Not to change the topic here:
Amid coronavirus, art shop moves from Outer Banks storefront to repurposed Norfolk school bus -
KITTY HAWK, N.C. — Ami Hill parked her repurposed, coral-colored school bus last month at the Rundown CafĂ© in Kitty Hawk.
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Hill's mobile art shop, Muse Originals OBX, is a product of the times; an attempt by one enterprising entrepreneur to find a way to stay in business amid the coronavirus closures and restrictions. She had to shut down her original brick and mortar store earlier this year.
Bus number 242 transported Norfolk schoolchildren for more than 20 years before Hill found it with help of a maintenance employee. The school worker had recently sent 10 buses to a salvage company in Ruckersville, Virginia, and told Hill 242 was in the best shape.
Car Crashes Into Medford Nail Salon | Medford, MA Patch
Vintage furniture shop opens new location on Washington Avenue | City Pulse
WEDNESDAY, July 29 — Vintage Junkies, a locally owned one-stop shop for quirky vintage housewares, has relocated to a new brick-and-mortar location at 1133 S. Washington Ave. Owner Amy McMeeken called the new storefront a “dream,” and said moving her shop from its previous home in the REO Town Marketplace to its own standalone location will allow her to greatly expand her inventory.
“I’ve been growing a lot the last few years, especially with the furniture part of my business. I kept trying to rearrange my spot in the marketplace to accommodate my growth, but no matter what I needed more space,” McMeeken. “The storefront I moved into just happened to become available when my lease was ending. I jumped on it.”
Not to change the topic here:
The Athens Banner Project Takes Over Downtown Storefronts | Flagpole
Gracing the cover of Flagpole this week, Schell's illustration is dedicated to their hardworking friends and coworkers in the service industry who, while adjusting to new business operations under a tremendous level of collective stress, deserve the sensitivity and support of the larger community. Currently studying printmaking and book arts at UGA's Lamar Dodd School of Art, Schell works at Maepole and was temporarily out of work for several weeks at the onset of the pandemic.
"At first, I felt excited to have so much free time to dedicate to my art. I was drawing, weaving and knitting with nearly every spare minute. When things looked like they weren’t going to be getting any better, I think the way I made art changed a bit," says Schell. "I've been doing a lot more reflecting on my work and my intentions in the past few months. I’ve been thinking about how I want my art to serve myself as well as others, and how I can use my art to help people.
Storefront Glass Market To Witness Massive Growth Alcoa, Asahi Glass, C.R.
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CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Florida man smears blood on windows, doors of storefronts
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (WPLG/CNN) -- A bizarre scene was caught on camera as a man smeared blood on several storefronts along a road in Florida.
"I find that very bizarre, somebody putting blood all over the windows of these buildings," Tom Donall, a resident, said.
Cameras outside of an Ace Hardware show the man smear blood from an apparent cut all over the glass doors and handle. He then moves on down the block, covering surfaces in blood as he goes.
’Rage reaction’: Husband gets probation, avoids prison, for beating wife after
A New York man was sentenced to three years probation for delivering a vicious beating to his wife last fall after the couple crashed their Jeep into a Vernon storefront.
But a Sussex County judge decided against jail time or the $10,000 penalty prosecutors were seeking after doctors testifying for the defense said that Alan Grosso's "rage reaction" was the result of a brain injury caused by the accident.
Inside the Sussex County Courthouse on Tuesday, during a socially-distanced sentencing before Judge Louis S. Sceusi, Grosso was ordered to serve probation, undergo neurological testing and continue marriage counseling. He was also ordered to pay $2,500 in fines — $1,250 for each criminal count.
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