Tag: <span>shops</span>

RockShop.jpgI just got back from a five-day vacation in Color Country–the affectionate name for the red rock mountains, arches, and hoodoos of Southern Utah. It’s a mind-bogglingly beautiful place. If you’ve never been, I highly recommend days hiking through Zion, Bryce, and Arches National Parks but if nothing else, just spend time driving the roads. The rock formations and barren landscapes in every shade of the sunset will have you pulling into every turn-off. You can see for miles and never spot a single sign of civilization–that’s what makes the few people and businesses you do see that much more interesting and Ernest Shirley’s Rock Shop of Hanksville a must-see.

RockShop-Jaspar.jpgAside from two gas stations, Ernest Shirley Rocks is one of the few stores in Hanksville (population 197). The shop has been around for over 40 years–originally as a grocery store but after a too many unpaid tabs, Shirley quickly switched his business from produce to pebbles. Collecting rocks was always his passion and in this part of the Utah, you can’t get a lower overhead and a larger stock to work with. From the stucco of the facade to the acre backyard, every inch of the property is covered in petrified wood, agate, jasper, coral, bone, and fossils of all varieties. Ernest Shirley’s is the beauty of Utah’s landscape dissected into pieces…that you can take home with you.

RockShop-Rock.jpgYou can find petrified wood side tables and agate coasters in high-end stores around the U..but Ernest Shirley’s is the real deal and amazingly cheap. There was this million-year-old-plus stump of petrified wood that I really wanted–for about $2,000 cheaper than I’d ever seen it listed but I resisted. I would have paid the $500 for it but I didn’t think I could finagle a 250 pound carry-on. ,I purchased four slices of agate for $20 (usually $60 and with a much better story than a mail-order catalog).

RockShop-Storekeeper.jpgSadly, Ernest Shirley died this past May and the future of the shop is a bit uncertain. So if you love rocks, pay a visit; all sales are negotiable, even the shop itself. It’s a rockhound’s dream.

Places

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I got Wish magazine/catalogue , the W Hotels new fashion and decor catalogue, in the mail this morning. I had never heard of it but when I opened it I was pretty impressed. Impressed not so much by the novelty of the items but how well they did their homework. The offerings were essentially an anthology of every “Editors Pick” page from every home design magazine to come out in the past four years–from classics like the Kartell’s Louis Ghost Chair to the ever-trendy Golden Banana Bowl. As far as pricing goes, you would think the W would include a boutique-hotel-style markup, right? Amazing enough I did a little comparison shopping and the W Hotel Store had some of the lowest prices offered online! Worth checking out, even if it’s to catch up on all the old magazines you missed.

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These stainless steel votives by Danish designer Marcus Vagnby for $59 were my favorite fresh find on the site. Love the pop of red and the shiny smooth surfaces makes me want to hold them.

Places

FPbowl.jpgI have been meaning to go to The Future Perfect in Brooklyn since I moved to New York. This arty edgy home boutique is always being written up in the city guides and design mags as the definitive source for cool and the pulse of now; so the other day, I finally paid a visit.

I was fully impressed with their display of wheel-thrown porcelain by Jennifer McCurdy (above). Just look at it.

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I love that the name of this pillow company is: Historically Inaccurate Decorative Arts. They take classic prints like this toile and update it with an embroidered graffiti. The store is filled with design ironies like this.

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This tarantula-like chandelier hovers over the center of the store. Made of 16 flex-y arm task lamps and just as many lightbulbs, this DesignFenzider commands the space of decor goodies.

Filled with clever, bizarre, and beautiful things, the reviews I read on the Future Perfect did not disappoint.

Places

SimonPearceFactory.jpgEveryone is so excited for the start of summer but I am already missing winter. This weekend, 10 friends and I sadly shut down our winter ski house in Killington, Vermont. It was a six-month rental, which should have left us ample time to explore the surrounding area, but as life goes, we crammed all our touristy adventures into our final day of the season: a Vermont cheese farm tour, maple syrup tasting, a brewery visit, and my new favorite, the Simon Pearce Glass and Pottery Mill.

SPearceKiln_0.jpgSimon Pearce has been a major national retail business for over 20 years but once you get to their historic river-powered mill in the small town of Quechee, you feel like you’ve discovered an artists commune. Glass blowers move through the facility with the precision and intention of a bee colony–dipping, trimming, and shaping the glass around the heat of the kiln. In the potters room, one ceramist mixes glazes for the latest bisqueware while another is kneading clay. A shelf of glazed vases and dishes sit perfectly on the shelf, reminding me that I am in also in a retail store. I head up the stairs to the shop which feels more like a living room than a showroom.

SPearceLamp.jpgWhen I asked the salesperson what was new, she showed me the new Lyra Lamp from the Simon Pearce Signature collection. The teardrop shape, each and every air bubble, the seaglass translucence . . . . I love everything about this lamp.

SPearcelogo.jpgThere is an organic quality and an honesty that I really adore in Simon Pearce. They’re a big business but they have kept production handmade, in-house, and powered by their local and natural resources. For an great example of true artistry in retail, I recommend a visit to the Mill at Quechee, VT .

Places