy frisée salad and fried sage leaves stuffed with sausage.

EAT La Nacional
239 W. 14th St., 212/243-9308
Expats from the Iberian Peninsula have been visiting the Spanish Benevolent Society since 1868 (Federico García Lorca, Luis Buñuel, et al.), and enjoying its authentic Spanish food-the tortilla española (potato omelet), made-to-order croquetas (croquettes), grilled calamari, and white sangria are especially good. There's no sign, so enter under the stoop, walk down the hall, and go through the unmarked door. If you happen by on a Thurs., head upstairs and ogle the weekly tango party.

EAT Nooch
143 Eighth Ave., 212/691-8600
A style-conscious noodle bar that serves dishes mostly from Japan and Thailand. Designer Karim Rashid's chartreuse accents and curvy furniture give it a cheery veneer.

EAT Pop Burger
58-60 Ninth Ave., 212/414-8686
Fast-food chic reaches new heights at this hip burger 'n' fries counter. Shakes are so thick your spoon will stand upright. After dark, the back lounge buzzes with pool players.

DRINK Enoteca i Trulli
122 E. 27th St., 212/481-7372, itrulli.com
Serious oenophiles and newbie wine drinkers alike will feel right at home at this Apulian wine bar and trattoria. The waitstaff will tell you all you need to know, whether you order a glass or a flight of three two-ounce pours.

DRINK Maritime Hotel
363 W. 16th St., at Ninth Ave., 212/242-4300, themaritimehotel.com
Not your average hotel bar. Its retro nautical-themed lobby with fireplace and massive outdoor terrace are both comfortable (i.e., loads of space) and make good perches for people-watching. There are even more bar stools downstairs at Matsuri, a handsome Japanese resto-bar.

SPLURGE The Inn at Irving Place
56 Irving Pl., 212/533-4466, innatirving.com, cibarlounge.com
Traditional five-course tea service with all the trimmings: finger sandwiches, scones, jams, and clotted cream amid Victorian lucre (the Inn may be one of the most precious-and fabulous-properties in the city). By reservation only. Price $35. Downstairs is the swanky Cibar Lounge for those who want something stronger.

SHOP Greenmarket Farmers Market
Union Square
A picnicker's dream. Contrary to popular belief, New Yorkers do appreciate Mother Nature, and this market is proof. The food is mostly grown within 150 miles of the city and picked the day before. You can find produce, blooms, and organic meats (smoked turkey!), plus yarn, cider donuts, and other handmade goodies. Mon., Wed., Fri., and Sat., 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

SHOP Print Icon
7 W. 18th St., 212/255-4489, printicon.com
Cut paper, letterpress stationery, holiday cards, and more. Buy a card for $3 at this well-loved, 20-year-old store, and take home a work of art. Paper has never looked so good.

PLAY Roller-skating at the Roxy
515 W. 18th St., 212/645-5157, roxynyc.com
Strap on skates, and sway to the Bee Gees at this Wed.-night blast-from-the-past event. Aside from taking you on a nostalgia trip, this long-lasting megaclub also hosts some raging dance parties on Fri. and Sat. Admission: $18.

PLAY Satalla
37 W. 26th St., 212/576-1155, satalla.com
A groovy 200-seat venue catering to world-music lovers. It gets top-name talent from around the globe-Africa, Latin America, and beyond. Shows, held most nights of the week, are at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m., with extra midnight performances on weekends and family shows on Sunday afternoons. The mission of its founder was to "foster an awareness of the world's cultures" through music. Average ticket price: $18.

Note:This story was accurate when it was published. Please be sure to confirm all rates and details directly with the companies in question before planning your trip.
 
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Travel Tips

Tagged
Planning
353277

Some international airlines still give passengers a goody bag that includes a toothbrush, an eye mask, and socks for the flight. Keep those socks: They're handy when visiting temples in Thailand, Vietnam, and Cambodia, where you must remove your shoes before entering. I slipped on the socks and my feet stayed both clean and warm!

— Nancy Easterbrook
Tagged
Packing
349245

If you have to save receipts while traveling, purchase a plastic coupon holder to help you keep track of them (it'll also protect them). Label each section of the coupon holder by category (hotel, rental car, gas, food, etc.) or by day of the week. The coupon holders are compact and easily fit into a laptop case, purse, or travel bag.

— Ursalene Davis
Tagged
Planning
367284

Before traveling overseas, look at your health insurance card. If it only shows an 800 or 888 number for precertification of hospital admissions, call that number and obtain the local number with an area code. Many 800 numbers can't be dialed from foreign countries. I learned this the hard way during an emergency hospital admission in Switzerland. The delay in reaching my carrier could have been avoided.

— Chris Carveth
Tagged
Road Trips
401354

For our road trip through the English countryside, I printed out a detailed map for every location we wanted to visit from multimap.com. I labeled each map with the day we planned on using it and wrote down the interesting sites and places to eat along the way. I kept them all in a folder and added brochures from the places we saw. It was a great souvenir upon returning home.

— Karen Holt
Tagged
Family Travel
377283

Give your children a coach's whistle in case they get lost; put it on a ribbon so they can wear it around their neck. The piercing sound may be annoying, but you'll definitely find them quicker!

— Chandra Huang
Tagged
Planning
550594

Before leaving on a trip, I print the names and addresses of my friends and family onto clear mailing labels. (All standard word-processing programs have preset templates for creating address labels.) Then, I take the address-label sheets with me on vacation. Since the addresses are already saved in my computer and the mailing labels are adhesive, addressing postcards has become really easy.

— Lisa Higgins
Tagged
Car Rentals
357265

I always have problems locating my rental car in a large parking lot. Now I bring along a brightly colored bandanna and tie it to the antenna.

— Tamara Johnson
Tagged
Packing
413290

In order to provide any reimbursement for a lost suitcase, most airlines and insurance companies require an itemized list of exactly what was inside it. Unfortunately, remembering everything you packed after the fact is virtually impossible. To avoid the headache, take pictures of the items you're going to put in your suitcase with your digital camera or cell phone. The photos will make creating the list a breeze, and, in the event of a dispute with the airline or insurance agent, you have some visual evidence of ownership.

— Erica Rounsefell
Tagged
Technology
401265

Before traveling to any city, do a search on the Internet of the city name and the word "coupon" ("New Orleans coupon"). You will find many sites offering two-for-one, percentage-off, and dollar-off discounts. On a recent trip to St.Louis, we saved $100 at restaurants and attractions.

— Carolyn J. Kubacki
Tagged
Packing
389251

Put a few plastic trash bags in the outer pockets of your suitcases and carry-ons. If you arrive at your destination and it's raining, you can cover your luggage with the bags while you make your way to your hotel. Just cut a slit for handles or straps.

— Barbara Gesse
Tagged
Technology
394273

After I fell into a stream in Cambodia, my digital camera wouldn't work. Someone suggested leaving the camera in a bag of rice overnight to draw out any condensation. By the next morning, it was dry and working perfectly.

— Roger Bailey
Tagged
Family Travel
385248

Every summer, we drive out West from Pennsylvania with our two kids. To avoid that infamous road trip question ("Are we there yet?"), I give each child a map with our route highlighted on it. Along the way, they can match up the town names with road signs we pass, and that way, they always know exactly where we are and how much farther we have to go until we'll get there.

— Machelle McCoy
Tagged
Packing
380277

Dry-cleaning bags stop clothes from wrinkling. Slide each garment into its own bag (leave the hanger at home) and place them flat on your bed, one on top of another. Then carefully fold the entire stack to fit it in your suitcase. Once you get to your hotel, hang everything up as soon as you can. You'll never unpack a suitcase of wrinkled clothes again.

— Claudette Christman
Tagged
Dining
358275

By the time I got home from my first trip to Europe in 1963, I'd collected menus from several restaurants I liked. I threw them into a box. In 1988, I returned to Europe and went to the Middle East. Once again, I picked up a few menus. This time I had them all framed and they now hang in my kitchen. Since then, I've added to the collection. It's fun looking at the prices and remembering the good times—plus they make great conversation pieces when I have a party.

— Jerri Moore
Tagged
Hotels
422332

Cold-weather traveling means turning up the thermostat in your hotel room, and along with the artificially warmed air come dry skin and static electricity. Instead of turning on the heat, fill the bathtub with very hot water and leave the bathroom door open. In about an hour, your entire room will be warm and humidified.

— Susan Mutty
Tagged
Planning
370258

Love researching your destination online, but don't know how to organize all those printouts, maps, guidebooks, and tips? I get a 5 x 7" spiral notebook (Mead makes one with a sturdy cover and a pocket insert), a set of index tabs, and some glue. Divide the notebook into sections with the tabs (sights, maps, currency converter, restaurants, etc.). Photocopy—in reduction mode—all the info you want to bring, and glue it into the appropriate section. I leave plenty of pages for my journals. This creates an all-in-one personal guide that you can read again years after your trip!

— Michele Graves
Tagged
Packing
389303

After looking for years for the perfect toiletries bag and being frustrated by many that were less than ideal, I finally discovered one that is just right: a soft-sided lunch box I bought at the supermarket. It has an outer zipped pocket with small compartments and slots perfect for often-used items like a toothbrush and toothpaste. There's a small removable zipper pouch inside (meant for a small ice pack) for those smaller, hard-to-find items like nail files and pill bottles. The remaining space inside is just right for larger items like shampoo and hand lotion. Other helpful features include both a small handle and shoulder strap and a waterproof, easy-to-clean interior. As an elementary school teacher, I know firsthand that it'll last: It was designed to withstand daily use by kids!

— Jennifer Minton
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Packing
381289

If you know you'll be cooking while on vacation, bring along small amounts of the spices you need for your favorite recipes. You'll save by not buying large containers of spices.

— Joan Phillips
Tagged
Hotels
440361

If you can't sleep due to the heat in your non-air-conditioned hotel room, take a cold bottle of water and place it on your pillow, in the crook of your neck. It will cool your whole body down.

— Tony van Hasselt
Tagged
Air Travel
396263

I work for a major airline and can attest to this tip for redirecting lost luggage. Place a copy of your itinerary--including contact info for where you're staying--inside your checked suitcase. If name and flight tags are missing, we'll still know where your bag needs to go.

— Michelle Keonig
Tagged
Planning
351258

If you're planning to use an ATM abroad, make sure the money you need is in your checking account, because some foreign ATMs don't allow access to savings accounts. And remember to carry your bank's local phone number with you; 800 numbers generally don't work overseas.

— Donna Johnson
Tagged
Car Rentals
368255

You won't always save by bringing the rental car back early. Alamo has an early-return policy at all of its locations, designed to discourage customers from returning cars early. If you show up at the lot a day or two ahead of schedule, Alamo will recalculate what you owe them at the daily rate; if it turns out to be less than what you would have paid for the week, they'll charge a $15 fee. Yet another reason to read the fine print on your contract carefully!

— Beth Ann Finster
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Cruises
373323

If you go directly from the air-conditioned ship out onto the open-air deck (which is usually warmer and more humid in most cruise destinations), your camera's lens is likely to fog up. Warm the camera with your cabin's hairdryer on a low setting or briefly leave it out on your balcony so it can acclimate to the weather.

— Martha and Ken Wiseman
Tagged
Air Travel
370289

If your flight is canceled, don't just wait patiently in line to be booked on another flight; call the airline's 800 number. They'll answer your call faster, and you won't be waiting with other stranded passengers from that flight. (Or cover all bases by calling while in line.)

— Karen LoPresto-Arbaugh
Tagged
Packing
351248

Shout Wipes take up very little space in your purse or backpack and are invaluable for treating stains. While traveling on an airplane, I gave one to a most grateful Italian after he spilled wine on his tie. Our friendship extended through customs, and we're now e-mail pals. Great stuff!

— Marilyn Rogers
Tagged
Technology
429291

Quotetravelinsurance.com gives you comparable details on more than one hundred travel-insurance plans, enabling you to make the best buy. It relies on ratings from insurance industry overseers such as A.M. Best and state insurance commissioners before allowing an insurance company into its extensive lineup.

— Marc Oppy
Tagged
Planning
355266

If you're traveling with someone, discuss a central meeting place in case you get separated. My husband and I were in Paris waiting to board the Metro. He was able to board the train, but I was left behind on the platform. Having a plan saved both time and needless anxiety.

— Marian Moss
Tagged
Shopping
378286

A company called Orikaso makes brightly colored polypropylene sheets that can be folded--kind of like origami--to form a dish, bowl, or cup. The sheets are lightweight and reusable, and you simply flatten them when you're finished. We found ours at a sporting goods store, but you can also buy them online. Check orikaso.com for retailers.

— Susan Day
Tagged
Planning
366293

You can suspend more than your newspaper when you're away. On several occasions, DirecTV has agreed to put my account on hold while I was traveling--without penalties, additional fees, reconnection charges, or the like. So, instead of a monthly bill of $65, mine gets prorated.

— Ed Clancy
Tagged
Hotels
455345

When I called to book a hotel room in Budapest, I was offered a rate of $75 per night. After I told the concierge that I was looking for a room in the $35 range, he agreed to the lower price without much fuss. It sometimes pays to barter.

— Julie Jensen

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