Heres where locals go for some of the best antiques in New Orleans.
Courtesy of Hidden South
You might already know Royal Street for antiques inNew Orleans.
The French Quarter blocks of this famed road have been celebrated for antiquities for centuries.

Credit:Courtesy of Hidden South
Inside shops like Keils Antiques, M. S. Rau, and Bevolo Gas, shopkeepers are also historians.
They know and keep the origin stories of clocks, sconces, divans, and estate jewelry.
Magazine Street is equally antique-heavy but with slightly more approachable prices and more recent eras.

Credit:Courtesy of Dop Antiques
In these neighborhoods, your adventuring is rewarded with great finds and possibly better prices.
Heres where to get off the tourist trail for antiques in New Orleans.
Our team cant wait to unveil whats arrived and connect each piece with just the right person.

Credit:Renaissance Interiors
You might want to drive 20 minutes from the French Quarter to Metairie.
Each month, if a piece does not sell, the price lowers by 20 percent.
The collection here would fit a traveling circus or vaudeville tent.

Credit:Stephen LoMonaco
Its somewhat of a strange museum dedicated to weird and wacky ephemera.
Folk art is housed in tiny cabinets, and taxidermy hangs from the ceiling.
Well be announcing more info about that as the project progresses.

Credit:Pauline Teel
Its about the story; no shop tells it better than Lucullus.
lucullusantiques.com, 915 Kentucky St, New Orleans, LA 70117