Posts Tagged ‘shopping’

After Christmas Sales

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Dan and I just got back from our after Christmas sales shopping sprees. We went to our two favorite clothing stores in town. For me, it’s Orange Blossom, a wonderful women’s boutique with stylish clothes, great service, and great sales. For Dan, it’s The Town Squire, a traditional men’s clothing store conveniently located two doors down from Orange Blossom with high quality clothes and incredible customer service.  (They wrapped all of my Christmas presents for Dan when I shopped there before the holidays, which was such a time saver, and the presents looked so much better than anything I can do).

We are now past our one year mark for our unchained living experiment, but we have both vowed – to different degrees – to keep shopping unchained. So we decided to check out the after-Christmas sales at each of these clothing stores. We went our seperate ways to see what we could find.

Shopping in Orange Blossom is always a delight to the senses and so relaxing!

Shopping in Orange Blossom is always a delight to the senses and so relaxing!

Of course, one of the things we get asked the most is, “Don’t you spend more by not buying in places like T.J. Maxx, Target, or Marshall’s for your  clothes?  What I’ve found is that the answer is “yes” — and “no.” Usually, I wait until stores like Orange Blossom and The Town Squire have their sales, and then I’m paying the same as I would at a place like Target.The “yes, I pay more” is the times I’ve gone and splurged for a dress for our annual Gala — but it’s worth it to me because I know that I have a one-of-a-kind dress that no one else in the community will be wearing that night.

But to me there’s more than just the price of the clothes that have changed the way I do my shopping for clothing. I shop locally, usually during the sales, because:

  • I’m getting much higher quality clothes that will last much longer.
  • I’m not pawing through crowded racks in dirty, uncomfortable stores like T.J. Maxx or Marshall’s hoping to find something (usually trying on 20 items in a dingy fitting room just to find one that might fit, is still in good shape, or is still in style).
  • My shopping experience is extremely pleasant in a lovely store.
  • I have attentive and highly knowledgeable staff who are there helping me every step of the way to make sure I look good when I walk out the door, that the clothes fit, and that I have a great experience,
  • And –best of all — I’m keeping my dollars local.

So how did I do today? I found three things at Orange Blossom.

  • A pair  of $44 shorts that were marked down 75% to $11
  • A gorgeous rust colored pullover that went for $97 that was marked down 75% to $24.25
  • A fun (and warm) green sweater that went for $76 that was marked down 50% to $38
Pat Fuller, the Orange Blossom owner (in white) and her wonderful staff!

Pat Fuller, the Orange Blossom owner (in white) and her wonderful staff!

Total purchase before tax was $73.25. Pre-sale these three items would have cost me $217, so I saved a whopping $144! I feel I got a great deal on three high-quality items, had a great chat with the wonderful ladies at Orange Blossom, and now have some new clothes to show off.

So, how did Dan do? We have just begun shopping at Town Squire for Dan. During Christmas I purchased a pair of pajamas, a sweater on sale for $25 (marked down from $185), and two high-quality summer jerseys on sale also for $25 (marked down from $85). Dan really liked his purchases, but needed to return the pajamas which were too big. True to form, the customer service was great. Turns out that large bottoms had been inadvertently been put in with a medium top so they exchanged it and got him fixed up right away.

Today, Dan was looking for dressier pants to wear when we are going out and some new belts. The belts he bought weren’t on sale, but he found two nice ones. The pants he found were selling originally for $75 each, but get both both pair for $95. Dan’s savings included a $10 off coupon we had, so he saved $75. The pants are being hemmed now and one needs to be taken in a bit. The folks at The Town Squire do the alterations them selves, which costs less than the local seamstress we usually go to.

While I was waiting for Dan to try the pants on, I spoke with the owner, Larry McDaniel. Larry has owned the shop for 35 years — ever since he was 24! Now that’s amazing in this day and age. He’s technically been in the clothing business even longer, having worked in clothing stores since he was 14. Obviously this man knows men’s clothing, which is no doubt how he continues to stay in business when so many men are shopping in chains. I do know he does a booming business in tux rentals for proms, weddings, and formal occasions.

You probably have a few locally owned clothing stores in your town — either one’s like The Town Squire, which have been around forever, or like the Orange Blossom, which might be a few years old or new. Please be sure to consider shopping there. If you’re looking for deals, watch for when your independently owned stores have sales. You will be pleasantly surprised that your local stores can match the prices of the discount stores –  but beat the discount stores every day on quality, costumer service, and ease of shopping.

And you will keep your money in your town helping local people instead sending it somewhere far away to be banked by the faceless corporate executives who run the local big box stores in your town.

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The True Meaning of Christmas

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

It’s almost Christmas and Dan and I have NOT succumbed to the shopping frenzy. But that’s really not new this year for us – we have never indulged in the Christmas shopping frenzy that has taken over America. We have always exchanged a few Christmas gifts depending on our economic status of the time, which usually isn’t much since I work in the non-profit world!

And last night as we were talking about exchanging presents we asked each other what we’d given each other last year. We couldn’t remember! Can you remember what you gave as a Christmas gift to your spouse or family members or received from them last year? Chances are the answer is no, and your unremembered gift is languishing in a corner somewhere. Or perhaps you returned it to get something else.

This year, since we are shopping unchained, my whole take on Christmas has altered even further as I continue to think more deeply about the meaning of Christmas.

Barn & Co., on Cape Cod

Barn & Co., on Cape Cod

While we were in Cape Cod before Thanksgiving, Dan purchased a nice $25 blouse for me from a very cool gift store in Dennis, The Barn & Co. He’s promised to buy me a few of my favorite mystery books at the used book store in Chattanooga, McKay Used Books. And other then that there might be a few stocking stuffers that I don’t know about.

McKay's new store in Chattanooga

McKay's new store in Chattanooga

For him, I’m knitting a scarf (half way through – yikes!) in a wonderful yarn he picked out. And I have a few small surprises I can’t divulge as he will be reading this post. Total spent by each of us – well under $100 each.

So here’s the thing I was thinking about on the way home from work yesterday – and stick with me even if you aren’t into the whole Jesus thing. Because even if you’re not, let’s face it, Christmas is supposed to be about the joy of giving to those you love — in the spirit of Jesus or whatever spiritual tradition you believe in.

The Three Wise Men by Hans Memling

The Three Wise Men by Hans Memling

Ok – let’s review what Jesus got for Christmas (at his birth). Three Wise Men show up with three gifts. Not, thirty mind you. Just three. So how is it suddenly we feel as Americans that we need to give each other (mainly our kids) so many gifts? Well, of course that’s where the mass media comes in telling us we MUST have those gifts or we are not cool, hip, in, or happy.

Maybe we should reconsider and go back to the original idea of giving three gifts?

Now these gifts were pretty expensive items for the time: Gold, Frankincense, and Myrr. They were nothing to sneeze at. But here’s the thing. Whatever happens to those gifts? I racked my brain, but I never read about these three gifts again in the Bible. And I’m pretty sure Mary and Joseph raised Jesus as a normal son of a carpenter with no special privileges of wealth.

So what DID Mary and Joseph do with those gifts?

You don’t hear about Joseph’s cashing them in so Mary can get a big diamond ring to show off back in Nazareth to hush up the gossiping neighbors about her early pregnancy. You don’t hear about a vacation beach-side condo so they can get away when the carpentry business gets to be too stressful. Nor do you hear about a college fund for baby Jesus so when he grows up he can better himself.

My guess? Mary and Joseph being good, devout Jews, sold the goods and give the proceeds to charity to thank God for the gift of their son.

Animal Shelters need your donations!

Animal Shelters need your donations!

Mmmmmm – giving donations to others in need during Christmas? Cool idea — and one I am going to follow this year!

Here’s some suggestions in case you might need them:

  • Your local homeless shelter.
  • Your local no-kill animal shelter.
  • Your local soup kitchen.
  • Your local food bank.
  • Your local museum or cultural organization. (My favorite place to donate to!)

It is truly wonderful to share your love by giving a gift to someone during the holidays. But I think it’s time we thought about why we give gifts, how we give gifts, and where we purchase the gifts. I hope you bought at least some of your gifts at independent stores this season!

And I hope you and your family have a wonderful holidays – no matter what tradition you celebrate!

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Subversive Shopping – Or How to not buy from Corporate America

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

As our year of living without chains has progressed, I’ve become equally disenchanted with corporate America and the mass quantity of goods they are foisting on us with the hopes that we will continue this vicious cycle of needless consumption that has taken over America. And of course this is now on my mind more than ever due to the Christmas season.

While it may seem crazy and hopeless for one person to go up against corporate America, in fact we do have a great deal of power through the purchases we make each day to change the face of America. The website Reclaim Democracy.org is a great place to find information on things you can do as a citizen to make changes now.

For me, it’s starting small with how we shop – unchained of course. But also, in cooking our food from scratch and not buying processed foods. Purchasing our food directly from the farmer from farmer’s markets. And it has meant that I’ve started buying as many household products as possible that are handmade by crafters, rather than those made by big corporations like Dial or Procter and Gamble. Not only am I supporting a crafter who is working from home, but the product I receive has less packaging and therefore less waste that will end up in a landfill.

The first product I stopped buying from corporate America was our laundry detergent. I’d read in magazines a great recipe for making your own laundry soap recipe at home (and found some on-line here), bought all the ingredients, and made some, but really didn’t like the results too much. And besides, I really don’t have time to make my own homemade laundry soap! So, I decided I would try buying some from a crafter on Etsy. There are lots of crafters making homemade laundry soap on Etsy. I picked one that seemed the most natural and had the least amount of packaging.

Minimal packaging powdered laundry soap!

Minimal packaging powdered laundry soap!

I purchase it from a crafter whose business is Shower Treat Soap made in Scotts, Michigan. If you’re not familiar with Etsy just think of it as a giant craft show right in your back yard. Now, how does this fit into our year of shopping locally in unchained stores? Well, it doesn’t. It’s absolutely true, I’m buying my homemade laundry soap from someone who is based in Michigan. But Laura IS a home-based crafter who is producing awesome, totally natural products with minimum packaging that is not harming the environment or my body. So I decided that I’d rather buy her laundry soap, than support the big company that makes Purex – Dial.

To me this is VERY subversive shopping. Let’s cut out corporate America and buy the products we need from local crafters. There are so many of them at your local craft shows, co-ops, and on Etsy selling their wares, why not? You’re supporting a local crafter, helping the environment by buying an ecologically better item and one with less packaging, and you’re cutting out corporate America all together. Yippee!

Here’s an example of how much better the product I’m buying is as far as ingredients. This is the laundry soap comparison:

Natural Laundry Soap (Unscented) Purex
Vegan cold process soap Alcohols, C12-16, ethoxylated (Isureth-4)
Sodium carbonate Sodium carbonate
Sodium borate Benzenesulfonic acid, C10-C16-alkyl derivatives
Sodium Laureth Sulfate (bad for you & the environment!)

Heck, I don’t know what that stuff is in the Purex. It’s not listed on the bottle. I had to hunt hard on the internet to find the ingredients, but I do know it looks pretty scary.

How does Shower Treat Soap’s Natural Laundry Soap work on my laundry? Great. I love how it cleans our clothes.

Super great shampoo

Super great homemade shampoo

What else am I purchasing? Homemade shampoo and conditioner from Joyful Girl Naturals. These are great products that make my dry, coarse hair feel so silky smooth! And best of all they have only natural ingredients so have been excellent for my problem scalp. I couldn’t even begin to list the ingredients in my old conditioner they were so long, so complicated and so tiny on the bottle I needed a magnifying glass to try and read them. The ingredients in my conditioner from Joyful Girl are all natural oils and herbs. Safe, safe, safe. Sharon makes each batch from scratch when you order it so its super fresh as well.

I’ve also ordered my kitchen pump hand soap and homemade lip balm from her which I love. I’ve just put in an order for two new products from her – dishwasher soap which I’m very anxious to try and skin toner.

Yummy Good Fortune Soap!

Yummy Good Fortune Soap!

Homemade soap is by far the easiest household item you can buy locally by a crafter. We sell some great handmade soap at our Museum Store by Good Fortune , which is made locally here in Southeast Tennessee just a few towns north of Cleveland. Jennifer Jack, the owner, makes awesome soap which Dan and I love to use. It comes in yummy scents, in beautifully prepared long-lasting bars. She also sells lip balms, moisterisers, shea butter, room sprays, and so much more. We have a hard time keeping her items in stock in the Museum Store!

Crone soapAnd I also recently discovered at a local craft fair, Soaps by Jan. Jan makes all natural homemade soaps with herbs she grows herself. The one I’m using right now is Crone’s Ocean. I loved the smell and the name as I just turned 50 and am now officially a Crone.

So, you can see I’m slowly trying to replace as much of my household products as possible with those made by crafters. It’s my small way of cutting out corporate America in favor of shopping with local crafters.

Let me know of any handmade products you might use from local crafters. I’ll be interested to know.

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Shop Local – Support Cleveland’s Montessori Kinder

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Kinder 2Wow! What a great concept. Between the dates of November 14 and November 21 if you shop  at the following locally owned stores in Cleveland you will not only get a discount on your purchase, but that discounted amount will be donated by the store to Montessori Kinder International School! Awesome! We all know how important it is buying local.  Your money stays in the community, rather than going to corporate headquarters. You’re keeping local people you know in business. And in this instance you’re supporting a local charity through your shopping. Buying local is the way to go.

Brigitta culture campNow I know first hand what great work our local Montessori does for children. This summer, the Museum Center where I work co-hosted a week-long Culture Camp with the local Mosaic Center and the folks who run the Montessori School. It was a wonderful week of cultural immersion of the fifty some children who attended. They learned the languages, foods, and customs of many countries in such a wonderfully supportive learning environment. And that is what Montessori is all about.

MontessoriSo now is your chance to help the local Montessori, support local businesses, and get a discount in the process. I’m there! Check out these great stores that are part of the Shop Local campaign!

To get your discount simply mention you wish to support the Cleveland Montessori and sign the merchant form at checkout. That’s all you have to do to shop local!
Shop Local Merchant’s List:

  • The Wild Bird Center: 15% seed/20% Other
  • The Wellness Store: 20% off reg.price items and gift certificates
  • Creative Customs: 10%
  • Scott’s Bicycle: 3-5%
  • Café Roma Gift Certificate: $10 for $50 & $20 for $100
  • The Bald Headed Bistro: Gift Certificates $20 for $100 & $50 for $200
  • Perry’s Petals: 15%
  • Capital Tires: $5 per tire michelin/ bf goodrich brands
  • Stamper’s Furniture: 5%
  • Happy Tails: $5 of Gift Certificate, 15%
  • Orange Blossom Boutique: 10%
  • Paisleys: 20%
  • Guppies: 20%
  • Studio D: 10%
  • Annabelle Ink: 10%
  • Caldwell Paving: negotiated at time of contract
  • Accent Mark: 10%
  • Berrywood Aesthetics: 10%
  • Tako Yaki Restaurant: min. 15%
  • Your Kids Closet: tba
  • Baskin Robbins Ice Cream: min. 10%
  • Yummy Restaurant: 35%
  • Season’s Harvest Market tba
  • Southern Traditions: tba
  • Carrie Workman Photography: 50% of sessions fee booked 11/14 – 11/21
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How local can you go with your meat?

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Very! Prior to a few months ago, buying locally grown meat was something I never knew or even thought about.

Free range chickens

Free-Range Chickens

But now I do. Why? First off, after reading Fast Food Nation and now my current book, Omnivore’s Dilemma, I am so much more aware about the meat processing industry in America. These two books were such eye openers for me, and I encourage you to read them. You will never look at your meat the same way again.

How Our Meat Processing Got This Way

How did our meat processing get this way? Nixon is our first culprit because the change in how meat is processed began with him. We should have known that that man had more up his sleeve than spying on the Democrats and then lying about it. Thanks to his policy on agriculture, we suddenly were flooded with lots and lots of cheap corn that we needed to do something with.

Today we consume corn in every product we eat, including our beef and chicken! If you haven’t noticed, cows graze on grass. But now they are fed corn, which is the reason why we need to inject these animals with antibiotics — because their bodies are not made to process corn. Cows are also fed other animal by-products as well, which also compromises their health.

800px-Feedlot-1

Mid-West Feed Lot

McDonald’s is our second culprit. In their quest for cheap fast food, they helped create a slaughter industry that herds cows into feed lots to eat the cheap corn and animal waste. McDonald’s purchases the sickest and weakest cows because they are the cheapest. Then those cows are slaughtered as fast as possible in unsanitary and unsafe (for the workers) conditions in a few slaughter houses based in the mid-west.

These slaughter houses are horrific places to work for the mainly Hispanic workers, many of whom are illegal. These workers, who often are maimed or disabled on the job, have no access to health care, workman’s comp, or disability. And all these problems have developed just so we can feast on low-cost meat that has a high chance of having E Coli because of the unsanitary conditions in the feedlots and the slaughterhouses.

Well, gee, after reading that, I just didn’t want to run down to the grocery store to buy some meat. Nor did I want to buy it at a restaurant. So, I’ve been mainly eating vegetarian for the past few month or so.

Then the 5ive Points Market opened every Thursday afternoon at our museum — and I discovered three local farms that are selling organic, grain-fed meat raised in a sustainable manner! Yippee!

River Ridge Farms

I know these are chickens! But the River Ridge Farm website doesn't have photos and all I could find were these from a blog about their cows!

I know these are chickens! But the River Ridge Farm website doesn't have photos and all I could find were these from a blog about their cows!

This week, we feasted on grilled chicken breast from River Ridge Farms which is located in Ten Mile, Tennessee in Meigs County. Yumee!

Tender and fresh, these breasts had a delightful taste. According to River Ridge Farms’ literature, their “juicy and delicious chicken is raised in protected pens right on the green grass of our pastures. The birds are moved to fresh pasture daily to supplement their all-natural certified organic diet. Our certified organic feed is hormone and anti-biotic free.”

Yes, we paid more for this chicken — $12.75 per pound for a split breast with the bone in. But the price was worth it to us.

River Ridge also sells grass-fed beef, pork, eggs, and turkey. They also produce honey and sell cut flowers. And then there are their vegetables! Oh my, we have had some wonderful veggies from them. One week we gorged ourselves on their heirloom tomatoes. I think I picked out 10 different varieties and Dan and I had a different one each night. Exquisite!

David the owner milking one of their cows

Co-Owner David Waters Milking One of Their Cows

The owners are Dave and Verlinda Waters, and they sell their products at the following:

  • Wednesdays: Chattanooga, Main Farmers Market, 4:00-6:00 p.m.
  • Thursdays: Cleveland, 5ive Points Market, 4:00-7:00 p.m.
  • Fridays: Ten Mile, at their farm, 4:00-6:00 p.m.
  • Saturdays: Knoxville, Market Square Farmers Market, 9:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

All of their animals products are USDA inspected.

Homestead Beef

Happy cows at Homestead Beef Farm in Rhea County

Happy Cows at Homestead Beef Farm in Rhea County

Homestead Beef in Sale Creek, Tennessee is another local vendor that comes to our Five Points Market. We haven’t purchased beef yet from them. I’m not a super big beef eater even before I began reading about the US meat industry. I’ll eat ground beef, but that’s about it. But we did purchase their breakfast sausage at $6.25 per pound. It was very good, with a wonderful flavor that was not too spicy — but did have a bit of a bite to it. They have been located in Rhea County since 1987. Their beef is USDA inspected, grass fed with no added hormones or antibiotics and is pasture raised.

Humberd’s Beef

New to the beef scene is Humberd’s Beef with owner Kelly Humberd right here in Bradley County. We purchased some frozen ground beef from Kelly which we haven’t used yet. Kelly grass feeds her beef until the end, when she finishes them off with corn. The beef is slaughtered locally at R & D Custom Slaughtering in Dunlap. I’ll report soon on how the beef tastes.

There are lots of other meat producers who sell at the Chattanooga markets. Its just that these three happen to be in my backyard at the Museum, so buying from them is convenient.

Reducing Your Carbon Footprint

I walk out my door at work to the Five Points Market - literally! Yes, I am totally spoiled. Thank you Main Street for coming up with this nifty idea!

I walk out my door at work to the Five Points Market - literally! Yes, I am totally spoiled. Thank you Main Street for coming up with this nifty idea!

Besides supporting the local economy, another reason why it’s important for me to buy locally is because my shopping local is helping to reduce the carbon footprint. The meat I’m buying is not being transported first from the farmer to the feedlot to the slaughterhouse to the grocery store and finally by me to my home. That’s a lot of petroleum — which doesn’t take into account all the petroleum used to grow the corn to feed these cows!

Instead of creating a huge carbon footprint, these local farmers are transporting their meats a short distance to the Farmers Market. And as for me, I’m literally walking out the door of my work (I know how sweet that is!), making my purchase, and driving home. Since the animals are raised on the grass that grows in pastures, there is no cultivation by tractors needed to feed them. This lack of machinery further reduced the amount of petroleum used.

This way of shopping is truly better for me, for the farmer who isn’t using chemicals, and for the environment!

Please drop me a comment if you eat grass fed beef, chicken, or pork and tell me about your experiences! I would love to hear about them.

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Shopping in Chains – Cheap or Not Cheap?

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

For the most part, I find it easy living the unchained life. It’s hard to believe its been seven months since we started in January!

One of the things people ask me is “don’t you find it expensive?” They are of, course, referring to the fact that I’m not shopping at the discount stores like WalMart, Target, Big Lots, TJ Max, Tuesday Morning, etc., that have taken over our society and ingrained into our brains that if we don’t get it cheap – and I mean really cheap – we are throwing our money away.

Cooke's Food Stoore

Cooke's Food Stoore

It is true that now that we are buying our groceries at our small locally owned grocery store Cooke’s, and at three organic and speciality stores Greenlife, Season’s Harvest, and Abundant Living we are paying a bit more for groceries. But what I have found is that what I now call my “stupid spending” has completely stopped.

And it was that needless spending on things I didn’t need right after last Christmas that made me want to try this unchained experiment. What happened was this: I went on a spending spree buying a bunch of Christmas ornaments and other items that were on sale after the holidays “just because they were incredibly cheap.” When I got them home and had them all piled up I felt sick. I didn’t need any of them. We hardly decorate the house, we don’t entertain, why did I need these cheap made-in-China ornaments anyway?

I got caught up in the frenzy of shopping that Dan sees all the time since he works for one of those major big box discount clothing stores in Chattanooga. Women (sorry, but we are the guilty ones) come laden to the checkout counter with armloads of “stuff” and Dan rings up hundreds of dollars worth of purchases. Can their homes really contain all this stuff? Will it really make them happy? Where will it all go when they tire of it? How much wood and petroleum and other resources, including cheap human resources, went into producing this useless stuff?

Smallmart-Cover-LGMy theory about this type of spending was recently confirmed in Michael H. Shuman’s book, The Small-Mart Revolution. This book looks at how consumers, investors, policymakers, and organizers can revitalize their communities by supporting local businesses. He begins the book by recalling his annual trip to WalMart to buy $15 sneakers. He leaves WalMart $275 later having bought cereal, cookies, batteries, toys for his children, a lamp, a chair, two books, an extension cord, a file box, drink glasses, Tide, Advil and Aleve. Much of it either broke, didn’t work, or was never used. How many times have you done this. I’m totally guilty!

A quick purusal of my check book shows that while I’m still purchasing things – some discounted window treatments for our guest room that we’ve needed for 2 years purchased yesterday from the new store, Nancy’s Home Fashion, on Ocoee Street – they are few and far between.

But if you really feel the need to shop for your home there is a unique solution. Buy gently used items from the antique malls that every community now has. These malls now have more than just true antiques. Many of the items are not particularly old, but are decorator items that need a new, good home. And they are usually priced very reasonably and are very well made.

An example is the furniture that was made from the early 1930s up through the 1960s. There is some very stylish furniture to be found in antique stores that is made from REAL wood, not particle board like the cheap furniture you buy today. Dan and I have our whole house filled with our parents’ family furniture dating from the 1910s through the 1960s. Its beautiful, high quality furniture that has withstood many families! Particle board won’t do that.

Relics

Relics

There are three nice antique malls and one antique store in Cleveland. My favorite is Relics located on Candies Lane. Laura is the friendly and very knowledgeable owner. The antiques are great at Relics and so artfully displayed in attractive decorator settings. The items are of a higher quality than you see at many antique malls, but you will definitely find things in a range of prices to suit everyone.

On my most recent visit I picked up two items for the Museum Center where I work – a 1950s piece of tourism memorabilia from Cleveland and a local history book. In the past, Dan and I have purchased a whole set of 19th century Victorian calling cards which we have placed around the home. They are lovely conversation pieces!

Antiques Parlour

Antiques Parlour

Another nice antique mall is The Antiques Parlor on Grove Avenue. They have interesting items throughout the store. Also nice, is next door is a decent used book store, Lee’s Used Books. I buy my two favorite mystery series books there, the Aunt Dimity Series and the Maggie Sefton Knitting Mystery Books when I can find them there used. We also buy our used DVDs there since we no longer go to Blockbuster. (Ouch! Yes, that has been one of the hardest parts of living unchained. We now get our DVDs either from the Cleveland Public Library or purchased used through used bookstores. So, consequently we don’t watch many new release DVDs. )

Interior at Antiques Parlour

Interior at Antiques Parlour

There are two other antiques stores in town which I don’t have photos of.

Mora’s Antiques on Georgetown Road and Presswood’s Vintage Antiques on Keith Street.

To sum up, as we continue our unchained shopping experience, I have found that I am no longer spending money on things I don’t need. Each purchase I make is thought about carefully. I have a beautiful home filled with lovely things. I don’t need more things in my life. The latest gadget for the kitchen, designer outfit, or hot new trend for my home will not fill some empty void in my life and make me happier if I buy it. What it will do if I purchase it is drain my wallet, drain the earth’s resources, and end up at some point in a landfill creating more pollution. I’d much rather buy what I need from a non-chain store, a resale clothing store, or an antique store. I’m helping my wallet, the environment, and the local economy!

I’d love to hear your thoughts about your own shopping experiences. Drop me a comment in my blog!

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Shopping Local at the 5 Points Farmers Market

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

It’s not everyday that you can say that your work and your personal life completely converge, but yesterday that happened for me when the 5 Points Market was launched at the Museum Center at 5ive Points here in Cleveland, TN.

It’s also not often that a history museum gets to be the site of a farmers market. But thanks to our great downtown location and the fact that we work hand-in-hand with our Main Street towards downtown revitalization, we were happy to offer our site when Main Street requested it.

At 3:00 p.m. the farmers and crafters started rolling in to set up their booths in our parking lot and in our back lawn area. For our first-time event, the farmers market had a great selection of vendors come to sell.

Among the things I could buy were:

  • Vegetables (many of them organic)
  • Grass-fed beef from two local vendors
  • Fruits
  • Locally made crafts
  • Beautiful cut flowers.

Shopping at the Greenway Table booth

Shopping at the Greenway Table booth

The Greenway Table was there. I’m very excited about this The Greenway Table, which was started by an energetic young woman named Jennifer Norton. Jennifer’s goal is to teach about sustainable agriculture and to use the organization’s produce to help feed those in need in Cleveland and to sell the remainder at Farmers Markets. She’s off to a great start, and I purchased quite a few veggies from them!

The Lavendar Kitty

The Lavendar Kitty

One of the craft vendors I purchased from was Kathy’s The Lavender Kitty. Kathy is a museum board member, my good friend, and the wonderful real estate agent who sold Dan and me our house. She grows lavender on her property and makes wonderful bath products with it. I purchased lavender hand scrub and bath tea, as well as delicious lavender cookies and refreshing lavender lemonade. Yum! All lovingly made by this talented woman.

Barbara Krasman - that umbrella will come in handy later!

Barbara Krasman - that umbrella will come in handy later!

Although I didn’t buy anything from Barbara Krasman, I do want to mention her. She is one of the vendors whose lovely line of handmade jewelry we carry in the Museum Store . I’ve written about our incredible store before, but it bears repeating. Everything in it is handmade by local crafters and artists who live within a 200-mile-radius of Cleveland. We think we are the only Musmum store in the country that has this model for selling and it’s a great one. We support local artists, rather than mass-produced items from China. Isn’t this what museum stores should be about?

Something to cool you down

Something to cool you down

We had two food vendors – the flavored ice couple Daily’s Delights and the Hot Dog Man who can always be found down at the Courthouse Square.

Clover Wreath Farm selling organic and heirloom veggies!

Clover Wreath Farm selling organic and heirloom veggies!

One of my most exciting finds was Clover Wreath Farm, a sustainable organic CSA farm right here in Cleveland and not too far from our house! Who knew!

I purchased some heirloom tomatoes and squash from the owner, who is pictured here, but really didn’t speak much to her. Tonight I checked out their very cool website, which has great links and lots of helpful information about why you want to eat organic, eat grass fed meat, shop local, etc. All very helpful to me right now, which I’ll explain in a minute.

My final purchase was from Humberd Beef. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a photo of Kelly Humberd, one of the owners, but I’m glad we found her. She and her family are just starting to raise grass-fed beef on their family farm. They process the meat at R & D Custom Slaughtering in Dunlap, TN. Neither Dan nor I eat red meat except for hamburger meat. We mainly eat chicken and fish. But, after last night, I’m completely changing my eating habits.

fast_food_nationI’m reading Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the all-American Meal by Eric Scholsser. The book came out in 2001 and was followed by a movie in 2006. Dan gave up fast food quite a while ago and I gave it up again in January for our unchained experiment. We did it mainly with the intent of not supporting businesses outside of our community. When you eat in a fast food restaurant, much of what you spend goes to corporate headquarters far away from your town, whereas if you eat in a locally-owned restaurant, the majority of your money stays local.

But after reading the chapters entitled “The Most Dangerous Job” and “What’s In Your Meat,” I will never buy or eat red meat that is not grass-fed and locally produced again. For those of you who purchase your red meat at the grocery store, not only is it filled with – sorry if this offends anyone – animal shit (which is why E Coli is continually breaking out), but the slaughter houses are horrible places for the people who work these low paying and incredibly dangerous jobs.

Thanks to the fast food industry, the big industrial slaughter houses in the rural Midwest are churning out processed beef as fast as they can so that our health is being jeapordized with the meat and the health and well-being of the people who are forced to work these wretched jobs areis being ruined. If you don’t have time to read the book, at least read through the link that summarized the book above.

You can choose to ignore this information as well, like my co-workers who “didn’t want to hear about it.” But making informed food choices about what goes into your body seems more and more important these days when chemicals, hormones, and God only knows what else are being dumped into our food supply. I want to know — and need to know — what I’m eating. Thanks to my unchained way of life, I’ll be making better decisions that will help not only me, but my community and the planet.

So, thanks Main Street for coming up with the idea of the 5 Points Market!

Please let me know if you have local farmers markets or local meat suppliers you’d like to tell us about! We want to share the information with our readers.

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Unchained Weekend – from Teennessee to New York 18th-century style

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Dan and I spent a long weekend in Ticonderoga, New York visiting my former place of employment, Fort Ticonderoga, for their annual Grand Encampment of the French & Indian War. This annual two-day event is the largest French & Indian War reenactment in the country and usually draws around 1,000 reenactors for the weekend and well over 2,000 visitors to the site.

We really miss the encampment so we thought it would be fun to go back, especially since I wouldn’t have to work it! So we loaded up our car with our 18th-century clothes and gear and headed north for the 1,000-mile drive. If you want to read about where we ate along the way check out Dan’s blog.

I’m going to tell you instead about a non-chain shopping experience with a twist. A way you can support local craftspeople and mom and pop vendors while shopping 18th-century style!

The new Magasin du Roi

The new Magasin du Roi

If you’ve never been to a reenactment, a typical day for a 21st-century visitor to Fort Ticonderoga can consist of any of the following: touring the Fort and its museum, touring the military camp and talking to the men, women, and children as they do their daily activities,

British forces firing on the French

British forces firing on the French

watching a battle between the French and their Native American allies vs the British and their American Colonial forces, eating in the Fort’s Log House restaurant, or shopping among the perhaps 50 or so sutlers in what is called “Sutlers’ Row.”

Sutlers are vendors who come with 18th-century style tents that they set up and fill with all sorts of period-correct goodies you can purchase to take home with you. Some of the vendors sell things only a reenactor might want. These people tend to be the clothing vendors, but it’s fun to go in and look! Whether you watch an 18th-century lady get fitted for her stays (modestly of course wearing them over her chemise!) or for her newest frock, or a man trying on his new britches ,it can be quite spectacular.

Goodwife Spikerman makes the final adjustment

Goodwife Spikerman makes the final adjustment

Here’s a photo of Dan getting some final touches on his green silk waist coat made by Goodwife Spickerman. Dan waited several years for her to complete this magnificent coat — and it was well worth the wait. He received many compliments on the coat and many people stopped us for photos!

chocolate_pot1However, anyone can make awesome purchases in Sutlers’ Row. Here’s some neat finds you might find enjoyable. Smiling Fox Forge is always at the Encampment and this is a lovely pewter Chocolate Pot that would look lovely in a dining room.

nestingsetOr if you love copper, check out Westminster Forge, where for 25 years they have been making their own beautiful copperware that anyone would be proud to have in their home. We have several of their pieces and they are exquisite! These works of art are heirlooms you will want to pass down in the family!

Three of our favorite sutlers were not at the Fort – in fact two of them don’t travel any more. But you can still purchase their exquisite items on-line so I wanted to mention these vendors. We became friendly with all three, which is what happens when you shop non-chains. And let’s face it, shopping in a canvas tent with someone wearing 18th-century clothing is about as non-chain as you’re going to get!

The Trunk Shoppe is owned by Katie and Steve Freede, and they make, of course, trunks. Oh my, the most beautiful trunks! Trunks you just want to curl up inside and take naps in (except they are kind of small). Here’s a lovely carriage trunk so wonderfully made.

carriage-trunk Talk about heirloom! We loved when Katie and Steve came to the encampment too. They were tons of fun. Here’s the Goodwife introducing her Mastercraftsman husband.

Goodwife Katie and Mastercraftsman Steve

Goodwife Katie and Mastercraftsman Steve

Deb's Reverse Glass Painting of a Highlander!

Deb's Reverse Glass Painting of a Highlander!

Debi and Cleon Grover own Historical Reproductions. They are wonderful people who share their love of 18th-century history, art, and swordsmanship with everyone. Deb is a wonderful folk artist and has been frequently named to the Early American Life artisan directory. You can see her painting’s better here. She is known for her reverse painting on glass which is a technique that is very hard to accomplish. Cleon makes reproduction swords and they both demo sword fighting and fencing, which is fascinating to watch if you are lucky enough to get to see it.

Finally, I would be remiss if I did not include my dressmakers, who, alas, do not travel much anymore. And again, unless you are a reenactor, it’s doubtful you would make a purchase in their establishment. But The Silly Sisters have been too good to me to not include them. Their clothing is carefully researched and documented and beautifully sewn. I am always dressed head to toe in Silly Sisters clothing.

Goodwife Anne and Goodwife Lisa at Fort Ticonderoga

Goodwife Anne and Goodwife Lisa at Fort Ticonderoga

Here I am at Fort Ti with my good friend Mistress Anne (I’m in the black hat). I’m sporting a Silly Sister short gown, petticoat (no that’s not my undergarment), shift (yes, that’s my undergarment) apron, modesty piece, mob cap, and stays. New black hat from Williamsburg. (Here’s a great link that illustrates a woman getting dressed step by step 18th-century style that shows all these layers of cloths and how they should be worn. )

So next time you see a reenactment advertised in your neck of the woods, whether it be a Revolutionary War, Civil War, or French & Indian War one, go check it out and shop Sutlers’ Row for some unusual non-chain purchases while supporting mom and pop vendors and crafters.

Please let me know if you already are a reenactment shopper. Tell us about your experiences – we want to know!

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Crafters Should Rule the World – the Shopping World That Is!

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

A few weeks ago I went with a group from the Museum Center at 5ive Points where I work to the John C. Campbell Folk School in Murphy, NC. We went to get a behind-the-scenes tour from their awesome Potter-In-Residence, Michael Lalone. The Folk School is a great place to go and spend a week or week-end learning a craft from a teacher, but its also a wonderful place to shop.

We ended our fun day in their craft shop. As I was browsing through the shop I was reminded how crafters can provide many of the necessities of our everyday life. When you buy a piece that is handmade by a crafts person I think you are getting double good points! Not only are you shopping locally, but you are helping support an artist.

Because our Museum Center’s store only sells the work of crafts people who live within a 200-mile radius of Cleveland, TN, I have had the pleasure of getting to know many of these folks. In all but a few exceptions, they have other jobs to make ends meet, or they struggle financially. But they love their work and are dedicated to what they do. They deserve our support. I’d much rather buy a handmade basket that will appreciate in value and that shows the love and workmanship of the maker such as these works by Ken and Kathleen Dalton, than a basket made in China!daltonmontage1

One of my long held fantasies is to be able to afford to buy everything, and I mean everything, from crafters. Could this be done? While its not exactly buying things local, I used the very cool website Etsy to see if I could achieve my fantasy in getting my morning routine done.

Here’s what I found:

Soap – yep! shampoo

Shampoo – yep!

Conditioner – yep!

Toothpaste – yep, but not sure I’m up to using it…..!

Deodorant – yep!

Hair brush – awesome and yep! hair-brush

Makeup – yep!

Organic crocheted washcloth – yep!

Bath Towels - yep, at least decorated by a crafter (not my style though!).

OK, I’m pretty much through with my morning routine. Maybe the toilet paper isn’t hand crafted, but of course I could find the toilet paper holder on Etsy. And I did find what I thought was the ugliest just for fun! skunk

It would take a lot of work to do this on a daily basis until you found the vendors you liked, but it was also a lot of fun to see all the amazing things that average, and not so average, people are making out there on Etsy. Check it out and think about buying your every day essentials from a small-scale home crafter. They are selling these items at your local craft shows as well! It will boost the economy in ways you never even thought about and you will get to try some amazing new stuff!

Please let me know if you buy locally made essentials from your area crafters!

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What Not To Wear

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

When I tell a certain type of women that I’m not shopping in chains for a year, I often get a look that is a cross between horror and panic. Let’s face it – many women like to shop for clothes. It’s what keeps our economy going — or at least that what we’ve been told. Sorry, I’m not “buying” into it.

Don’t get me wrong. I love clothes! But I hate to spend lots of money on clothes, I don’t think I need tons and tons of clothes, and for probably the last ten years or so, I’ve been buying a good portion of my clothes used in re-sales shops and on Ebay. No one has signed me up yet for What Not to Wear so I guess I’m doing ok.

Since moving to Cleveland and taking a job as director of a city history museum, I do feel — and need –to dress up more often. So from time to time, I buy new clothes from a local boutique called The Orange Blossom. Pat Fuller and her staff always make me feel so welcome and special. They help me pick out just the right outfit for big events like our annual gala. To help out my budget, I almost always wait for their special sales to buy my clothes. I’ve purchased some wonderful pieces from them that will last a long time.

This Saturday, I hit a few of the local resale shops to see what was around for summer clothes. Here’s my haul for the day.

Among my purchases were a J. Jill shirt for $9.99 from Prior Attire on Keith Street (no website). Prior Attire is by cloth02far my favorite of the three re-sale shops in Cleveland. I always come away with something nice from the store.

A new store also on Keith Street is En Vogue. They are much more than a clothing re-sale shop. They have furniture and decorative items downstairs and clothing up. There I purchased a lovely blue Ann Taylor Loft shirt on sale for $5.50, a Croft and Barrow black and white top for $7.49, and a classy Laura Ashley watch that needs a battery for $6.49.

Finally, since I needed some new sandals, I swung by a local Cleveland institution, Becky’s Shoes (no website). Here’s an example of a store that’s fooled me until just one minute ago. I thought it was a local store. Nothing about it says chain. It’s not slick or institutional in feel. It doesn’t have that cookie-cutter feel that chain stores have. When writing these posts, I always check to see if the stores have a website and guess what folks. Becky’s fits our definition of a chain.

For the purpose of our experiment, Dan and I decided that a chain is a store or restaurant with four or more outlets owned by the same owner. Becky’s is in Cleveland, Knoxville, and Hixson, Tennessee and Rome, Georgia. I am extremely depressed as this knocks out a great source for shoe shopping in Cleveland!

What did I get at Becky’s before I knew it was a chain? An extremely comfortable pair of Josef Seibel sandals for $29.49. While I don’t know the exact price of the sandals, most Josef Seibel sandals retail for over $100. Great deal, but sadly my last at Becky’s.

The only other non-chain women’s shoe store in Cleveland went out of business, so it looks like shoe shopping will be in Chattanooga. The Orange Blossom carries a limited supply of women’s shoes, but the one brand I did purchase from them, La Plume, were not comfortable on my extremely hard-to-please feet.

So some shopping successes and a shopping lesson from the day. What would Stacy and Clinton say about my blog, my shopping, and my un-chained life? Guess what? Maybe they will let me know!

Prior Attire
2520 Keith Street
Cleveland, TN
423-473-0983
no website

En Vogue
2155 Keith Street
Cleveland, TN
423-473-7333
no website

Becky’s Discount Shoes
2767 Keith Street
Cleveland, TN
423-476-1465
no website

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