Felicia Petty shows some of the items available at Kyle's Graceful Adventures' new downtown shop located at 112 E. Second Street.
MUSCATINE – After outgrowing two storage units in Muscatine, Kyle's Graceful Adventures has gracefully moved into a downtown storefront where it is continuing to supply goods to people in need of help.
During the worst of the pandemic, founder Felicia Petty acted as a go-between for people who wanted to donate goods to needy families and those in need. She used her personal storage units to gather goods and distribute them. With goods coming in faster than they were going out, Petty moved her non-profit venture – dubbed Kyle's Graceful Adventures named using her three children's initials – to a downtown store.
ButcherBox launches Instacart storefront | Grocery Dive
Instacart is known primarily for brick-and-mortar integrations, but the ButcherBox deal shows the potential for online sellers to also tap into the company's vast audience.
Late last year, Instacart and Drinks launched The Wine Shop, which offers wine bundles to shoppers in 39 states and Washington, D.C. An Instacart spokesperson declined to say if more partnerships with online sellers are in the works, noting that the company is always exploring new opportunities.
LETTER: Urge preservation of Fowle's storefront | Letters To The Editor | newburyportnews.com
The Newburyport Zoning Board of Appeals will hold a meeting on June 8 at 7 p.m. to determine if the new tenant may demolish the Fowle's News facade and signage on State Street.
The Fowle's exterior embodies a charm that is unique. The store hails back to a time in Newburyport when many city folks could find magazines, newspapers, cards, food, cigars and other items.
We believe this situation calls for us all, as a community, to look at this in a different light and to restore Fowle's to its former glory. Imagine tourists walking downtown and seeing the sign restored.
Using Zoom Helped A Business Owner To Raise Funds to Open a Storefront Featuring Cocktails
"I've always been a food and cocktail kind of girl," Curtis said to Travel Noire . "That's what we did in LA; great dinners, great drinks all night long. I moved here, and it was a different culture."
Curtis’s endeavors aligned with what intuitively spoke to her spirit and personality. Travel Noire added that Curtis started hosting cocktail classes in 2016. She even brought in Charlotte-area bartenders to lead the instruction, before the pandemic unfolded. Her classes sold out.
Police: Fired Bojangles employee takes frustrations out on storefront window - SuperTalk 92.9
A Greeneville, Tennessee man was charged after he took out his frustrations on a fast food restaurant storefront.
Tyler D. Garrett was charged with one count of misdemeanor vandalism following the incident at Bojangles on Asheville Highway.
Police officials said Garrett had just been fired by the biscuit shop and he admitted to punching a front window display leaving a spider web impact. A Bojangles manager estimated the damages to be between $700 and $900.
St. Louis-Based Firm Nistenhaus Design Launches Retail Storefront | Home | laduenews.com
Nistenhaus Design has built upon its "nest." The St. Louis architectural and interior design firm – the first word of whose name translates from the German as "nesting house" – recently opened a new retail storefront.
Dubbed The Warehaus, the 6,500-square-foot annex at 3412 Lemp Ave. showcases art, furniture and all forms of creative product and talents. "The Warehaus will be a literal space to show for production and showcasing of our 'wares,' inspired by the early American furniture makers, where design and production happened in one place," explains principal designer Mike Wyrock. "It is going to be unique for what most people are used to seeing in St. Louis.
Dough Crazy creates edible cookie dough in downtown Des Moines
She and her husband started making dough at home and selling it from the food truck, and once the operation got going, business never slowed. Easton Smith, a stay-at-home mom, said that between caring for her children, she was making batches of dough that quickly sold out at events. The couple felt they were on to something, so they started looking for a permanent location.
Past efforts to address safety issues have included making the dough without eggs, but it can have a grainy mouthfeel and don't taste quite like the real thing, Smith said. Plus, it turns out the eggs aren't the only risk factor.
Kreme & Krumbs: Scooping up big, bold flavors of ice cream | Feast and Field: Food Begins in
Inside a modest-looking white storefront on Glenwood Avenue in Bloomfield, New Jersey, there is always a waft of enticing smells that immediately envelopes visitors. You might detect a note of velvety vanilla from the bean pods sliced open on the stainless steel counter, the distinct smell of fine dark chocolate melting in a double boiler, strawberries cooking away into a luscious jam and even a lace of Kentucky bourbon.
The cozy space filled with kitchen equipment and flavors and ingredients, both exotic and grown just a short drive away, is the current nerve center of Kreme & Krumbs , a small but growing artisanal ice cream company that has become known for its inventive, flavorful scoops that are handcrafted in small batches. The brains, muscle and chief taste tester of Kreme & Krumbs is Kiahna Malloy, an East Orange woman who's passionate about good food and quality ingredients.
Community On Edge As Search Continues For Midtown Attempted Rape Suspect: ‘I’m Not
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – Police are searching for a suspect in connection to an attempted rape in Midtown .
As CBS2’s Natalie Duddridge reports, surveillance video shows a man running down the street near 33rd and Madison Avenue.
Investigators believe he tried to rape a 27-year-old woman who was walking in the area Saturday morning at 7 a.m.
Authorities say he came up behind her and grabbed her throat with both hands, then allegedly pushed her against a storefront gate and pulled down his pants.
Spartanburg business openings: Beyond This February, Dairy Dreme
She could rarely find books for herself and her children where both the author and characters were Black.
"It was a hassle," Thompson said. "In our area, what we have is, you might see those authors featured in February, or after a tragedy, and then not again."
That's where the name of Thompson's new online bookstore comes in. She took matters into her own hands and recently opened the online bookstore Beyond This February, a name that means a lot to her.
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