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Oct 06, 2025

Hand-Pulled Noodles, Muay Thai and Mooncake Candles: Inside Brooklyn’s Mid-Autumn Fest

How four local artists turned a shared vision for the mid-Autumn festival into a thriving community for Asian Americans in New York.

By Corrie Aune

Friends play Mahjong, a traditional Chinese game, in the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest’s game room. Photo: Corrie Aune for Documented

When Rita Chan, Ben Chin, Fred Hua, and Justina Nguyen met four years ago, they quickly discovered they shared a vision for the Asian American creative community in New York City. 

“We realized there were so many Asian American creatives around us, and we’re all spread out in different parts of the industry,” Chin said. “So I wanted to create a space that brings us all together.”

Through this vision, the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest was born. 

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Each year the four organizers — Chin, Hua, Chan, and Nguyen — plan a gathering and artisan market for Asian American creatives in New York City to build community while enjoying food, art and performances together. The festival celebrates the Harvest Moon, one of the most significant holidays for Asian families each year. 

At this year’s Mid-Autumn Fest, hosted at Hana House this past weekend in Downtown Brooklyn on Oct. 4, local artists sold items like handmade zines, mooncake shaped candles and Filipino banana ketchup. Food vendors from across the city offered dishes like hand-pulled noodles, summer rolls and Indian mithai sweets. Outside, visitors took part in free Muay Thai classes and painting workshops. 

The festival is also a not-for-profit event, benefiting local charities each year. This year, all profits went towards Meals for Unity, an organization providing meals to the elderly across the city.

This was the third year of the festival and Chin expected the largest crowd yet. He also explained that the creative spirit of his fellow organizers and the artists they work with has given him hope, despite the political and cultural shifts since last year’s presidential election. 

“We’ve had to be really creative as we work with each other and fundraise,” Chin shared. “It’s easy to just throw your hands up and say, ‘Well, the world’s not for people like us anymore,’ and not do anything about it. But [at the festival] everyone’s energy is like, ‘Okay, how can we make this work? How can we do things differently? How can we help each other do this?’ It gives me a lot of hope for what we can keep building.”

Photos and text by Corrie Aune.

The Mid-Autumn Fest organizers, from left to right: Justina Nguyen, Ben Chin, Fred Hua, Rita Chan. Photo courtesy Kayla Nguyen.
Jessica Ng leads visitors in a free Muay Thai workshop outside the festival. Corrie Aune for Documented
Customers buy bowls of hand-pulled noodles from Very Fresh Noodles, a Chinese noodle shop located in Chelsea Market. Corrie Aune for Documented
Filipino theater artist Maria Camia performs a one-woman puppet show for the crowd.
Thai artist “Pam’s Universe” paints customers’ faces at the festival.
Staff members from Nhà Mình, a Queens-based Vietnamese Cafe, make fresh summer rolls.
Baby’s Buns and Buckets, a family-run, multi-generational Thai American fusion restaurant based in Brooklyn, offers chicken dishes and french fries at the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest.
Desserts from Bougette Culinary Studio are displayed on mirrors at the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest.
Filipino theater artist Maria Camia performs a one-woman puppet show for the crowd.
Tagmo, an Indian Mithai sweets shop, offers desserts like mango panna cotta and cardamom chocolate mousse.
Vendors sell art and clothing at the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest.
Airi Yamada, a Japanese nail artist, gives manicures at the festival.
Vivienne Leow, a Malaysian-born artist, helps customers make their own prints at her artist booth.
WE ARE CHIMMI, short for “We Are Children of Immigrants,” is an apparel brand founded by children of Asian American immigrants. At the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest, they sold items like bubble tea-shaped hair clips and ramen-shaped keychains.
Banana Ketchup, a Filipino condiment developed in the 1940’s, is sold at the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest by the brand Bad For Business.
Metic, a guitarist and music producer originally from Hong Kong, performs for a crowd at the NYC Mid-Autumn Fest in Brooklyn.

Update October 7, 2025: The piece has been updated to include a photo with all the founders pictured.

Corrie Aune
Corrie Aune is a Texas-raised, New York City-based photojournalist focusing on issues of immigration, religion, and local activism. Corrie holds a degree from Baylor University in journalism and poverty studies. She also holds a certificate from the International Center of Photography in visual journalism and is trained in trauma-informed storytelling.
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