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Where independent Florida businesses & cool shoppers come together.

LocalShops1 Blog

Why do you shop locally?

“Shopping local is like paying it forward. You aren’t just supporting your local restaurant. You are supporting your local baker, grower, florist, etc. Shopping at a local children’s resale shop like Ollie’s Treehouse not only supports my Mom, but it supports all the wonderful families that choose to sell their gently used items to Ollie’s. Local shops also know local shops. So at Ollie’s you may learn about other wonderful local businesses like Thomas Bruce Photography, StrollerFit St. Pete or about LocalShops1!!”
Tricia Schmitz,
Ollie’s Treehouse, St. Pete

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“There’s no place like home…and without independent small businesses, home wouldn’t be the same. (They) are the backbone of our community. As shoppers, we feel it is important to shop locally to support our local economy & to keep the small mom & pop businesses, like ourselves, in business. As business owners, we feel that it is important to show our customers that we appreciate them by giving back to the community with our yearly charity pond tour … free educational classes and fun events.”
David & Lisa Burns,
Backyard Getaway, Bradenton

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“Local businesses are cooler, harder-working, and more likely to benefit me and my friends in the long run. That is why I shop locally.”
Dr. Nate Bonilla-Warford,
Bright Eyes Tampa

• • • • •
“I love to support local artists, and local merchants. It helps build a strong local economy. If I need a gift for someone and don’t make them something, then I want to buy them something from another local artist.”
Christina Lee,
Lee Shore Gallery, Bradenton


“Local, independent businesses add charm  to our
neighborhoods & keep the local economy
going strong!”
LocalShops1 Girl

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GPS Ready: Ybor Artists 2

This is part of series of interviews  from the Ybor Art Association.

O1 Organic Fine Art Gallery has many faces. One of these faces is to promote art and artists in the community so that everyone’s life will richer as a result. One way they do it is by through the Ybor Art Association Meet and Greet .I had a change to attend the last “Meet and Greet”. I interviewed many of the Artists there about their art and inspiration.

Kathleen McCabe -Artist uses Ceramics and Porcelain Dishes to make subtle 3-d mosaic paintings of flowers and leaves.

What is your inspiration? My inspiration is my garden. I have this little cottage in my backyard that I use for my art studio. I can look outside my window and see nature and this inspires my pieces. I use different types of old dishes, bowls, and cups to create the subtle effect of raised leaves and flowers. For example, I used pieces of a thick bowl to create this thick ridge that outlines the leaves. This ridge is about a quarter inch and stands out on the piece. Inside the leaves and flowers, I use thin fine china pieces to give it a elegant effect. You have to come closer to see the depth of the thick and thin pieces. I love the fact that I can upcycle broken dishes and china into beautiful art work. I go to garage sales, or thift stores to find my materials. I use my tile cutters and just snip and clip away and arrange my pieces into my art work. It usually takes about 60 to 80 hours to finish a piece.

What doe you want people to take away from your Art? I want them to know that you can be inspired by nature and that recycling and upcycling is very important. I love the fact that you can take what normally would be cast way and turn it into Art !

What are your final thoughts? I am working on a future bamboo piece. I have been working off and on it and I don’t know when it will be finished.

Thank you Kathleen McCabe for your beautiful art work and flowers.

If you are interested in creating your own Mosiac art work, check out the art/pottery castoff bin at Dishtopia and Anytime Tea Bar for materials to create your own masterpieces.

http://www.dishtopia.biz/

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GPS READY: Henri Matisse

Henri Matisse Exhibit at Tampa museum of Art-Feb 6 to April 18. To see all the exhibits and the Dates of the ART AFTER DARK Series , go to http://www.tampamuseum.org/  or you can click here : http://www.tampamuseum.org/events/art-after-dark

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GPS READY: Ybor Artists

This is part of series of interviews  from the Ybor Art Association.

O1 Organic Fine Art Gallery has many faces. One of these faces is to promote art and artists in the community so that everyone’s life will richer as a result. One way they do it is by through the Ybor Art Association Meet and Greet .I had a change to attend the last “Meet and Greet”. I interviewed many of the Artists there about their art and inspiration.

Jason Shiver is an artist that works in both painting and metal sculpture.

What is your main Inspiration? My main inspiration is water-Water is all around us and we start from water.  I enjoy studying how man interacts with nature. Man can interact with nature and help it or man can interfere and destroy nature.

What do you want your viewers to take from your Art ?  I want to see what people think of my art work. I want to have the audience react; I want to catch their attention and engage him.

What is the large art piece outside in the window ? It is called the 4th way-It is a philosophy concept that deals with Man’s concept of himself, both as a child and as an adult. The middle piece shows that mankind is disportionately larger that the stars and planets he is grasping at. This symbolizes the fact that he thinks of himself in grandiose fashion. On the top, man as an adult tries to make his own light and trusts in his own technology and works to guide him. The child trusts the divine guidance and is guided by a higher light and wisdom.   This, he says, is the common struggle of man and we are both the adult and the child in the painting. We both trust in divine guidance to guide us and yet at the same time we use the sum of our own skills, talents, abilities to lead us and trust in our own technologies to help ourselves.

Final thoughts ? I will follow all the directions of my work and see where it goes.

Thank you Jason Shiver and Mrs. Shiver.

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Cafe has real Charisma

Story by Amy Blanton
LocalShops1.com USF-St Pete contributor

Tucked in the art district of the Village of the Arts in Bradenton is a coffee & art shop. Walk toward the bright, spring- color painted structure and something draws you in. Maybe it’s the iron archway, maybe it’s the glass windows … but there’s something magnetic about Charisma Cafe and Art.
Kim and Harvey Hoffman opened the shop in October 2007. The couple had moved to Sarasota from Boston more than 20 years before, never with an intention to open a coffee shop. So how did it come about? Kim Hoffman tells us her story.
“I’ve been serving coffee since I was 12. I’ve worked at bakeries, doughnut shops, coffee shops, as well as my sister’s coffee shop in Sarasota for 12 years,” Hoffman says. But opening her own shop was never in the plans. Hoffman was actually out looking for an investment property.
“Our family doesn’t have a lot of funds because my husband is paralyzed, (but) we had equity in the house and the bank was able to loan us the money. The idea was to have a family come in and rent the house for five years or so at a time and then later give it to our kids.

Kim Hoffman, Charisma Cafe

“I didn’t know about the Village of the Arts until my realtor friend, Jonie, from Sarasota brought me here,” she says. “We were shown a piece of property that was very promising and we put a back-up bid on it.”
On the way back to Sarasota, the realtor drove by a house she had sold a year earlier.
“An eerie feeling overcame me when the car stopped,” Hoffman says. “I saw the place and said, ‘I hope that’s not the place that you wanted to show me.’ There were citations posted, parts of the chimney were knocked off.”
The realtor called the next day. Turns out the house they had seen, the one falling apart, was for sale. The owner had called the night before and aid he was dying and needed to sell the house.
Hoffman said she wanted the house. The night before she had prayed for a sign, for something to send her in the direction she was meant to go. She figured this was it. She asked the realtor to write the contract. She refused to even go look at the house from the inside.
“We signed the papers at Sarasota Memorial Hospital because (the seller) was going in to surgery and they didn’t think he would make it,” Hoffman says.
“In a sense, I did a bad thing of not looking at the house first. There was practically no floor. In the back, it wasn’t complete. Half of the back wall was gone.”
For the next few months, Hoffman worked on the house. She wasn’t even close to done when, one day, she was driving around the Village of the Arts with an artist friend.  “I told her ‘I bet in about a year or so someone is going to open a coffee shop here.’ She turned to me and said, ‘And why can’t that be you?’ A few moments later she says, ‘We do know how much you love food.’”
They talked about the house. Hoffman said she knew it still looked bad, but after she painted it would be better. “It just has some charisma,” she told her friend.
“That’s your name,” her friend said. “Charisma.”
And in that short conversation the Hoffmans’ property went from being a rental home to a coffee shop/gallery. She didn’t tell her husband until months later, after the business was created, the supplies had been purchased.
At the time, the Village of the Arts was a transitional neighborhood, an up-and-coming arts district. Today, it is a thriving community filled with colorful homes, art galleries, restaurants and other businesses.
And the coffee shop is packed with charisma. Besides the coffee and food and local artwork, it’s also a place for tea parties, for children and grown-ups, too.

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GPS Ready: Straz Center performance

For the first time on stage, the equestrian arts are infused with unprecedented magic and emotion in Cavalia, an innovative theatrical extravaganza.

Presented by the Straz Center at the Florida

State Fairgrounds
March 12-21

Regularly priced tickets start at $44.50.
Buy Cavalia tickets.

“The greatest show I have ever seen!” - Larry King, CNN

Seen by more than 2.5 million people worldwide, Cavalia is a tribute to horses and a celebration of the relationship that we have enjoyed together. This theatrical extravaganza features more than 100 two- and four-legged artists, including beautiful horses of 12 breeds, riders, acrobats, aerialists, dancers and live musicians. It is this combination that sets the mood in the majestic White Big Top, the largest touring White Big Top in the world. Headquartered in Montreal, Quebec (Canada), Cavalia is the brainchild of Normand Latourelle who has become renowned for producing popular events throughout the world. Watch a video clip. To learn more, visit cavalia.net.

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GPS READY: Monday night Jazz

USF to perform on Monday Night Jazz. Come out for an evening of big band jazz!

Monday, March 1 at 8:00 p.m.
Theatre 1

$8 Students/Seniors, $12 Adults – Advance Sales
$10 Students/Seniors, $15 Adults – Day of Performance Tickets

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GPS READY: GIFTS OF LOVE CHARITY and SILENT AUCTION

Kalesia Tea on Fowler is having GIFTS OF LOVE charity and silent auction again !! This time it supports Community Stepping Stones, a community of people, mentoring kids, teaching art, and helping Sulfer Springs!

I went to this last year and it was AWESOME !!

MARCH 20 6 to 10 pm!

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GPS READY: More Music and Art at USF

Monday, March 1, 2010 - 7 PM
Architecture Lecture Series
Jan Wampler

Plaza Room 2708 – Marshall Student Center, USF - Free
For additional information click
here

Monday, March 1, 2010 - 8 PM
Monday Night Jazz
Theatre 1, USF
$8 students/seniors, $12 adults (Advance Sales)
$10 students/seniors, $15 adults (Day of Performance)
For additional information click here
Tuesday, March 2, 2010 - 8 PM
USF Symphony Band
Theatre 1, USF
$8 students/seniors, $12 adults (Advance Sales)
$10 students/seniors, $15 adults (Day of Performance)
For additional information click here
Wednesday, March 3, 2010 - 8 PM
USF Concert Band
Theatre 1, USF
$8 students/seniors, $12 adults (Advance Sales)
$10 students/seniors, $15 adults (Day of Performance)
For additional information click here
Thursday, March 4, 2010 - 8 PM
SYCOM
FAH 101 – Music Recital Hall, USF - Free
For additional information click
here

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Gps Ready: Events around Town

15 minutes of Fame Rotating Exhibit
15 minutes of Fame art show –if you are a museum member, you can have a 15 minute show and exhibit at the museum!
This is for photography and you can share your inner shutterbug with your fellow photographers-you don’t have to be professional photographer to be in the show. On feb 24, 7:30 to 8:00 at the Florida Museum of  Photographic Arts-New group every month!

There is a new market in Seminole Heights!  Check it it out ! It is on the Lawn of Hillsborough High school -they have jewelry, home-made goods and other healthy eats.

Feb. 28
Sunday Morning Market in Seminole Heights,

9 a.m.-1 p.m.
Seminole Heights hosts its Sunday Morning Market.

Hillsborough High School
5000 N. Central Ave.
Tampa, FL 33603
For vendor information, contact market manager Tiffany Ferrecchia at (813) 649-8747 or eternalbalanceliving@yahoo.com.
Learn More

Sunday, February 28, 2010 - 4 PM
Steinway Piano Series
Natsuki Fukasawa

FAH 101 – Music Recital Hall, USF
$8 students/seniors, $12 adults (Advance Sales)
$10 students/seniors, $15 adults (Day of Performance)
For additional information click here

March 7
Oscar Nights In America
at Tampa Theatre,

6 p.m.
Tampa Theatre hosts Oscar Nights America, an Academy Awards-sanctioned event with a big-screen viewing of the ceremony. Guests are treated like movie stars with limo rides, red carpet arrivals, screaming fans and paparazzi. All benefits go to the theater.

711 Franklin St.,
Tampa, FL 33602
(813) 274-8286
Learn More

http://www.tampatheatre.org/oscarnight10.php

FACING THE LATE VICTORIANS: Portraits of Writers and Artists from the Mark Samuels Lasner Collectionwildeape.web.jpg
March 5 – June 5, 2010
This much-lauded traveling exhibit includes drawings, prints, photographs, manuscripts and books from the 19th century’s most influential artists and writers.  Included in the show are portraits of Oscar Wilde, George Eliot, Aubrey Beardsley, George Bernard Shaw, J. M. Barrie, H. G. Wells, Arthur Conan Doyle, Thomas Hardy, Henry James, William Morris, Max Beerbohm, James McNeill Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Robert Louis Stevenson and Sarah Bernhardt, who performed at the Tampa Bay Hotel on her farewell tour.  Details on the exhibit and companion events.

Facing the Late Victorians: Portraits of Writers Artists from the Mark Samuels Lasner Collection Website

Picnic in the Park

Sunday, March 14, 2010
11:30 AM – 3:30 PM

Captain Cliff’s Fun Boat: $4 per person
Boxed Lunches: $8, reservations by March 11
Table and 8 Chair Rental: $20, limited table reservations
$1 Day at the Museum

Schedule
11:30 am-3:30pm, Old fashioned games, free ice cream, boat rides
11:30am-12:15, Flexible Four from Tampa’s Heralds of Harmony
12:00pm-4:00pm, $1 Day at the Museum
12:15pm-1:15pm, Blake High School Gospel Choir
12:30pm-2:00pm, Joy and Jack Harris book signing
1:15pm-2:00pm, Stylin Quartet from Toast of Tampa Show Chorus
2:00pm-2:30pm, Live Theater, Arthur Schleman
2:40pm-3:10pm, UT Band’s Wind Ensemble
Publix Super Markets Charities underwrites Picnic in the Park.

Henry B. Plant Museum
401 West Kennedy Boulevard, Tampa
813.254.1891
plantmuseum.com


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