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My favourite fabric store just moved and had a grand re-opening a few days ago. I popped by the new store today and considering how fantastic the array there is, I think I managed to control myself pretty well.
I know I need to go back for some flocked polka dot jersey (yes, you read that right, jersey with flocked polka dots!) and I also want some trouser fabric for myself.
(Blogged - Link to blog can be found on my profile page.)
New today, jewelry for the wild-at-heart neopagan. Now available on the Marketplace or in our in-world Shangrilah Store.
Harvest Moon is a collaboration between Honey Heart, Phoenix Caro and Sillve Resident. The new store features clothing, accessories, and home and garden products for men and women who have a pagan spirit and a wild heart. We have a little of everything for the pagan, druid, witch, and fae amongst us, with gorgeous Bento-rigged wings, Sabbat jewelry, men's outfits for Signature and Aesthetic bodies and so much more.
Harvest Moon is a collaboration between Honey Heart, Phoenix Caro and Sillve Resident. The new store features clothing, accessories, and home and garden products for men and women who have a pagan spirit and a wild heart. We have a little of everything for the pagan, druid, witch, and fae amongst us, with gorgeous Bento-rigged wings, Sabbat jewelry, men's outfits for Signature and Aesthetic bodies and so much more.
Harvest Moon can be experienced in the Shangrilah region or by shopping our store on the Marketplace.
Our store in Shangrilah :
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Shangrilah/222/211/28
Our store on the Marketplace:
marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/148196
No longer a store As recall It is I think a restaurant now still there but a old building worth noting
For my occasional series "the changing face of Britain's High Street" and more recent series "Covid Times".
Some further store closures and how it affects Poole High Street.
Poole 12.10.2020
Elizabethtown, Ky - The Riders Department Store on the corner of West Dixie and Mulberry was first built as the S.J. Poston House, and then began business as a Funeral Parlor, and also served as a restaurant, general store, youth store, and candy store in its business history. Today, old, stuffy, costly clothes are sold there that no one would wear by choice. The Irony is thru-out its business history, they have come full circle with the customers they serve.
Taken in the picture store at The Castle Museum.
I'm fond of The Castle and go there often. It features occasionally in a recurring dream of mine where I get very lost (not hard to do) and find secret rooms.
So the couple of times I've had the chance to go in non-public rooms there it's the
oddest feeling.
Munnings doesn't do much for me, other than as an official curmudgeonly County Treasure (not unlike our own dear Colonel). But I've always loved this one
www.culturalmodes.norfolk.gov.uk/projects/nmaspub5.asp?pa... : 1925.105 : F You really have to click on the thumbnail to see it properly.
Seago i'm much fonder of.
Variopinte plates, Box 299 Taffys, ODLCO Boater's Keychain, Wabi Nabe Cast Iron Pot by Gabriel Hargrove, Trivet Runner by Michael Savona
Beales Department Store JE Beale PLC Flagship Store 36 Old Christchurch Road Bournemouth BH1 1LJ
Beales Department Stores is a story that began in 1881. In that year, John Elmes Beale (1847-1928) opened his Fancy Fair and Oriental House in Old Christchurch Road in Bournemouth, Dorset selling products and novelties that reflected the growing enthusiasm for Chinese and Japanese design. Born near Weymouth along the South Coast, J E Beale became a significant figure in the Bournemouth community – even serving as Mayor for three years between 1902 and 1904.
Beales remained a family business throughout the 20th century. John was succeeded by his son Bennett Beale and then by his grandson Frank. After studying at Oxford and LSE he left England to train at Macy’s in New York.
Upon his return, he bought some of this New York flair back to the UK, creating a department store that was synonymous with style and customer service. There was never a warmer welcome than a Beales welcome.
An unfortunate casualty of World War II, the original store in Bournemouth was bombed during an air raid. Never ones to be defeated, the Beales family developed a flagship store on the same site. By the late 1960s, the business had extended its reach to a number of towns in the south of England. Frank Beale died in 2001.
Frank was succeeded in the 1980s by Nigel Beale, the great-grandson of the founder. Nigel remains honorary president of the company even today.
In 1995 the business floated on the London stock exchange but has now returned to private ownership under Tony Brown
outside hiroshima about 25 kilometers north east, this store was on teh way to a friends.
I am enjoying the old balck and whites. I should get back to now though. Last one for a bit.
Old AG store at Red Oak II (SW Missouri)
www.redoakiimissouri.com/index/red-oak-ii-missoura/index....
This is a Downtown Plainfield store that's been here for ages. I remember years ago buying my photo magazines here.
I wanted to give this an eerie look as if the store was coming out of nowhere.
The Allans store in Collingwood. In 1938 a fire started in R N Allan's shop in Tasman Steet. Elsie May nee Allan , Katies grandmother, was preparing for her wedding and lost all her bridal effects. The only thing they saved was the piano. The store and Collingwoods public hall were destroyed. The rebuilt shop was a cafe more recently. Presently it is unoccupied and for lease.
Store bought superculture.
Dude, the only fringe you're living on is the type that comes from Toni & Guy.
"I've been feeling down
I've been looking round the town
For somebody just like me
But the only ones I see
Are the dummies in the window
They spend their money on clothes
It saddens me to think
That the only ones I see are mannequins
Looking stupid, being used and being thin"
Roslyn, WA / Cicely, AK - facing East. KBHR is in the large orange building at the right. The furthest left little brown house in the middle top of the picture is Maggie's house.
it was so exciting to just randomly find this store while strolling around.
www.hermanmiller.com/discover/tokyo-welcomes-the-herman-m...