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New Retail

New: In Commune on Capitol Hill

Sara Hoffman’s new new-to-you vintage store works for your whole family, and maybe even your larger community, too.

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SLIDESHOW: The new vintage (and more) shop on Capitol Hill, In Commune.

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SLIDESHOW: The new vintage (and more) shop on Capitol Hill, In Commune.

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Owner Sara Hoffman studied apparel at Seattle Central before opening her 12th Avenue shop. If you didn’t know, you might guess she had studied fine arts, minimalist merchandising, Japanese textiles, or studio pottery. But don’t think that means the wardrobe are without a distinct point of view.

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Among the vintage and slightly used wardrobe options for men, women, and children: hand-knit sweaters, Pendleton wool shirts, wide-wale corduroys, ’60s shift dresses, linen trousers, tweed skirts, railroad-striped overalls, winter-white silk shirts, and plaids of every stripe.

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Some stores that deal vintage clothes and housewares have a magpie approach: get all you can get and crowd a small space with it. Hoffman’s version of presentation is much more minimal and spare. All her pieces are meticulously cleaned and pressed, and each one is given it’s due space for appreciation and contemplation. It’s a way of living, and of doing business, that will suit her well when she eventually expands and offers not just used items but new, local and up-and-coming designers and crafts.

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Hoffman’s aesthetic is recommended for Seattle shoppers who frequent Totokaelo, Blackbird, Les Amis, Bitters Co. and like-minded outlets. Here, a funny little made-in-Germany ’80s blouse for her, and …

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…it’s on-trend Americana mini-me.

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As a working mother, Hoffman’s on-task in terms of responding to the world we live in. She was ready for the recent snowstorm. Were you?

Inside a storefront that used to be an apartment, Sara Hofmann makes the ultimate peace with the space’s charmingly offbeat not-quite-this-not-quite-that nature with In Commune, a study of textures, textiles, and reused goods.

Hoffman collects vintage and gently used clothing for women, men, and small kids (figure on size 4T and under for the most part) as well as beautiful used and useful pottery, artful textiles, and the odd poetry book or letterpressed moon cycle calendar or two.

A table in the Danish modern tradition sits smack dab in the middle of the joint; you’re likely to find Hoffman’s son Asa there, quietly spooning after-school soup from a hand-thrown bowl, or just hanging out.

Ferns and fiber art hangs around, too. If all this new-to-you, handmade, nature-focused, richly tactile stuff weren’t such a growing trend—no, more like a spiritual need—within a certain design/lifestyle/fashion zeitgeist (the loosely configured community who regards the text Handcrafted Modern as a sort of bible, shops and sells at Object and, you know, makes their own kombucha), you’d feel like you had stepped into the ’60s.

Which is not to say all the vintage wardrobe pieces are ‘60s throwbacks. Or that the shop is a one-note nostalgia hut. They aren’t; it isn’t. Check out the slideshow here for more on the aesthetic and the offerings In Commune.

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Tags: Seattle Vintage, Capitol Hill, Sustainable Such and Such

Local Art Market

Shop It: Vermillion’s Sunday Market

Questions for Vermillion owner Diana Adams about the spot’s fine art (and great drinks) mart.

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A shot from Vermillion’s Artache Sunday market. Not pictured: the fine art.

Where: Vermillion

What: The Capitol Hill art gallery and wine bar teams up with ArtAche Market to showcase local artists at their monthly Sunday market. Here, we chat with Vermillion owner Diana Adams about this new eat-drink-buy scene.

WWW: What makes your Sunday market different from other Seattle indoor markets?
Adams: Our market will put a little more emphasis on fine art. A lot of the artists we’ll have are people who are interested in having regular shows at Vermillion but we don’t have room for because we are booked for most of the year.

Should shoppers expect any vintage or crafty stuff at all, or just fine art?
We have an even split between fine artists, Etsylike crafters, jewelry, vintage, and records.

What are your favorite products or sellers right now?
Ghost Gallery had a spot at the October Artache, so anyone who has been to that gallery has an indication as to the fine art aspect. Neon Nightmare will be at the November market. Each market is a unique blend of artists.

Shoppers at your market can also be eaters and drinkers. Will there be any specials in that department?
We’ll have our regular happy hour from 3 to 7 which is $3 wells, bottle beer, and house wine. Boilermakers are $5. We’ll post a food special depending on what the weather looks like it’s going to be that day.

When: November 6 from 3 to 8; markets are every first Sunday of the month.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Seattle Designer, Seattle DIY

Urban Market

Shop It: Century Ballroom Indoor Flea Market

The Capitol Hill hotspot unveils a weekly indie mart this weekend.

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Where: Century Ballroom, 915 E Pine, second floor of the Oddfellows Building on Capitol Hill.

What: An indoor vintage clothing, vintage housewares, and indie designer mart. We’re not sure what to expect since this weekend is the inaugural event—will the vibe be more like the Bad Will Market, Georgetown’s still-going-strong Saturday flea/farmers market, or the EtsyRain thing?

How about this: You go, and report back?

When: Every Saturday, year-round, starting this Saturday, August 13 from 11 to 3.

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Tags: Seattle Vintage, Capitol Hill, Farmers Markets

Stylish Art

See It: Mad Homes

A reason for fashion consumers to get arty before August 7.

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Clothes horses really ought to visit the Mad Homes exhibit on Capitol Hill.

You have about 10 days to catch MadArt’s Mad Homes exhibit, in which a group of soon-to-be-demolished homes on Capitol Hill become stage, platform, and canvas for area artists.

There are any number of ideas to glean from the installation, but those of us with a thing for clothes and sartorial identity might be especially struck by the middle home, in which artist Luke Haynes used clothing to line the walls, ceiling, and floor of two rooms and a hallway and staircase.

Because the presence of bulldozing and rebuilding—the scrap the old, erect the new mentality—is such a double-edged sword, you will probably already feel a sense of sadness for the charming old houses. And, maybe, contempt for the coming condos. There’s something really anthropomorphizing about the whole project. And when you stand in a room that’s been completely wall-to-walled with yellow gingham dresses, ‘80s sweatshirts, denim in every shape and size, and bright blue T-shirts, you can almost see the people that have come and gone in those rooms. You can almost feel them. Or at least I could. I thought about the memories they made there, and how they’d no longer be able to walk by. And I was that much more bummed out by “progress,” and that much more aware of the life and spirit that our clothes can sometimes carry.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Art Exhibits, MadArt

Urban Market

Shop It: BadWill Market

Check out Capitol Hill’s indoor/outdoor market for hipster-sourced vintage gear, locally made art and photography, jewelry, and more.

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SLIDESHOW: What to expect at the second BadWill Market on July 10. Here, lace collars (not shown: other reassigned vintage, DIY accessories, and salvaged old-school style) from Wear the Canvas.

View Slideshow » Photo: Wear the Canvas

SLIDESHOW: What to expect at the second BadWill Market on July 10. Here, lace collars (not shown: other reassigned vintage, DIY accessories, and salvaged old-school style) from Wear the Canvas.

View Slideshow » Photo: Midnight Mart

Vintage clothing—and hats!—from Midnight Mart.

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Moksha, the co-ed, world-sourced boho-vibing spot in the U District, offers vintage clothing.

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I should probably mention that former Project Runway contestant Blayne Walsh and his locally made men’s and women’s pieces are Bad Will members.

View Slideshow » Photo: Officials Vintage

Officials Vintage specializes in deadstock and vintage sports stuff—Tampa Bay jerseys and Jets jackets—but they keep a few ironic 80s sweatshirts around, too.

For some people, vintage is about the thrill of the hunt. For others, it’s about the thrill of someone else hunting, and then laundering, pressing, and presenting the finds to them in a clean, easy-to-navigate arena.

For the latter there are many Seattle options, among them: BadWill Market at HG Lodge.

Cruise the indoor/outdoor market for hipster-sourced vintage, art, and otherwise handmade stuff on Sunday July 10 from 1 to 7.

Check out the slideshow here for more on what you’ll find there.

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Tags: Seattle Vintage, Capitol Hill, Seattle Etsy

Sonic Boom Leaving the Hill

Recent closures in the Melrose Market have us asking, What’s up with retail on Capitol Hill?

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Melrose Market Sonic Boom, soon-to-have RIP status.

Sonic Boom’s closing up shop on Capitol Hill. Thank the shopping gods the Ballard branch isn’t too far away.

The music emporium is the second store in the Melrose Market area to shutter in recent times; Velouria boutique—coincidentally owned by Tes De Luna, wife of SB owner Joseph Hughes—closed late last year. At present, the ultramodern shopping mall has a number of vacant storefronts. Everyone and their uncle were psyched when the Melrose Market went up; it’s a bummer to see the retail aspect falter a bit.

Hughes cited a decline in community support for small retailers, and especially for music sales. (Some folks wanted to start WWIII over his remark to Seattle Weekly that the area’s younger demographic tends to spend money on drinks, not records. C’mon people, the comment is hardly shocking! Remember your twenties?) Yet other nearby store owners are happy with the hopping business. “It all seems pretty vibrant” notes Katherine Anderson, purveyor of organic flowers and home goods at Marigold and Mint.

Whether closing up or staying on, shop-owners share a common concern: sky-high rent. For Sonic Boom, steep rent was a major factor in closing. Same goes for Velouria—well, that, and De Luna had a baby. (Her Ballard location remains a classic.) At Marigold and Mint—likewise two other nearby vendors who didn’t want to go on record—the petite square footage is a large part of their success: “Retail only works here because of the small footprint,” says Anderson.

You probably can’t do much about the rent prices, but Hughes posted a good challenge for Seattleites on the Sonic Boom website: “Whether it’s clothes, music, groceries, shoes, furniture, or gifts,” he says, “support the stores you enjoy shopping at. That’s the best way to let them know you care about what they do.” It’s a good practice, one we’ve been advocating for two years now.

So get to it! You can shop Sonic Boom on the Hill until September 5—sales have already started with 15 percent off all merchandise.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Music, Closings, Sales and Discounts

Sale: Repurposed Materials at NuBe Green

Picture saying this to guests, “Please, make yourself comfortable in what used to be cardboard box.”

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SLIDESHOW: NuBe Green is taking 30 percent off all recycled cardboard merchandise, which includes chairs, tables, toys, and home accessories.

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SLIDESHOW: NuBe Green is taking 30 percent off all recycled cardboard merchandise, which includes chairs, tables, toys, and home accessories.

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The cardboard shuttle doubles as a playhouse and coloring surface.

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The possibilities for this bit of recycled cardboard include: candle votive, napkin ring, and candy dish.

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The table works both in the office and dining room.

Where: NuBe Green

What: In the market for some sustainable furniture and home decor? Check out Ruth True’s truly green shop as she highlights the creative ways that designers have repurposed recycled cardboard. Dining tables, chairs, candle votives, and, yes, a rocket ship (okay, a playhouse shaped like a rocket ship)—all of which used to be some sort of blah brown box—are 30 percent off.

Take a spin through the slideshow here to preview the possibilities.

When: Now through May 31

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Home Decor, Sustainable Such and Such, Nube Green

Retail Spotlight

New Store! Meet the Shopkeeper: Scout Apparel

Pine Street is getting a whole lot shoppier.

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SLIDESHOW: New on Capital Hill, Scout Apparel. The Shopkeepers were shy so in order to actually meet them face to face, you’ll have to go to the shop. Here, please meet some of their merchandise.

View Slideshow » Photo: Scout Apparel

SLIDESHOW: New on Capital Hill, Scout Apparel. The Shopkeepers were shy so in order to actually meet them face to face, you’ll have to go to the shop. Here, please meet some of their merchandise.

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An ombre sweatshirt at Scout.

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Those favored earrings the owners mentioned.

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Wear this mini-dress with Converse if you please.

Pine Street around Bellevue Ave is getting a whole lot shoppier these days. Just up from Melrose Market (home to Butter Home, Sonic Boom, and Marigold and Mint, RIP Velouria), there’s the critical mass of Vutique, Edie’s, Wall of Sound,, and now Scout Apparel. The new clothing boutique operated by Karen Krupp and Erin Dolan (recognize the name? She also owns Edie’s) deals in everday, very Seattle-feeling style for men and women. Think: easy-to-wear basics with on-trend details and Thursday night out-to-dinner dresses and pants-and-jackets combos that go with Converse and combat boots. And now, a little bit of insight from Krupp and Dolan, and a slideshow of key looks.

WWW: What album is playing on your store’s sound system right now?
Krupp: Johnny Cash’s American III: Solitary Man.

What was your first job in retail? What did you love or hate about it and how does it compare to what you do now?
Erin and I were both working at the mall; she had to wear pantyhose, I wore a khaki apron. Now we wear what we want and sell what we like.

What’s your favorite thing in the store right now?
Ax + Apple Native Son Necklace.

Where do you shop when you’re not at your store?
Office Depot; there’s not much time to shop when you’re starting a business!

What do you love about your store’s neighborhood? What nearby restaurants, coffee shops, etc., do you recommend?
The Melrose Market (meat, cheese, flowers plus awesome sandwiches at Homegrown), Bauhaus Coffee, Honey Hole, Hot Mama’s. It’s just a great neighborhood with a lot of energy, plus we’re between Mud Bay and a dog park, so we meet lots of great four-legged friends.

What’s the weirdest thing that has ever happened in your store?
Nothing weird has happened inside the store yet, but we’ve only been open a week, so give it time.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Melrose Market, Meet the Shopkeeper

New! Butter Home at Melrose Market

Small in space, but big in nostalgic charm.

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SLIDESHOW: Climb the stairs inside Melrose Market to find Butter Home.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

SLIDESHOW: Climb the stairs inside Melrose Market to find Butter Home.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The grandma’s attic feeling perfectly suits the overall vibe at Melrose Market, where it’s all about earthy riches and regional, relatively simple charms.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

From Butter Home, you can look down at the rest of the Melrose Market.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Butter Home sells decorative flowers and heart-shaped magnets made out of scrap metal.

Just above the Calf and Kid there’s a new cozy little home decor shop in the Melrose MarketButter Home. It’s tiny and feels like you’re walking around your grandma’s attic, which in this case is a good thing.

The 366-square-feet of this in-the-rafters boutique offer a surprising array of woodsy furniture, tasteful dishware, vintage-inspired glassware, and funky knickknacks like scrap-metal flowers and decorative twine balls made from recycled newspaper. Owner Claire Corley tries to stock as many sustainable, local, handmade, and vintage pieces as the space allows.

Her love for all things old started early; her grandparents owned the San Francisco auction house Butterfields (now known as Bonhams & Butterfields) when she was growing up. In fact, that’s part of what inspired the name Butter Home.

The other part? ‘Well butter’s the best food,’ Corley explains with a smile. Get a peak around the shop as you click through the slideshow here.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Home Decor, Melrose Market, Seattle Retail News, New Seattle Boutiques

Pop-Up: Punctuation Gallery

The multimedia art space on Capitol Hill is a vintage store and shirting shop for the rest of the month.

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This was an art gallery, now it’s a pop-up shop: Punctuation on Capitol Hill.

File under: Don’t fix it if it isn’t broken.

Punctuation Gallery’s Maikoiyo Alley-Barnes and the collective’s other curators have made the front art gallery into a limited-time-only shirting shop for the venue’s in-house, stitched-in-Seattle line by Tarboo as well as a vintage clothing and lifestyle boutique by Projecteur.

It was meant to be a one-week thing, but the response was good so the ‘show’ is staying up.

Stop by during the month of March to check it out.

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Tags: Seattle Vintage, Capitol Hill, Seattle Pop-Ups, Seattle Designer

New! SugarPill Apothecary

Just a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down at Capitol Hill’s new neopharmacy.

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Slideshow: SugarPill may just be the sweetest neighborhood nonpharmacy ever. All photos by Lucas Anderson.

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Slideshow: SugarPill may just be the sweetest neighborhood nonpharmacy ever. All photos by Lucas Anderson.

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Photo by Lucas Anderson

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Even slabs of pink Himalayan salt get silver platter treatment at SugarPill. Photo by Lucas Anderson.

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SugarPill also sells salt in tiny tester tins ($2.25). Photo by Lucas Anderson.

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Fine paper goods for love notes or to complete get well wishes. Photo by Lucas Anderson.

As its name suggests, Capitol Hill’s new SugarPill is not your typical apothecary.

Want to satisfy your sweet tooth? Check. Trying to hunt down pink Himalayan salt? Check. Looking for something to soothe that cold you’ve been battling? You can find that, too.

‘I wanted to open up something a little bit unusual, not just a pharmacy,’ explains owner Karyn Schwartz, who is eager to share her passion for natural medicine. Her house blends, including Clear the Airways Bothersome Cough and Northwest Herbal Cold and Flu (about 7 bucks), are made from ingredients like elderberry, marshmallow leaf, mullein, anise, and peppermint.

SugarPill isn’t just about getting over bad feelings. You can now drink the chocolate elixir of Marie Antoinette’s court. Schwartz’s favorite treat is a line of historic drinking chocolate from the KaKawa Chocolate House; the recipes are carefully researched for accuracy.

More of a savory, less sweet? Find just about every gourmet salt under the sun: pink, gray, black, coarse, finely ground, etc; slab, packaged in sweet glass bottles, or in teeny, adorable tester tins.

And when there is nothing to cure and no craving to satisfy, SugarPill also offers a selection of beautifully wrapped soaps, girlie perfumes, delicate glassware, and greeting cards.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Health and Beauty, New Seattle Boutiques

NuBe Green Trunk Show for NuBe Seattle

The eco-shop celebrates Seattle (okay, Vashon Island) designer Adrienne Antonson and a new in-house line on March 9.

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Ikat poncho from Nube Seattle, new at Nube Green

Where: NuBe Green on Capitol Hill

What: The All-American lifestyle store in the Oddfellows Building celebrates the new spring collection from the in-house all-Seattle line, NuBe Seattle. Artist Adrienne Antonson designs on Vashon Island with fabrics made from locally grown fibers as well as vintage or otherwise repurposed materials. The pieces are hand-sewn in the area — hence (let’s just get this out of the way), the price tags.

And while the ikat poncho and felted wool vest shown here, from the collection that’s available online and in person at the trunk show and launch party next week, do convey a very Seattle (circa 1972, circa 1986, circa now) artful islander vibe, they’d also fit beautifully into a closet filled with Dries Van Noten, Maria Cornejo, and similar lines. Which, now that I think about it, is another way of saying I’d like them in mine.

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Felted wool and linen vest by designer Adrienne Antonson for Nube Seattle and Nube Green

When: Wednesday, March 9 from 6 to 8. Local wines and cheeses will be served.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Seattle Trunk Show, Sustainable Such and Such, Seattle Designer, Nube Green, Adrienne Antonson

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