Get Thrifty on North State Street with Wise Buys, Bargains for a Good Cause

Store Manager Nancy Long poses in the renovated Wise Buys. Photo credit: Patricia Herlevi.

In the past, shoppers found high-end recycled clothing at consignment shops. Only true bargain hunters braved outdated or worn-out clothing at thrift stores. However, Wise Buys, a thrift store tucked along North State Street near Rudy’s Pizza, Old World Deli and the Y, resembles a consignment shop without the high price tags.

With recent renovations and the re-opening of Wise Buys last April, shoppers ranging from teens to sage elders find fashion at reasonable prices. And in the thrift store tradition, a shopper can take an additional 50 percent off the item with the right color tag. The other advantage of finding gently-worn treasures at Wise Buys is that proceeds support Lydia Place, a local organization providing transitional housing for homeless families.

Wise Buys
Wise Buys offers upscale fashion at bargain prices — and all for a good cause. Photo credit: Patricia Herlevi.

The store now resembles a boutique with easy access to women’s and men’s clothing as well as household items. Store Manager Nancy Long describes Wise Buys’ mission as revolving around diversity. That includes diversity of the treasures available in the shop, the customers, and the shop’s volunteers. “In addition to diversity, we recycle everything. Zero waste is part of our mission,” Long says. This allows shoppers to buy local and keep clothing out of the waste stream.

The zero waste mission includes recycling paper and bottles as well as donating hard-to-sell goods to ARC, Goodwill, Ragfinery and furnishings to the Re-Store. Nancy is meticulous about recycling everything, and she shares that passion through education with her volunteers.

Taking a tour through the back of the store, we walked past winter boots, coats, and piles of donations. However, the store does not accept every donation. Unacceptable donations include large furnishing, children’s clothing, and computer electronics.

However, the store sells children’s clothing to Little Bugs Consignment then turns the proceeds into vouchers for children’s clothing to help families in need. And as far as used beds, while the store itself doesn’t accept them, it will donate gently used beds to families.

Wise Buys
Wise Buys is tucked along North State Street. Photo credit: Patricia Herlevi.

The store concentrates on the biggest sellers — women’s and men’s clothing. Nancy describes the contemporary thrift shop consumer while bringing Wise Buys up to speed with the current trends. “People buy at thrift stores for fun. Younger customers, [under the age 50], buy the most from the store.”

She goes on, “We corner in on high-end brands and fashion that would cost more. And active-wear sells ridiculously quickly.” A big seller is sports bras, which according to Nancy, fly out of the store as soon as they arrive.

Besides selling gently used brand name clothing and working towards zero waste, Wise Buys connects with the community in providing job training with Opportunity Council, Work Source, Work First and other similar programs. The non-profit organizations pay the wages of the workers-in-training.

Reaching further out in the community, Wise Buys teamed up with Western Washington University’s Center for Service Learning, which connects professors and students to non-profits.

Wise Buys
Sportswear, especially jogging bras fly out of the store. Photo credit: Patricia Herlevi.

“The non-profit gives them a problem pertaining to organizational change and they work in teams to solve the issue. They have helped me with training outlines, identifying our target customer and communication between volunteers,” explains Nancy.

And speaking of school programs, Nancy mentioned a teacher from Nooksack Valley High School who reached out to her. “She was setting up a class similar to the one at the college for high school students as a way to learn about something they were interested in and help the community at the same time.”

So far the project reaped beautiful results. “After a few trials of various ideas, the one that has worked the best is jewelry making. I send them all our broken jewelry and miscellaneous beads and they make jewelry for us to sell. I had a full display out of their work in July with the names of each artist. They really did some amazing work!”

Wise Buys landed at its current location in recent years and was purchased by Lydia Place from the YWCA in the late 1980s. With sales from the shop, Lydia Place paid off the mortgage in its first year of the store’s operation. The store brings in $80,000 a year, which accounts for 10 percent of Lydia Place’s budget. In addition, the store includes four case worker offices upstairs.

Wise Buys
The original Y’s Buys sign.
Photo courtesy: Patricia Herlevi.

Originally, the YWCA opened the thrift store in 1967. At that time the store was called Y’s Buys and opened on Champion Street. At one point the store moved to Commercial Street, then later to Holly Street and, after a fire, moved to its current location at 1224 North State Street.

Together with Buffalo Exchange and the hospice thrift store, North State Street acts as a hub for bargain and vintage shoppers. This bodes well for quirky fashionistas searching for blue tag finds. And let’s toss in a few good deeds revolving around recycled goods while we’re at it.

 

Musical Genre-Jumpers Come to Mount Baker Theatre

Mount Baker Theatre
Today area residents enjoy great performances at Mount Baker Theatre. Photo courtesy: Bellingham Whatcom County Tourism.

A favorite answer to the question, “What kind of music do you listen to?” that we’ve heard is, “Good. Oh, and live.” This person didn’t care what sort of music it was as long as the musical prowess was evident.

There are also musicians who echo this “genius across genres” sentiment in their capabilities: Wynton Marsalis holds Grammy Awards in both jazz and classical categories — no small achievement. Ben Folds roves like a bee picking up pollen from pop, punk, a capella — and classical chamber music. And like bees, the thread across all excellent cross-genre musicians seems to be that they explore, and they work.

Mount Baker Theatre
Mount Baker Theatre hosts a variety of renowned acts to its stage throughout the year. For a look at this season’s upcoming shows visit Mount Baker Theatre online. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.

“There are three musical and guitar traditions in my background,” says flamenco guitarist Jesse Cook. “I was a classical guitarist as a kid, and I studied flamenco, and then I studied jazz. One of the forms I use, rumba flamenco, is itself a hybrid created in the 1800s when sailors were coming back to Spain from Cuba having heard these Cuban rhythms. And here I am, 150 years later, taking it and mixing it back with modern music and seeing where it takes me. Music is a constantly evolving thing.”

So instead of exploring cul de sacs of music — flamenco, classical, rumba, world beat, pop, blues or jazz — Jesse Cook unites them. Cook is coming back to Mount Baker Theatre by popular demand from patrons thrilled with his previous local live performance.

Internationally acclaimed jazz musician Wynton Marsalis is a composer, bandleader, and educator — and the world’s first jazz artist to perform and compose across the full jazz spectrum. From its New Orleans roots to bebop to modern stylings, jazz is the mission of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Marsalis is a dynamic leader, raising the artform and the people it touches simultaneously through the outreach and institutions he’s had a hand in.

Primarily known for his contributions to jazz, Marsalis’ love for Bach, Beethoven, and Mozart led to him to pursue a career in classical music, recording trumpet concertos at the age of 20. Over the years, his recordings consistently incorporate blues, jazz, swing as the primary rhythm, American popular song, individual and collective improvisation, and a panoramic vision of compositional styles from ditties to dynamic call and response patterns.

Collaborating with artists such as Regina Spektor, Weird Al Yankovic, Sara Bareilles, and William Shatner, as well as some of the world’s foremost symphony orchestras, Ben Folds is endlessly curious. While planning a rock tour, he also played two sold-out shows this month at the Sydney Opera house with a Brooklyn-based classical sextet.

We Banjo 3
There’s something for everyone at Mount Baker Theatre this season. Photo credit: Yvonne Vaughan Photography.

For five seasons he was a judge on NBC’s hit “The Sing Off,” a show that put a capella in the national spotlight, and before that was the front man of the Ben Folds Five (described in jest as “punk rock for sissies”). Folds has created an enormous body of genre-bending musical art that includes pop albums, multiple solo rock albums, classical or “chamber rock,” and other collaborative records. Mount Baker Theatre presents Ben Folds this fall alone with a grand piano and his off-beat wit.

Put musical mastery on your calendars now with these upcoming live performances by multi-talented artists: Silent Films with Live Scores featuring the 1920s film “Peter Pan” and cross-over film historian and organ aficionado Dennis James (October 9), Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis (October 14), Ben Folds (October 28), the Time Jumpers with ten Nashville greats and multi-Grammy winner Vince Gill (January 15), Jesse Cook (January 26), and the guitar as used by four different musical cultures in International Guitar Night (February 24).

 

Pickford Film Center Presents ‘You’re Lookin’ at Country: Tough Love the Parenting Edition’

pickford film center
Featuring everything from indie flicks to blockbuster hits, popcorn and a movie at the Pickford Film Center is always a good time.

Submitted by Pickford Film Center

Coming to Pickford Film Center on September 11 at 6:00 p.m. is another chapter in the You’re Lookin’ at Country series, hosted by Elizabeth Shepherd with live musical stylings by Stephen Ray Leslie. This will be a night of vintage montage of country music videos and TV performances from the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.

For the sake of the children, we urge you to attend this night class with parenting experts, such as Conway Twitty, Loretta Lynn, George Jones and the late and great Merle Haggard. These classic video performances will be centered around “an instructive evening of tales about philandering dads, depressive mamas, heartbroken kiddos, and above all, alcohol­fueled destruction of the family unit.”

You’re Lookin’ at Country: Tough Love will be a night of musical fun and tuneful tips from your favorite country stars. Tickets are at regular pricing, but be sure to snag yours ahead of time. You’ll leave the show uplifted, realizing that your own childhood was perhaps not quite so bad as you remember it.

 

Mount Baker Theatre’s Educational Programs Bring the Arts to Area Children, One Show at a Time

lighting at Mount Baker Theatre
More than 17,000 children from the region attend a MBT Education Program production each year. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.

The incredible costumes, fantastic performers, innovative sets, and professional spectacle of live theater aren’t just for grown-ups. Mount Baker Theatre (MBT) wants every area child to experience the wonder found in culturally diverse live performing arts. Through Mount Baker Theatre’s educational programs, MBT provides access to professional arts curriculum for more than 17,000 Whatcom, Skagit, Island, San Juan, and upper Snohomish Counties’ public, private, and home school communities each year. More than just a field trip, this season’s shows will allow children to explore different subjects, cultures, and points of view in a safe, immersive, and memorable environment.

As funding for the arts has been cut over the years, MBT’s education program experiences have become even more important to area children. “Children gain many things from seeing a live theater performance, even without a connection to their classroom curriculum,” explains MBT’s Program Manager, Alison Terry Storms. “For many students, it’s their only exposure to the performing arts, particularly on the scale that we are able to present to them on our incredible stage. We are able to offer them access to really high quality work at a rate that’s affordable to schools and the students.”

Mount Baker Theatre's educational programs
More than 17,000 children a year take a field trip to Mount Baker Theatre from Whatcom, Skagit, Island, San Juan, and upper Snohomish Counties. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.

The hallmark of MBT’s education program is the Wade Bennett King Education Series whose focus is to enrich school curricula while providing students with the cultural experience that comes from early exposure to professional live performance. This season’s series includes ten shows for a range of audiences. Nine of the ten are geared toward elementary school and middle school children. Many are stage adaptations of well-known children’s literature. This season includes “Skippyjon Jones Snow What,” “Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters,” and “Junie B’s [Jones] Essential Guide to School,” to name a few.

Providing young people an opportunity to look at reading and stories in a whole new way can have an impact on how they see the world and what they choose to read. “Last year I got to see “The BFG” and they had a humongous paper mache model of the giant’s hand that reached onto the stage to grab Sophie,” Columbia Elementary School 3rd grader Lucy Guerra recalls. “I’ve read the book so many times. It was good to see it on stage and remember all the parts of the story. I like the way it all played out with real people.”

Kids will also get the chance to see dynamic motion, too. “‘Collision of Rhythm’ is going to be so exciting for the kids. Bronkar does rhythmic juggling, body percussion, and beatboxing with a tap dancing marimba master named Aaron,” Storms explains. The Peking Acrobats will also return to the theater and are always a crowd pleaser. “They are a window into a new culture, popular with both kids and teachers,” Storms adds.

A special program will perform for four days in the more intimate Walton Theatre within MBT as well. Portland-based Tears of Joy Puppet Theatre will present a piece from their Masterworks series, “The Toad Prince,” a revival using the vintage puppets of one of the company’s first shows.

Middle schoolers will enjoy Doktor Kaboom in “It’s JUST Rocket Science.” “He teaches the physics of rocket science through a theatrical presentation. It’s his second time at MBT and he’s very funny and exciting and does comedy experiments on stage,” Storms explains.

Mount Baker Theatre's educational programs
For many children a trip to Mount Baker Theatre is there only exposure to the performing arts. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.

Middle school exposure to cultural history will also be shared through “Wings of Courage,” which is the story of Eugene Bullard. “He was the first African-American fighter pilot during World War I in France. He wasn’t allowed to be a fighter pilot in the US during that time, so he traveled to France with a minstrel show. While there, he ended up in the armed forces and became a fighter pilot,” Storms explains. “But when he later returned to the US, he wasn’t allowed to fly anymore. It’s a fascinating story that needs to be told. We’re so excited to have it here.”

High school students won’t be left out either. Produced by Seattle Shakespeare Company, “Romeo and Juliet” will take the MBT stage for the second year in the row. “Many students read it in our area school districts. Part of the reason I chose the show is because I know from my own experience that when you see Shakespeare on stage, it makes a huge difference in your understanding versus just reading it,” Storms shares.

Several of the productions also have associated study guides that MBT makes available to teachers to use in the classroom before and after their field trip to MBT. “We get great support from teachers. We also want parents and administrators to know that the program has real value. Bringing the kids to the theater isn’t just a single field trip, it is an experience that carries forward into life and you really never know the impact it will have long-term,” Storms adds.

In addition to the Wade Bennett King Education Series, MBT also hosts Missoula Children’s Theatre in the summer, teaching theatre arts to children of all ages in a weekday summer camp format. The touring production company arrives at MBT complete with costumes, scenery, props, and makeup — everything it takes to put on a play, except the cast. “Missoula is unique because it gets up to 60 kids with a range of ages in a fully-formed production in just five days, which is unheard of,” Storms explains. “It gives students a chance to check it out in a short amount of time.”

Mount Baker Theatre's educational programs
Missoula Children’s Theatre comes to Mount Baker Theatre each summer. Lucia Costello (L in yellow) and Lucy Guerra (R in red and gray) performed in this past summer’s “The Frog Prince.” Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.

The summer program was a joy and hands-on learning experience for Lucy Guerra and her friend and fellow Columbia 3rd grader Lucia Costello. “It’s super fun to dress in fun costumes and get up on the stage and do the big show,” Guerra explains, beaming. “I was a Swamp Turtle in “The Frog Prince” this past summer. Lucia was a Swamp Mosquito. We were the Frog Prince’s swamp friends. So much fun.”

Mount Baker Theatre’s education programs strive to bring the arts and culture to all children in our area. “For non-traditional learners or those who might not gain as much from a book, MBT is giving kids another window into a new subject. You never know what is going to spark that passion in a kid and flip that switch to engage them,” Storms says. “Seeing a show might make them want to learn more about a subject outside the theater, or learn a musical instrument they saw on stage, or try a new science experiment. Giving kids new ways to look at things might not help them solve a math problem, but it reinforces individuality and gives them some cultural competency and compassion that the classroom alone just can’t give them.”

Tickets to the Wade Bennett King Education Series performances are currently available to schools and individuals by contacting the Mount Baker Theatre Box Office.

Mount Baker Theatre
104 North Commercial Street
Bellingham, WA 98225
Phone: 360-733-5793
Tickets: 360-734-6080
www.mountbakertheatre.com

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Do You Know Who Your Audience Is? We Do

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Understanding your audience is key to growing a business successfully. ©SouthSoundTalk.

Great stories are everywhere, but what one person considers great, another could find uninteresting. Knowing who your audience is and addressing that audience appropriately is a key component to successful marketing.

WhatcomTalk shares a wide range of stories, covering everything from high school sports and upcoming events, to profiles on community organizations and local businesses. Because all of the content we publish is shared and distributed online via social media, we know exactly who is reading what.

Serving Bellingham and surrounding Whatcom County, our readers consist primarily of women ages 25 – 45. These are educated working women, mothers, and household decision makers who want to know what’s happening in the community where they live, work and play.

Mount Shuksan
If a customer wants to put their brand in front of active men and women living in Whatcom County, we can place their logo on an article about local trails to hike. Photo credit: Brandon Fralic.

But knowing who our audience is doesn’t just help WhatcomTalk share stories that we know our readers will care about, it allows us to help our customers make more informed advertising decisions.

If a customer wants to reach active middle-aged men and women living in Bellingham, we can strategically place their logo on an article about local running trails or yoga classes. If a customer wants to advertise specifically individuals interested in art, we can put their logo on an article taking a self-guided tour of Bellingham’s many urban art displays.

Placing your brand in front of the audience you want your business to reach is key to growth. By helping our customers reach a specific audience, we can help them not only grow their brand, but measure the results using a comprehensive Community Social Graph that’s backed by insights and analytics.

For many small businesses, especially ones without in-house marketing departments, reaching a target audience can be difficult. Let WhatcomTalk help grow your businesses by placing your brand in front of the community members you want to reach.

 

WhatcomTalk is a digital media company sharing positive stories about people, places and businesses in Whatcom County. WhatcomTalk offers content marketing and online options to advertise across our community social network in Bellingham, Lynden, Ferndale and beyond. Advertise with WhatcomTalk to reach your target market, grow your brand, and measure results.

 

Readers’ Choice: WhatcomTalk’s Most-Read Stories in August

Red Barn Lavender
We're celebrating the approach of fall with one last look at summer — scroll through the article below to see what our readers' favorite stories were in August. Photo credit: Theresa Golden.

Fall is in the air. From the damp skies to the pumpkin spice lattes, summer has swiftly made its exit, making room for bulky sweaters, rubber boots, hot drinks, and all the things that autumn brings. But before we say goodbye completely, take a look back on summer one last time with our readers’ most-read stories in August.

1. Pozie by Natalie — Florist Natalie Ransom Uses Creativity to Build Her Dream

Pozie by Natalie
Pozie by Natalie’s owner Natalie Ransom hard at work making a one-of-a-kind floral crown. Photo credit: Katheryn Moran Photography.

2. Visiting Point Roberts — A Country Within a Country

Point Roberts Marina
Cross the border into Cananda, then cross it again to enter the charming town of Point Roberts, Washington. Photo courtesy: Point Roberts Marina.

3. A Symbol to Rally Behind: Brad Lockhart Designs Bellingham Flag

Bellingham flag
Brad Lockhart overlooks where Bellingham meets the bay, inspiration for his proposed city flag design. Photo credit: Tommy Calderon.

4. Editor’s Pick: Stop and Smell the Lavender at Red Barn Lavender in Ferndale

Red Barn Lavender
Stop and smell the lavender at Red Barn Lavender in Ferndale. Photo courtesy: Red Barn Lavender.

BelleWood Acres Celebrates Harvest Happens! 2017 — A Season of Apples, Pumpkins, Activities & More

BelleWood Acres is the ideal setting for Ciderfest. Photo credit: Tim O’Leary.

Halfway between Bellingham and Lynden, families and visitors of all ages find one of the area’s most beloved farms, BelleWood Acres. Home to 21 indelibly delicious apple varieties, this working orchard boasts a distillery and events center, a farm market, a pumpkin patch and a café. BelleWood has something for everyone every day, all year long. From families and lunch meetings, to school field trips and foodies, BelleWood Acres is a beloved outing for Whatcom families.

Harvest Happens
U pick varieties are available when ripe. You can also taste and purchase apples at the country store! Photo credit: Libby Liming.

While fun events and activities take place at BelleWood Acres daily, it’s September and October when the farm really gets hopping with Harvest Happens!, BelleWood’s famous fall festival.

During the week, the farm plays host to group tours and u-pick apples, with ripe apple varieties posted on the website weekly. Area companies and groups can schedule special fall celebrations during the week with event planner, Pamela Felke by calling 360-718-7720.

Farm Tunes happens Friday nights from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. in September —showcasing the region’s most sought after musicians and great comfort food on the event center patio. Weekends tend to get a little bit crazy.

Taste farm to bottle apple distillations free from 10:00 am to 5:00 p.m daily. Photo courtesy: Bellewood Acres.

On Saturdays and Sundays, BelleWood is off the hook with tractor led apple bin train rides, distillery tours, corn cannons, face painting, live music, caramel apples, fresh apple cider and more. You can even get lost in the corn maze. With opportunities for the entire family to play, eat, shop and drink, getting your fall on is easy at BelleWood Acres this fall. Pumpkins will roll in around the beginning of October, filling the days with oodles of children scurrying through the patch to find their perfect Jack-o-lantern.

Bellewood Acres is ready to welcome you with delicious fall goodies. Photo courtesy: Bellewood Acres.

Eat at BelleWood Country Café, a full-service restaurant featuring darn fine farm food. Chef Josh and his team create down home fresh food daily. Shop in the farm store for specialty gifts and local products that you won’t find anywhere else. Taste farm to bottle apple distillations free from 10:00 am to 5:00 p.m daily. BelleWood Distilling offers eight kind spirits: Honeycrisp Vodka, Raspberry Vodka, Straightforward Vodka, Straightforward Gin, Reserve Brandy, Eau de Vie, Pumpkin Spice and BelleWood Bruce. Register at bellewoodfarms.com for a full blown educational distillery tour on weekends presented at noon and again at 2:00 p.m. by BelleWood’s spirit masters.

You won’t want to miss Harvest Happens! at BelleWood this September and October. For more information about BelleWood Acres and the farm’s fall happenings, visit BelleWood Acres online.

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Hand-Sewn Stories — Cutting Cloth with Moth & Squirrel’s Libby Chenault

Moth & Squirrel
Libby and her recycled fabric creations can be found at the Bellingham Farmers Market each Saturday. Photo credit: Theresa Golden.

Not ready to say goodbye to your favorite worn and ragged T-shirt? How about giving it a new life as a monkey or a whale instead? Libby Chenault transforms once loved shirts and sweaters into a menagerie of stuffed animals, hats, key rings and more through her studio art business, Moth & Squirrel.

Within her studio at Make.Shift, Libby works with special clothing items found at Goodwill and Ragfinery as well as items donated to her from friends and the community. She starts with larger projects by cutting out necessary fabric for hats and works out smaller pattern pieces as the scraps themselves become smaller. Inspired by color and texture, with a fond appreciation for donated cashmere, Libby crafts and line embroiders each item of her own design with the use of her simple sewing machine.

Moth & Squirrel
Inspired by color and texture, with a fond appreciation for donated cashmere, Libby crafts and line embroiders each item of her own design with the use of her simple sewing machine. Photo credit: Theresa Golden.

Working with recycled materials is a passion and practice that started for Libby at a young age. “I would say I got started as a kid in elementary school, and my mom’s actually not much of a sewer at all, but she taught me how to sew on a button and she let me cut things up,” Libby explains. “So we didn’t really have a lot of go-to-the-fabric-store-and-buy-new-fabric experiences, but I could cut up old things.”

In college, Libby explored the nature of storytelling, an additional component that accompanies her art. “I went to Fairhaven College, and so I made my own degree and it was called personal identity through storytelling and a sense of place,” Libby shares. “One of the things I love about working with recycled fabric and the fiber arts in general is that so often they do have stories involved with them, whether it’s ‘Oh we took my wedding dress and turned it into this quilt,’ or ‘this was fabric from my grandma,’ or even just you know ‘this is my favorite thing and I want to save it. How do I make something new out of it?’”

Libby learned to sew at a time when Home Economics was taught in high school. Nowadays, sewing skills are less common for individuals and, as a result, Libby has had the opportunity to teach her skills through several venues. At Ragfinery, Libby taught several techniques including hand embroidery, printmaking and applique at a five-day kids’ camp where children ages 7–13 were able to try out techniques for themselves.

Moth & Squirrel
Libby Chenault, husband Steeb Russell and son participate in each Bellingham Art Walk from their studio at Make.Shift. Photo credit: Theresa Golden.

Libby also spent some time at Western Washington University this past year during Sweater Days, which focused on sustainability, heating costs, recycling, and keeping heating bills down. “As part of their program for that, I taught some mending classes up there. There were students who had brilliant young minds, but they had never sewn a button before. But then some of those skills just don’t get passed on as much and so that was so cool to have a student come in and say, ‘Oh here’s my favorite dress and it has this hole in it and what can we do?’ And not only helping her fix it, but learn how to do it so they have that confidence that they can take care of themselves and make and do and problem solve.”

For Libby, her career as an artist began to come together after she graduated from college. “I had graduated from college and I did some of my first dolls out of recycled materials. I sold some down in Seattle gave others to friends,” she explains. “At that time I was also doing bookmaking, so I would make journals. I had some friends who had a hemp clothing business at the farmers market at the time and so I would get some of their scraps and turn it into book cloth for my journals. Then I started making flowers out of some of my friends’ really lovely hemp silk blend, and so I would get little scraps from that and started making hair flowers. And everything has sort of grown from there.”

Around 2005, Libby and her husband started prioritizing art by renting their first studio and participating in the Downtown Art Walk. Now Libby and her husband, Steeb Russell — a painter of colorful “paint-toons,” share a studio in Make.Shift. Art Walk has long been a family event for Libby and her husband, with their son joining them in attendance since he was just one month old. Libby shares that her son, now 6 years old, even has zines that he sells during Art Walk. Having a family involved in art provides Libby with a sense of comradery. “Our work influences each other a lot, not necessarily that our style is the same, just we have a lot of love for similar subject matter as far as taking animals and making them our own or using colors in certain ways.”

Moth & Squirrel
Libby Chenault transforms once loved shirts and sweaters into a menagerie of stuffed animals, hats, key rings and more! Photo credit: Theresa Golden.

Libby has also been a part of the Bellingham Farmers Market for the last 10 seasons, bringing her creations in vintage suitcases. Here, unnamed stuffed animals, pieced together with fabric from across all corners of the community, wait patiently to travel into the hands of a new owner — each ready for their own storytelling identity to begin.

Libby’s designs may be purchased at the Bellingham Farmers Market on Saturdays, or from her studio in Make.Shift during Art Walk. Her items can also be found at The Lucky Dumpster in Edison.

Have a piece of clothing you would like transformed into something new? Or maybe you would like to donate an unwanted cashmere sweater? Contact Libby through her email at: mothandsquirrel@gmail.com.

Learn to Play Hockey, Soccer and More at Bellingham Sportsplex

Learn to play Bellingham at Bellingham Sportsplex.
Learn to Play Hockey Academy participants pose for a photo at Bellingham Sportsplex. Photo courtesy: Bellingham Sportsplex.

Do you or your kids have an interest in learning to skate or play ice hockey? How about soccer? Bellingham Sportsplex offers a variety of learning academies for youth and adults. Put on by local non-profit organization Whatcom Sports and Recreation, these classes are both fun and educational. Participants can drop in for a single class or sign up for an entire multi-week course. Here’s what to expect from each academy.

Learn to Skate Academy

The Skating Academy Basic Skills Program teaches ice skating on an NHL-size ice arena, right here in Bellingham.

“Our focus is to provide a great learning experience for all ages interested in ice sports,” says Skating Academy Director, Keri Ferguson. “Skating in all forms is a lifetime activity and we are very fortunate to have the arena here in our community.”

Bellingham Sportsplex Learn to Skate
Learn to Skate participants are taught ice skating on Bellingham Sportsplex’s NHL size arena. Photo courtesy: Bellingham Sportsplex.

During summer 2016, a six-week basic skills course includes one 30-minute lesson and three practices per week. Rentals are included, and skaters receive guest passes to get friends out on the ice.

Summer Seminars are new this year and will feature two-time Olympic guest coaches in August. A variety of skate camps — from junior level to elite — are offered as well. Check the Bellingham Sportsplex website or contact Keri Ferguson (kerif@bellinghamsportsplex.com) for more information.

Learn to Play Hockey Academy

Bellingham Blazers Learn to Play and Hockey Academy is designed for those with little to no previous ice hockey experience. Learn to play hockey in a safe environment — full gear is required for all classes.

Bellingham Blazers head coach Mark Collins runs the hockey academy. “We can have anywhere from 30 to 50 kids on the ice, and all of the Blazers boys help coach the kids,” says Mark. “It’s another thing that we’re doing to generate interest in the community and introduce players to hockey.”

Academies run 10 weeks, with each new class building off the previous week’s lessons. Players learn a variety of skills including power skating, balance, and edge control. Visit the Bellingham Sportsplex website for more information.

Hammers FC Soccer Academy

Kids interested in learning to play soccer can also get in on the action at Bellingham Sportsplex.

Hammers FC Academy Soccer Camps
Kids learn soccer skills through fun games and exercises at Hammers FC Academy Soccer Camps. Photo courtesy: Hammers FC Academy Soccer Camps

Lil’ Hammers programs are for children between 3 and 6 years old. Four-week courses offer a mix of training and games, with a focus on fun. According to the Lil’ Hammers program website, “Each training session and game is organized with an emphasis on fun in mind, to cultivate the love of soccer!”

The Jr Hammers program is for 9- to 11-year-olds. Players train and compete in tournaments during summer break, participating in Baker Blast and other big games.

Summer soccer camps are offered as well for ages 5 to 12. Each camp lasts a few days, and includes training, along with a Hammers FC Academy T-Shirt and ball.

For more information on Hammers FC Soccer Academy, contact Claire Morgan at clairem@bellinghamsportsplex.com.

 

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