When Tigertree announced last July it would be closing its retail storefront and moving to a strictly online format, Co-Founder Josh Quinn said there would be a return to brick-and-mortar someday. Someday has now come a lot sooner than expected.
Tigertree has landed a new home at 3284 N. High St. in Clintonville, taking over the former home of Lacquer Gallery.
Initially when looking for what would come next after their exit from the Short North, Quinn was wrestling with office space versus warehouse when the realization of losing connections with customers not being in a retail storefront format really hit him.
In case you are keeping track:
Woman Flees After Crashing Car Into Storefront in Miami Beach – NBC 6 South Florida
The Playism Storefront is Shutting Down This Spring | TechRaptor
The Playism storefront - which focuses on Japanese releases - will be shutting down on March 24, 2021, with purchase history also expiring on May 10, 2021. It's important to note that this is just the storefront, and that they will still be distributing games and content through Steam and consoles such as the Nintendo Switch. Check out the full announcement below:
As of 13:00 on March 24th, 2021 (Wed.), features allowing for the purchase of games and content such as OSTs, etc. ("PLAYISM Store Functions") on the PLAYISM official website will be terminated.
Local sage stick and home decor business expands to first storefront on Hertel Avenue | wgrz.com
BUFFALO, N.Y. — A business owner who has built her brand around a product that can help you relax and bring good energy into your home will be opening her first shop next month.
Courtney Nelson-Benton launched Elle James Decor three years ago. She's known for her homemade floral sage sticks, as well as wreaths and other decor items. Courtney started off at artisan markets and festivals, before landing on the shelves of the Lexington Co-Op.
This may worth something:
A Hundred Years Ago, See's Candies Launched in an L.A. Storefront
The company opened its first location on Western Avenue in 1921, and this year the confectioner is celebrating with a centennial assortment box ($15.50) packed by hand—as all See's candies still are—with its most iconic goodies, including the unique rectangular Lollypops and the top seller, the Scotchmallow. But the company, which now makes it candies in factories in both L.A. and San Francisco, is also changing with the times.
"I heard it over and over: 'Just put dark chocolate on the Butterscotch Square, and we'd love it,'" Egan says. "I would expect that, in the long term, we will have it on our shelves and as a regular piece."
Playism shuts down storefront | GamesIndustry.biz
Frogwares says it didn't create the version of the Lovecraftian detective game currently available on Steam
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As developers enter a second year of working from home, mounting AAA delays suggest blockbusters could be fewer and further between
Pipestone Launches Storefront Improvement Program - DiscoverWestman.com
The RM of Pipestone has launched a new Storefront Improvement Program through the Community Development Corporation of the RM.
"We're now currently accepting applications from businesses in Pipestone," explains Tanis Chalmers, Manager of Economic Development for the RM of Pipestone. "Basically, if a business is wanting to make some upgrades to the front of their building, whether it be windows, doors, signage, lighting, maybe an awning, they can apply for up to $7,500 to go towards the cost of the changes to their building."
St. Louis' Union Studio Opens Second Storefront in Webster Groves | Style | laduenews.com
When Mary Beth Bussen and Sarah Kelley – co-owners of Union Studio on Tower Grove Avenue in St. Louis – received an out-of-the-blue phone call in October 2019 from a fellow small-business owner inquiring if the pair would like to expand to an open storefront in Webster Groves, the instinct was to answer "no." On reflection, however, they reevaluated the opportunity and recognized its potential.
"It was an opportunity to be a part of the small businesses we respect and are happy to be neighbors with, to join a community that has historically been very supportive of handmade work," Bussen says, "to be part of another neighborhood that is similarly walkable and vibrant, and to reach people whom we might not have otherwise in Tower Grove."
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