halifax commoner - Archived Student Publications from the
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halifax commoner - Archived Student Publications from the
HALIFAX PAGE EDITOR: JOHN GILLIS We take you shopping downtown Holiday Gift Guide FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 COMMONER Published by the University of King’s College School of Journalism Funky furniture finds: 4, 5 Retro home decor: 14,15 Candies and fine foods: 6, 7 FREE “Stuff you can’t get a t S e a r s ” : 11 Harry Potter alternatives: 8, 9 Christine Kay / The Commoner Sarah Young, 9 (left), and Anna Story, 9, eye candies in the front window of Freak Lunchbox at 1723 Barrington St. PAGE 2 THE COMMONER FRIDAY NOVEMBER 16, 2001 Deer droppings make tasty stocking stuffers By Jennifer Vardy price from $3 and $20. “I’ve never known a woman not to love candles,” Chapman says. “It’s something lovely for any room of Is there someone naughty on your your house, and a treat that they will never Christmas list this year? Give him a lump of buy for themselves.” For the wine lover, coal. Candy coal, that is. The Unicorn carries You can get it at The wooden and wire wine Unicorn for just $3.60. bottle holders. A woodAccording to Sophie en case holding a single Chapman, owner of The bottle is $39, while a Unicorn, the big gift for case for a double bottle women this Christmas is $49. will be the fur boa and Chapman recomcuffs. It can be worn with mends a selection of a suit or over a coat or powdered hot chocolate jacket. They’re made of for stocking-stuffers. It braided rabbit fur or comes in cappuccino, Mongolian lamb, and banana, Irish Cream cost between $40 and $60. and other flavours, and Chapman says jewelis only $1 a packet. The ry is also popular. Unicorn also carries boxes “Especially rhinestone,” of Deer Droppings — she says. “Sparkle and chocolate covered peanuts more sparkle. We’re — for just $4. even seeing that in belts If you’re tired of the this Christmas.” Prices ordinary gift wrap you for jewellrey range see in department between $50 and $150 stores, The Unicron has for earrings, bracelets wrapping kits for under and necklaces. $10. The fabrics can be If you’re looking for used on any shaped parsomething for that hardcel. to-buy for woman on your list, candles are Christine Kay/The Commoner ◆ The Unicorn, 1579 Grafton St. your best bet, ranging in The Commoner Cherub $95 (real feather wings) Christine Kay/The Commoner Sophie Chapman admires Christmas geese. Males sell for $95, females for $45. Books, bob-skates and camel-hair coats I met a romantic man at Dalhousie’s Killam Library one afternoon. He was in the first year of his degree; I was in graduate school. He asked me for help with a jammed photocopier, then invited me for coffee in the library café. I accepted and he told me stories about his life. It took a while — he was 83 years old. After years in business and a career in the navy, he had come back to school for his business degree. The best story was the way he met his wife 60 years ago. It was 1936 and she’d been hurrying along Barrington Street to her job at the phone company. She was wearing an above-the-knee camel-hair coat and stumbled as she ran. He helped her to her feet. She thanked him and rushed off before he could get her name. He was on Christmas shore leave from the navy and never expected to see her again. A year later, he did. Back in Halifax, he recognized her arriving at a party in her camel-hair coat — from Mills Brothers Department Store, he later learned. After a short courtship, he proposed. He promised she would always have a camel-hair coat from Mills Brothers if she would agree to marry him. He confessed to asking her years later if she wouldn’t prefer a coat from the Sears catalogue instead, but apparently that didn’t go over well. Mills Brothers is still in business and they still sell camel-hair coats. Inside this issue of The Commoner, you’ll join Michael JANICE MACDONALD MANAGING EDITOR viewPOINT Ganley on a visit to the old store, and you’ll find objects of interest from other stores in downtown Halifax. From dried cranberries drenched in white chocolate at project 9, to antique bobskates at The Urban Cottage, to your favourite Alex Colville painting in poster form at Annabelle’s, we’ve filled this issue with gift ideas for the holiday season. We’ve found items for all age groups over a wide price range. We couldn’t cover all the stores in metro, so we selected a representative few from the downtown area with unusual or interesting gifts . While you’re downtown, check out some of the other stores too. If you’re lucky enough to find a parking spot, you may as well stay a while. Better yet, hop on a bus, or walk. You might also want to catch some of the stores on Young Street’s Hydrostone Market, the new Wheatons in Sackville, or some of the shops in Bedford and Dartmouth — HRM has no shortage of specialty stores and boutiques. With little time and less cash, I have to confess to spending little time shopping in stores like these over the past few college years. When I do, it’s usually time spent fer- reting out books in one of this city’s great used book shops like my favourites, John W. Doull’s and Schooner’s Books. But in exploring the stores and stories in this issue of The Commoner, I’m reminded of childhood trips to Halifax from Cape Breton, and meeting friends for dinner and a night of holiday shopping downtown when I first moved here five years ago. In my immediate family, we’ve started a tradition of exchanging names for Christmas gifts. The caveat is, you have to make the present by hand. We’d been worried about having too much “stuff” and about the commercialism of the season getting in the way of its meaning. By making the gifts, we spend time, not money, on the recipient. Of course it’s a bit easier for my family members. My father sculpts with steel, and builds with wood. My mother is a painter and chef. My sisters sew or craft. Those genes must have skipped me — my gift recipients are never sure what they’re going to get, but they know it will definitely look homemade. Still, I shop for gifts for my niece and nephews, and friends and other family members. So this year, I’ll take this guide and spend a December evening exploring some downtown shops. This is the last issue of our newspaper for the term. We here at The Commoner wish you peace in the coming holiday season. THE HALIFAX COMMONER Vol. 4 No. 5 The Halifax Commoner is written and edited in the Newspaper Workshop at the School of Journalism University of King’s College Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 2A1 (902) 422-1271 ext. 150 Fax: (902) 425-8183 Managing Editor: Janice Frances MacDonald jfmacdon@is2.dal.ca Assignment Editor: John Gillis Photo and Street Level editors: Christine Kay Leah Fitzgerald Thomas Edelson Faculty advisers and instructors: Michael Cobden (mcobden@is.dal.ca) Michael Creagen Eugene Meese Blair Purdy Joan Westen PAGE EDITOR: JASMINE BUDAK FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 3 Leopard, giraffe and zebra teapots — oh my! Mills Brothers has been selling stylish clothing and accessories for 82 years. By Michael Ganley The Commoner Snow White and the seven dwarfs are already in window 7, watching the passersby on Spring Garden Road. The shelves inside are stocked with silver-tipped badger hair shaving brushes ($140), something called “Fireplace in a Box” ($14.95), and novelty Christmas sweaters sporting teddybears on skates ($145). The Christmas season has begun at Mills Brothers. The Harry Potter doll ($40) has already sold out, but Ron Weasley ($40) is still up for grabs, and hopefully more of Harry will be in before the big day. The staff is busy stocking shelves, dealing with customers and placing orders. “You should speak with Janet, she’ll show you the things that are moving well,” said the young woman who greeted me at the door. “And the things that aren’t,” she added in a touching bit of honesty. Janet Stern manages the giftshop, which occupies one small corner of this surprisingly large store. “Everything has to go through Mr. MacLellan,” she says. Ian MacLellan is the president of Mills Brothers. I make my way through cosmetics (collectible compacts, $35 - $90), accessories (cashmere-lined Isotoner gloves, $68), sportswear (puff-jacket by Tommy Hilfiger, $295), and head upstairs to the business office. Michael Ganley / The Commoner Sandra Little tidies clothing in the sportswear section. The nutcracker doll on the rack is a popular gift; it comes in different sizes priced between $3.95 and $28. Mr. MacLellan, well-dressed, ushers me into a small board room. Pictures of the store as it was when it began in 1919 adorn the walls, along with framed letters of congratulation from dignitaries and retail groups, and a photo of Miss Canada 1948, who worked at Mills Brothers. “You should really speak with Heather, who does most of our buying” says Mr. MacLellan. Heather MacLellan is his daughter, and the store’s creative director. She’s out and won’t be back for half an hour. I tell him I’ll go across the street for a cup of coffee and come back. “You’re assuming that she’ll be able to fit you in,” he cautions. While waiting, I browse through the small men’s clothing section (manicure set, $34), which has its own entrance off Birmingham Street, as if running the gauntlet of giftshop (premium Japanese green tea, $10.95), cosmetics (Estee Lauder blockbuster set, $300 value for $59.50 with purchase of $30 of Estee Lauder product) and sportswear (PBJ cotton turtlenecks in a variety of colours including camel, the colour this year, $39.95) is too much for male shoppers. “Older gentlemen like hankies” (three cotton hankies, $19.50, one linen, $18.95) says Stella Athanasiou in men’s wear. “They make great stocking stuffers.” “Could you drop off a copy of your publication and your business card,” asks Heather MacLellan when she gets back. “I’ll give you a call. Today and tomorrow are too busy, so I’ll call you Wednesday.” I explain I have a deadline and just need to talk to a few staffers about what’s hot this season. “I know, that’s great,” says Ms MacLellan. “Publicity’s publicity, but I’m not familiar with your publication.” Publicity, apparently, is not publicity. After reviewing the most recent edition of this august newspaper, Ms MacLellan instructs staff in various departments to share their insights with me. She apologizes for being so busy, saying things are hectic as they prepare for their invitation-only customer appreciation wine and cheese party the following night. “Vests ($85 to $500) are big this year,” says Sandra Little in sportswear. “We sell out of the Mason-Pearson hairbrushes for men or women ($46 to $135),” says Brenda Dauphinee in cosmetics. “They’re handmade in England and not easy to get.” “The safari look is in,” says Janet Stern in the giftshop. “We have leopard, giraffe and zebra print teapots for $78.” And the Fireplace in a Box? Well, it’s a video and there are two options. The original provides the crackling sights and sounds of a fireplace for your television. The fire burns down, and after an hour only the sizzling embers are left. The more recent version provides popular Christmas tunes along with the cozy blaze. ◆ Mills Brothers, 5486 Spring Garden Rd. Hostess gifts galore at Jennifer’s of Nova Scotia By Leah Fitzgerald The Commoner Leah Fitzgerald / The Commoner This Christmas tree displays an assortment of wooden ornaments ($5). PAGE EDITOR: DAN SCHNARE For the hostess on your list, Jennifer’s of Nova Scotia has plates by New Brunswick potter Flo Greig with either an earth-toned or blue apple pattern ($40). There are also dip trays from Clayworks, the Halifax potters, in pastel colours with either an apple or pear bowl in the centre ($46) and a recipe for ginger lime fruit dip. Village Pottery, from PEI, makes green and beige metallic glazed dip trays ($36), as well as other pieces ($20 to $40). For the family gardener, or any resident of HRM, there’s a compost pot ($59.50). It’s by Flo Greig, and it comes in either the earth-tone or blue apple pattern. The squat pot has a cover that fits tightly to keep the fruit flies out and the smells in. It’s a lot more attractive than the city-provided kitchen green bins. Jennifer’s has wool hats and mittens ($35.50). They’re hand knit, with a fuzzy lining made of tufts of sheep’s wool knit, which make up the dotted pattern on the outside of the mitten. They come in green, red, blue, and beige. Jennifer’s also has a wide assortment of jewelry and ornaments. The shop has a wide selection of earrings by Desiderata, a New Brunswick jeweller, from small dangling goldstone spheres ($10.50) to hammered copper teapots and abstract shapes ($20.50). Leah Fitzgerald / The Commoner Cotton ball snowman tree ornament ($4.75) Black Celtic knots pained on beige clay backings set as necklaces, pins and earrings (Touchs Time Pottery, Antigonish, $14 to $18) are nice accompanied by A Primer of Celtic Art Symbols ($4), a short guide to the meanings and origins of common Celtic knots. Manager Kurt Bulger says the guaranteed hot seller is Amos Pewter’s new ornament for this year ($14.95), a gazebo surrounded by flying birds. Bulger says the Mahone Bay company has a devoted following. The delicate pewter birds, dolphins, and doves ($14.95 to $15.95) would make a nice hostess gift or token for a friend. For package toppers to tie on with bows, wooden snowmen or Santa Clauses ($5) would be perfect, and would be great, too, on a Christmas tree. Jennifer’s also has a small collection of Seagull Pewter angels ($14), with detailed wings and gowns. Roberta Originals folk art angels are mounted as pins or for hanging ($12). The clay figures come with different colours of hair and dresses and each face is slightly different. Large snowman mugs by Clayton Dickson Studio ($17) have dishes that match in blue or white. The heartshaped plates ($36) would make great Christmas cookie serving platters. For kids, a large wool hand knit Christmas stocking ($39.80) would be nice filled with little treats, like the hand knit chicken and pig finger puppets ($2), or the fuzzy dinosaur finger puppets ($2.25). Reindeer heads, made of yarn covered plastic, reveal a kiss, a chocolate one of course, when squeezed open ($2). For Dad, there are double-sided cotton ties by Flax Blue ($25), in bright prints, usually with a conservative print on one side and a wild print on the other. Christmas prints are also available. ◆ Jennifer’s of Nova Scotia, 5635 Spring Garden Rd. PAGE 4 THE COMMONER streetLEVEL What’s the best gift you’ve given or received? “ Project 9’s fashion designs Funky furniture, plastic kitchenware, hip clothes, coffee and bagels. by Eliza Barlow Our son Matthew gave us a clay handprint last year for Christmas. It’s these sentimental gifts you remember most I think. “ Jane MacPherson Physiotherapist was a bottle “ The best gift I everofgotCanadian Club whiskey.” Cory Weston Panhandler of “ My brother gave mea boya littleandfigurine girl. The Darlene Kyte Youth counsellor girl was like the big sister and she had her hand on the boy’s head. It made me cry. I think I might start crying now.” FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 The Commoner If you’re looking for an adventurous gift for your sweetheart, head down to project 9 in downtown Halifax and pick up some Belgian chocolate body paint in a sultry cobalt blue bottle ($14). The sign above it says, “Yes, it’s chocolate. Yes, it’s Belgian. Yes, it’s body paint. Use your imagination.” Julie Lacroix, an employee at project 9, shows her favourite stocking stuffer, a “funny little deck of oval-shaped cards” in a plastic oval case, for $6. Owner Geoff McLean describes project 9 as a mini-department store featuring urban contemporary furniture and accessories, as well as clothing and shoes. Urban contemporary, he says, is a style that’s geared towards an urban style of living: for apartment buildings and smaller spaces. Much of project 9’s floor space is devoted to furniture. There’s a red-and-brown “flamenco” chair, which has a swirl in its shape (the back is curved downward) and turns on its base, for $649. There’s a bright red upholstered sofa bed, designed by Montreal designer Lucy Au, that sells for $1,399. It looks like a regular sofa at first glance, but it folds down on its metal frame into a bed. A luxurious beige chaise lounge by the window is $949. One of the unusual pieces of furniture in the store is a white leather chaise lounge. The seat is circular, and the back of the chair tropical daiquiri, lime salt, cocoa/coffee specialty and bloody mary/caesar. Near the café on a wooden shelving unit is an assortment of gourmet cooking condiments and other interesting foods. There’s a row of tall glass bottles of “bread dipper sauce,” which café employee Lacey Corkum says is an olive-oil based sauce for dipping baguette bread into. A can of dried cranberries “drenched in white chocolate” is $11.50. Project 9 sells bathroom accessories such as shower curtains and towel bars, which cost around $25 each, and mini-trash cans in blue, orange and light green for $5 each. A freestanding chrome soap dispenser is $38. Little clocks on sucLeah Fitzgerald/The Commoner tion cups sell for $16 each. The selection of clothing, You can sit and spin in style on the project 9 flamenco swivel chair for $649. which McLean says is “for hiprotates 360 degrees around the for our market, we’re finding sters,” is at the back of the store. seat. This funky item sells for we’re the first people they go to He says the men’s clothing is snowboard, surfer and casual $2,699. “It has sort of an Austin when they’re starting out.” McLean says some of the most apparel, while the women’s clothPowers look to it,” he says. “It attracts a lot of attention.” One popular items he stocks are vari- ing is more fashion-oriented. McLean says project 9 is a good woman, McLean says, bought a ous “storage solutions,” such as chaise like this in chartreuse green square plastic mesh storage bas- place to come if you’re looking for kets. They come in pink, black, a store that’s more on the cutting leather. McLean says project 9 appeals orange, blue, white and green and edge than larger department to new homeowners and people cost $12 each. People buy them to stores. “The product we have is so who are beginning to buy “keep- make gift baskets. “Because wick- different than what you’ll get in a chain store,” he says. “We just er” furniture. Though he said the er is so over,” he says. Project 9 sells unusual lamps, have a better selection of different furniture is geared toward smallspace living, people who live in like a “’30s-inspired modern” and modern items.” In one corner of project 9 is a apartments aren’t his only cus- large glass sphere that looks something like a fortune teller’s crystal small café serving coffee, cappuctomers. “We had one fellow we deliv- ball and sells for $59. There’s a cino, espresso, bagels and muffins. ered a chair to last week,” he says. pair of lamps with leopard-print The furniture in the café looks like “He’d just built a huge, magnifi- shades, and a “lumirama” lamp, a merchandise; you can sit on metal cent house in the back of Cole tall metal floor lamp with three chairs with purple or red upholstered seat covers at the round Harbour. The chair was one of our saucer-shaped lights, for $169. If you like margaritas, project 9 glass tables, while you sip an “Lola” chairs [around $665], which is a very structured, square is the place to go for your acces- espresso and try to take in all the chair with metal legs. He got it in sories. There are several different stuff in the store. It takes well over styles of margarita shakers that an hour to see everything here. a cosmic orange fabric. “We delivered it to him and it sell for $38 to $40 each. There are was his first piece of furniture. His also round, flat tins of margarita ◆ project 9, huge house was totally empty. So glass dippers in flavours such as 5525 Artillery Pl. ula, salad tongs, pie server ($14 to $20) • Plastic photo album in bright orange, electric blue, lime green or white ($16.00) $20 - $50 • “Ecospa” soap and bubble bath set in “thalasse” ($28) “ When I was 16, my mom gave me my grandmother’s wedding ring. She got it from her grandmother who got it from her grandmother. I don’t wear it all the Melanie Glaverson time. I’m afraid to School nurse lose it.” • Eight gallon chrome-and-black trash can ($69) • Hexagonal wooden laundry hamper ($79) $100 + • “Lumirama” lamp (floor lamp with three saucer-shaped lights) ($169) • Metal wall clock by umbra ($32) Flavoured margarita glass dippers. • “Sq.ware” serving dishes with handles, set of two for ($35) Under $20 • Fish-shaped plastic soap dish ($3.50) • Oval-shaped deck of cards in oval case ($6) • Assorted coloured cooking accessories by Paderno: wire whisk, egg beater, spat- • Margarita shakers, assorted styles ($38 $40) $50 - $100 • “Alice An” tea kettles in yellow, blue and chrome ($65) Salt & pepper shakers at $18 per set. PAGE EDITOR: THOMAS EDELSON FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 5 Get cool for Christmas at Attica From flower lamps to dog dishes, gifts for the hipster on your list. By Jake Kennedy The Commoner A slightly curving back, graceful arms and delicate yet simple lines — when Harriet Ross first saw the Zen sofa in the newly opened showroom of Attica, it was love at first sight. “I saw it, and I loved it,” she says. Ross is the manager of Attica, a home furnishing store on Granville Street. And she’s a selfdescribed minimalist, preferring clean simple lines over an ornate and complex design. The sofa in the showroom sold quickly, so Ross wasn’t able to take it home with her. She spent two-and-a-half years looking at different designs, but still couldn’t find a design she liked better than the Zen. A couple of weeks ago, she decided to place an order through Attica’s catalogue service for the couch. “I upgraded it a bit,” she says. “As with anything, you get what you pay for.” She paid $2,300. “You can buy a sofa that is going to look terrible in eight years, or you can buy a sofa that will last you a lifetime,” she says. “It’s an investment.” Any customer can flip through the catalogues at Attica to try to find a sofa like Ross’s. The store does a great deal of business through this service. But it also offers a number of other home furnishings. The main theme is hip, young and urban. You won’t find many straight lines in the designs, and most of the companies have numerous vowels in their names (even the occasional umlaut). It’s Jake Kennedy / The Commoner Leo Toner flips through one of the 15 catalogues of furnishings available at the store. Attica sells furniture and accessories for the modern urban home. the type of store that has business cards for all its salespeople next to the cash register. The store is split into three rooms. When you walk in, you’re greeted by a display of bath salts ($6.50) and foaming bath gels ($24.80) by The Thymes. Also available in the area are brass doorknobs shaped like a knife, fork and spoon ($10 to $17), along with various kitchen utensils like green plastic bottle openers by Aless ($36). If you head off to the left, you are greeted with the furniture show room. This is where the store offers 15 different catalogues, and hundreds of fabric swatches, of sofas and chairs. Be prepared to open up the wallet, though. This furniture is hip — and hip comes at a price. A six-drawer chest, coming up to around shoulder height, in a deep chocolate stain retails for about $2,250. Nearby is a Queensized hazel bedframe with a European chic feel to it ($1,770). Right when you walk in, though, your eye is caught by a light beechcoloured dining room set and chairs ($2,310). The table has an aqua-green frosted glass top, and the chairs have covered cushions in metallic blue. The most interesting part of Attica, though, is in the room off to your right when you first walk in. If you want to impress your friends with a worldly young urban professional air, then this is the room for you. Catching your eye are plastic dog and cat dishes by Koziol ($19.95 for dog dish; $15.95 for cat dish), simple dishes topped with plastic figures of the respective animal. Also by Koziol are the curvacious Swing CD boxes, retailing for $24.96. Towards the back is a wonderful glass flower rising out of a flower pot. When you get a little closer to it, you realize it’s actually a table lamp by Dansk ($90). Other interesting items nearby are the corkscrew which doubles as a wine stopper by Tommy Larsen ($93), and metal business card cases which range in price from $10 to $19. If you’ve been trying to get the attention of some young lady for the past few months, and had no success, an assortment of pillows with cutesy, romantic messages on them might help. For about $35, you can pick up a satin pillow with “I can’t concentrate anymore” or “Tell me how I can possibly resist you?” scrawled across it. No more hiding those boxes of Trojans in a drawer within reach of your bed. Say you’re young, say you’re hip and say you’re having sex and damn proud of it with a condom holder by Aless. The plastic version comes in a couple of colours for $14, or you can spend the big bucks on a stainless steel holder for $63. They’re not exactly discreet — they look exactly like a condom package, complete with the embarrassing O-shaped ring that shows through the back pocket of your pants — but do you really want to spend your time trying to get a box open? • Attica, 1652 Granville Street streetLEVEL What is the best gift you’ve given or received? I went out and “bought myself a vibrator this year for an early Christmas present. I highly recommend it.” Carla Sturge Massage therapy student Northumberland College best friend Chris is obsessed with “crispyMythings, so I made him the ‘Crispy Chris’s Christmas Candy Carton.’ I filled the box with crispy M&Ms and Crispy Crunch bars and Play Dough. It’s not crispy, but he loves Play Dough.” Shannon Kehoe Student Auburn High “gaveMymeex-girlfriend a trip to England a years ago.” few Dean Cook Call centre employee Natural fibres make natural gifts at P’lovers By Michael Ayyash The Commoner P’lovers, from the outside, looks like a regular store in Park Lane mall. Until you notice the reduce, reuse, recycle on the wall behind the cashier’s counter, you don’t realize that everything here is made of hemp or recycled material. That’s when you start looking at items in a different way. Ordinary looking products suddenly seem extraordinary. Take the black front door mats, for example ($26.95). They are actually made of old tires that were destined for landfill. The jewelry hanging off the rack is old silver cutlery twisted into rings and bracelets ($29.95). Even the hand-turned pens are made out of reclaimed PAGE EDITOR: LEAH FITZGERALD wood ($22.95). “P’lovers was created to help people live more sensitively with the earth,” reads the store’s mission statement. Books of various types, all relating to healthy environmental living, fill the wooden shelves. Vegetarian cook books and clean planet books are part of the variety. There are pocket-sized books full of quotes and advice on happiness, well-being and inner peace ($6.95). “They tell people about mindful living,” says store manager Karin Clegg. There is also a collection of Feng Shui books ($6.95 to $50), a Chinese approach to arranging things in certain patterns to enhance luck and well-being. Followers of Feng Shui believe changing the environment of the room can change a person’s life and destiny. Candle lovers also have something to look for at P’lovers. Beeswax candles are available in different sizes and colours. The candles are in the $30 range. Clegg says they’re non-toxic and actually clean the air while they burn. They last between 250 and 300 hours, she says. Other beeswax products, like soaps and lip balms, are also available. If it’s clothes you’re looking for, hemp can serve you there as well. The store has natural and organic baby clothes ($7.95 for shirts) and a selection of hemp bath robes for adults ($89.95). Clegg says natural clothes are made of cleaner material than regular ones, and last longer. • P’lover’s, Park Lane year I sent my parents a huge “box One as a stocking. It came with a huge card and the box was filled with small stocking stuffer gifts. We wanted the present to be big and fun ‘cause my parents were alone that year.” Barbara Birch Government employee PAGE 6 THE COMMONER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 Bravo! dishes out Bertie Bott’s Beans Dresden Row food store offers French truffles and real caviar By Michael Ganley The Commoner Real truffles. From France. The ones you’ve only read about. The size of chestnuts. Dark brown rough texture, earthmusty smell. “They’re a fabulous thing,” says Robert Chan, owner and operator of Bravo! International Fine Foods, showing off a small bag of the delicacies. “They can’t cultivate them to save their souls. They’ve tried seeding them and all kinds of things.” And so truffle hunters train dogs to sniff them out where they grow, six inches underground near old growth oak trees in France and Italy. “They used to train pigs but they always wanted to eat them,” Chan says. “So they’d be fighting a 300-lb pig for the truffles. Dogs are just as happy with a dog treat.” Chan doesn’t stock truffles ($2 each), at least not the mushroom kind. The market isn’t big enough. But this week he received a special order from da Maurizio’s, which is putting together a meal for a regular. Chan had the truffles delivered from Toronto by overnight courier. Chan will also special-order fresh caviar ($4,500 for 500g). “Honest to goodness real caviar only comes from sturgeon from the Caspian or Black sea,” says Chan. “We have sturgeon in the St. Lawrence, but nobody is actively harvesting them.” But don’t make the mistake of thinking that Bravo! is only about the high- end stuff. The front window on Dresden Row has a large, simple sign in it: “Bertie Bott’s Beans.” For the uninitiated, Bertie Bott’s Every Flavour Beans ($8.70/bag) are a Harry Potter tie-in. They taste like dirt, grass, mud, slugs, sardines, frogs and more. “Kids take them to school and offer them to their friends,” says regular customer Sharon Ing. She spends 20 minutes in the small, crowded store, poring over bottles and jars of condiments and sauces. “I love this place!” she says. “You can get stuff here that you can’t get anywhere else.” The “stuff” includes Godiva chocolates ($9/100g or $80 for the 1.5 lb limited edition collector’s tin), Moravia lemon cookies ($4), Chef Dan Fearing’s smokey bacon BBQ sauce ($14.15), Vermont Gold chocolate raspberry syrup ($9.75), Stonewall Kitchen cranberry horseradish sauce ($11.75) and Cocoa Barry cocoa ($20/kg). “Fry’s cocoa is crap,” says Sharon Ing, cradling her bag of Cocoa Barry. Allison Rubarth moves enthusiastically around the store. She grabs Dahlia’s Chinese exotic flavour paste ($14.25). “This is: ‘wow, I’ve just landed in China,’” she says. “And I’ve been there. You can take a regular stir fry and make it special.” Rubarth also picks up the Consorzio roasted garlic flavour olive oil ($10.95). “Just mix a little in with your mashed potatoes.” Then the Minasso olive spread ($6.95). “Spread a little on a cracker. It’s amazing.” And finally the Spice Hunter pine nuts ($8.45). “Fry them up and add them and some cranberries to your turkey dressing.” Chan only stocks the things he likes. “It’s hard to say ‘yah, that’s delicious’ if I don’t like it,” he says. One thing he clearly likes is Rao’s homemade marinara sauce ($14.95). “Rao’s is a restaurant in New York City unlike any other,” he says. “People have permanent tables there so they have to go every few weeks or find someone else to eat at their table.” Frank Sinatra was a regular at Rao’s, says Chan, and Woody Allen currently has a table. The label on the bottle says the waittime for a table is four to six months. Chan says many people first come in for the Godiva chocolates. “Then they start to look around and say ‘Hey, there’s interesting stuff here,’” he says. Chan recommends an Italian Panettone cake ($35 to $40 for a 2.2 lb cake) for Christmas. “You slice it, toast it, put a little butter on. It’s manna from heaven.” He says the classic Panettone is delicately flavoured with extract of grapefruit, orange, lemon and vanilla. But there are all kinds, including his favourite, Panettone with candied pineapple ($40). ◆ Bravo! International Fine Foods, 1587 Dresden Row Michael Ganley/ The Commoner Robert Chan says “honest-to-goodness real caviar” only comes from the Black and Caspian seas. CD addict suffers relapse on discovery of Taz Records I’m the first to admit I have a problem. For years now, I’ve had a virtual inability to walk out of a record store empty handed. It’s a major strain on my finances. I’ve been known to go on binges, ending up with more CDs than I can listen to in a week. Sometimes, I’ll justify my purchases by thinking of them as presents to myself. “I worked so hard at that paper — I deserve this,” I’ll think, and boy am I a pushover. When I decided to come to school in Halifax, my first thought was, “How the hell will I be able to get all my CDs out there?” Eventually, I accepted that I could not. I found the biggest carrying case I could and resigned myself to living through the year with only 200 to choose from. The best way to combat my addiction is avoidance. But there are so many darn record stores. Whenever I’m dragged to a mall, I find myself seeking comfort amidst JOHN GILLIS viewPOINT shelves full of shiny compact discs. I rarely buy any of those — I like to be in the presence of the discs themselves, but I’m not going to pick up even one of the hundreds of copies of the latest Britney Spears or Creed albums in these mall chains. Where’s the Handsome Family section? How many copies of the new Death Cab for Cutie album do they have? And what about the character of the place? I’ve been in HMVs around Canada, in Edinburgh, even in Tokyo. Once you’re out of sight of the street, you wouldn’t know the difference between them. My addiction was taking over my whole being before I left my home in Winnipeg. Early this year, a fantastic record store opened within walking distance of my house. The kind of place where, when you excitedly handed a fistful of cash to a clerk for the Sigur Ros album you’d been scouring the earth for, she’d go, “Cool! This is a fabulous album.” Here, the fire has died down. It’s not that I don’t deserve the gifts. The main reason — I’m once again a poor, starving student. Okay, I’m exaggerating. But I don’t have a lot of cash to blow. The other reason is, I haven’t found my record store. I spend a lot of time in downtown Halifax. I walk or bus past that HMV on Spring Garden Road at least twice a day. I’ll admit, I’ve gone inside. I also enjoy the Sam’s on Barrington. I love that they have a whole floor of folk and traditional music. But it looks pretty much like every other record store. I might be in trouble, though. One afternoon last week, I wandered into Taz Records on Argyle. The proprietor was deeply engrossed in a discussion of the evolving setlists of some obscure artist. A music lover selling music — how novel. I don’t think he even noticed I was there. Old Johnny Cash LPs were mounted on the wall with pride. There were rare boxed sets and a dazzling array of vinyl. Then I found the Dylan section. Three full rows of assorted bootlegs! I dashed out the door before I could find out whether they had the 1969 Nashville Skyline sessions, or the March 30, 2000 show in Fargo, North Dakota. All those times I’ve neglected to shower myself with rewards — this could bankrupt me. PAGE EDITOR: ELIZA BARLOW FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 7 Bon-bon boutique tickles more than your tastebuds By Eliza Barlow The Commoner Leah Fitzgerald / The Commoner Emma Reardon scoops red and green jelly beans. Under $20 • Tempting truffles in brandy, vanilla, Irish cream and others ($1.95 each) • Jelly Belly gourmet jelly beans ($2.50 per 100 grams) • Ice cream puzzle in ice cream container ($18.50) • Tequila-filled chocolates ($8 per box) $20 - $50 The most unusual candies at Sweet Jane’s candy store are chocolate-covered potato chips. “We sell a gazillion of them,” says sales associate Donna Thompson. A small bag costs $4. If it’s more chocolate you want at the shop marked by the blue cloud-shaped sign outside, Sweet Jane’s offers an appealing selection. Try the truffles: brandy, vanilla, Irish cream, rum, champagne and macadamia nut ($1.95 each). Over the Moon Belgian chocolates cost $20. For adult tastes, try a carton of tequila-filled chocolates ($8.25). Sixty dollars will buy you nostalgia: Blast from the Past Groovy Candies, for example — a box of hard-to-find sweets from the 60s, like Chuckles, wax lips, pumpkin seeds, jujubes, Nik l’ Nip, Blow Pops, Lemonheads and Clark’s Teaberry Gum. Piñatas shaped like pirates, jack-in-the-boxes and kittens are $18. Add to that the cost of candy to fill them. You can fill your piñata with Jelly Belly gourmet jelly beans, in pineapple, lemon, passion fruit, buttered popcorn, • Boxed set of 20 notecards and envelopes featuring art from the Museum of Modern Art in NYC ($21.75) • Gumball machine ($22) • Goodnight Moon baby journal ($33) • Set of three round nesting Christmas tins ($40) $50 - $100 • Box of Groovy candies: hard-to-find candies from the 60s ($60) • Countdown to Christmas calendar by Mary Engelbreit ($20.95) Leah Fitzgerald / The Commoner Pyjama party fun in a jar ginger or strawberry cheesecake for $2.50 per 100 grams. Sweet Jane’s thick gingerbread cookies, shaped like houses, Christmas trees, and women, cost $6.50 per cookie. One wall of the store is devoted to Christmas foodstuffs from Gourmet Village. Glass bottles of coloured corn kernels are $6.50. Bags of caramel corn are $3.50. White hotchocolate mix in a glass snowman-shaped canister costs $8 for 6.3 ounces, or $20 for one pound. Sweet Jane’s also sells inedible treats. A boxed set of 20 notecards and envelopes from the Museum of Modern Art in New York retails for $21.75. Writing paper in red, yellow, orange, blue, green or pink sells for 35 cents per sheet. Matching tissue-lined envelopes cost 45 cents each. Cult Images square greeting cards are not your standard Hallmarks. They feature black and white photos of movie stars such as Twiggy, Mick Jagger, Bob Marley, Grace Kelly, Elvis Presley and Audrey Hepburn ($3.50 each). Preteens will love the Sleepover Survival Kit ($35). It includes a pyjama-party kit, a hair-wrap kit, microwave popcorn, a friendship-pins kit and a pillowcase with a marker for decorating. They sell puzzles, too. A puzzle of Dr. Seuss’s Cat in the Hat costs $27. Green Eggs and Ham sells for $32. An icecream puzzle in an ice-cream container costs $18.50. Superheroes appear on several items. A metal Superman trash can costs $24, and a Spiderman lunch box costs $20. Sweet Jane’s has an assortment of items based on SaintExupery’s Le Petit Prince. A wall-mounting blue and yellow coat hook costs $65, a small suitcase costs $22 and metal glasses sell for $15. They also sell photo albums and journals. A coiled book of plain paper with a wedding dress on the front costs $28.50. A Goodnight Moon baby journal records baby’s first laugh, step and haircut ($33). A ‘My Handprint’ stamp tin for babies’ handprints and footprints costs $14. “People come in here because they’re doing something nice for themselves or someone else,” says Thompson. “It’s really on the ‘treat’ side of things.” ◆ Sweet Jane’s, 5431 Doyle St. Hunker down with a hobby this holiday season By Jennifer Vardy The Commoner Under $20 • Fish windsock kite ($18) • Speed Baron Offshore remote-controlled boat ($16.50) • Canada’s Fast Eddy McDonald’s The Looper yo-yo ($7.50) $20 - $50 • The Dude Flying Rocket ($45.99) • Sculpey III 10-pack clay ($26.99) • The All-Canadian Trivia Board Game ($34.99) $50 - $100 • Rail Master basic train kit ($59.99) • King George V model British battleship ($89.99) $100 + • LGB starter train set ($489.99) • SCX Imoda F-1 race car kit ($275) • Stadium Thunder race car ($299.99) PAGE EDITOR: STEPHANIE ROBERTS Looking for ‘the’ gift for someone who has everything under the moon? Try The Dude — the gift with the potential to sail over the moon. “We were all fascinated when The Dude came in,” says Michael Larisey, co-owner of Maritime Hobbies and Crafts. “We took it out and blew it up with a drinking straw, and the air tube seals itself.” Children can launch this seven-foot high model rocket for just $45.99. The body of the silver rocket is inflatable and comes with an attached parachute attached so it will float back to earth. Maritime Hobbies and Crafts also sells models of cars, boats and trains. “To us, they’re not toys,” says Larisey, gesturing to the samples on display. “They’re hobbies, meant for relaxation.” Gary Anderson agrees. Retired, he works at the store part-time in the model train section. He says he became interested in model trains several years ago, as a way to relieve stress. “Trains teach you patience,” he says. Train sets range from $60 for basic models, to $1,000 for advanced models. They sell every kind of accessory a model railroad enthusiast could imagine. Not only do they have whistles and engineer’s hats, but they have scenery, too — miniature used-car dealerships, scaled-down trees and tiny chainsaws for tiny lumberjacks. Model cars are popular, too, says Larisey. “People come in and buy their dream car,” he says. They stock everything from a ’67 Oldsmobile to the most recent models. Miniature board game keychains make great stocking stuffers. If your kids are fans of Mr. Potato Head, Monopoly or Barrel of Monkeys, for $4 to $6 they can carry them anywhere. Brightly coloured kites hang from the ceiling. Basic ones cost $18. Advanced, twohanded, kites can cost more than $100. “It’s an outside activity, but people are outside in the winter, too,” says Larisey. “They can still fly them — they’ll just wear gloves while doing it.” They sell jigsaw puzzles, too. A Three Stooges puzzle costs $3.49. A puzzle of paintings by Thomas Kinkade cost $20. Larisey says they like to offer different things than what people would find in department stores. ◆ Maritime Hobbies and Crafts, 1521 Grafton St. Christine Kay / The Commoner The Dude can take you to the moon and back PAGE 8 THE COMMONER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 Books and toys for child Woozles offers modern kids the old-time gift of reading dering minds attentive. What seems like a good id little boy doesn’t always seem to his parents. The Salamande ($9.50), by Anne Mazer, is just tale. The young boy wants a orange salamander as a pet. mother has a few questions: w the salamander eat? Where sleep? What will it do when it its friends? The boy imagine tions to each challenge until he imagines his room without a let the rain in. The story has lus trations and subtly teaches a about responsibility. Every child seems to h favourite blanket. It’s a friend sorely missed when it b threadbare and has to be “r Something From Nothing ($6 Phoebe Gilman, tells about a boy named Joseph who’s gran gives him a blanket. When Jo too old to use the blanket, his father tailors the blanket into a As Joseph grows, the original goes through several transform until it is nothing but a special Then the button is lost. There ing left for grandfather to mak thing out of. But Joseph is make something out of nothin story is loosely based on a tra Jewish folk tale. The modern child doesn’t seem to have time for anything that isn’t plugged in. Kids spend their time in front of TVs, computers or some other electronic gadget that can’t be up to anything good. Books are a thing of the past, right? Woozles Children’s Bookstore proves there’s still some fight left in the written word. Lisa Doucet works there and seems to have read every book and played with every toy in the place. Here’s a sample of her expertise. Picture Books for Younger Children We all remember the classics. SamI-Am, the Grinch and Yertle the Turtle frolic on the bright covers of Dr. Seuss classics. The Man with the Yellow Hat tries to keep that silly monkey, Curious George, out of trouble. Maybe the Man with the Yellow Hat should take a trip to the White House. Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore, Owl and T-I-doubleGa-Er bounce through the HundredAcre Wood with their friend Christopher Robin. But Doucet also has some new, soon-to-be classics. Auntie Claus ($25.50), by Elise Primavera, is about a spoiled girl named Sophie who wonders why her Auntie Claus disappears every Christmas. Sophie decides to solve the mystery and stows away in her aunt’s luggage. Sophie’s plans take an unexpected turn when she steps out of her box and Mr. Pudding, a head elf, assumes she is a newly recruited elf and immediately puts her to work in Santa’s toyshop. Sophie starts to get really nervous when Santa sends her to the coal mine with the B-B-and-G List (Bad Boy and Girl List), thinking that she may be on it. The happy ending eventually comes and Auntie Claus is able to teach her about the importance of hard work and a few other things. “There would be a revolt if we didn’t carry this book,” says Doucet as she reaches for The Polar Express ($29.95), by Chris Van Allsburg. In The Polar Express, Allsburg, the author behind the hit movie Jumanji, transports a young boy to the North Pole via the Polar Express. At the top of the world, Santa gives the young boy the honour of being the first to receive a Christmas gift. He asks for a sleigh bell from one of Santa’s famous reindeer. He gets the bell, but sadly loses it. This bell, however, has some Learning to Read Lisa Doucet looks through one of many books available for children at Woozles bookstore. magical properties and creates a happy ending for true believers in the Christmas spirit. Doucet says the next book she pulls off the shelf is destined to establish new Christmas family traditions. The House of Wooden Santas ($29.95), by Canadian author Kevin Major, is written in a semi-connected short story style with a new section for each day of Advent. Jesse, the main character, has to leave hockey and his best friends in the city when he moves with his mother to a small seaside village where she can sell her woodcarvings. Boredom and being the new kid in school makes Jesse wonder what kind of a Christmas he’ll have. But as the 25th creeps closer, Jesse is surprised each day as his mother brings home a new, beautifully carved Santa. A photograph of each unique Santa carving matches the daily stories in the book. Not since Wilbur, the prize-winning swine in Charlotte’s Web, has a pig risen to such prominence in children’s literature. “This pig captivates the world,” says Doucet as she reaches for Olivia Saves the Circus ($24.50), by Ian Falconer. In this story, the porky protagonist is asked to share her vacation memories with her classmates at school. She is all too willing, because, as she remembers it, she went to the circus. All of the circus Stories and photos by Todd MacKay folk were sick and couldn’t perform, but luckily Olivia was able to fill in for everything from lion taming to the trapeze. Her teacher is skeptical and asks if the story is all true. “Pretty all true,” replies Olivia. Obviously, Olivia would make a sensational journalist. Respect for nature and the environment are important themes in The Water Hole ( $27.95), by Graeme Base. Intricately illustrated pages show rhinos, pandas, toucans and 100 other animals coming to a small pool to drink. Eventually the pool goes dry. But the water hole returns as the season changes and the rain comes. Pictures in Paperback The Gruffalo ($10.95), by Julia Donaldson, is the story of a mouse whose quick wit and imagination keep predators at bay. As animals threaten to eat him, the mouse warns them that he is on his way to see his friend the Gruffalo. The mouse won- ders why none of the other animals seem to realize that the terrifying Gruffalo is a creature of the mouse’s imagination. But at the end of the tale it’s the mouse’s turn for a scare when he actually meets a real, live Gruffalo. Donaldson’s story has an excellent rhyme and rhythm that makes it fun to read aloud. Sometimes punishments don’t work out as planned. At least not where a little boy in a wolf suit named Max is concerned. Where the Wild Things Are ($11.95), by Maurice Sendak, is the story of a boy who is sent to bed without supper. But in his imagination, Max sails a ship to a place where the wild things are. Rather than being scared of the comical monsters, Max uses his wolf suit and all of the ferocity a little boy can muster to scare the wild things. The wild things are impressed and make Max their king. Unfortunately for his loyal subjects, Max eventually decides to sail his ship home where he finds his mother, and his supper, waiting for him. With neon colours and action packed pages, Who Hops ($9.50), by Katie Davis, is like a game show for the really little ones. The game goes something like this: who hops? A bunny hops. A kangaroo hops. A cow hops. Nooo, a cow doesn’t hop, that would never work! The rhythms and colours will keep even the most wan- At some point the glossy and bright pictures lose their and kids between the ages of nine start to read chapter book are a few Doucet suggests. Two of the books in this c take place right here in Nova Terror In the Harbour ($7. Sharon E. McKay, revisits the explosion of 1917. A Migh Imagining ($7.99), by Lynn K describes the experiences of slaves who escaped from the can South to Nova Scotia underground railway. The Magic Treehouse series popular for early chapter book ment. Mary Pope Osborne’s offering, Christmas in C ($17.95), helps children learn the time and culture of the m King Arthur. Short research gu available to accompany the Treehouse novels and encoura dren to learn more about the hi background. Middle Readers If you’re wondering who category, check the line-ups in movie theatres today. Harry fans will be out in droves to young sorcerer and his friends début film. But before the film the immensely popular books Rowlings: Harry Potter an Philosopher’s Stone ($9.95), Potter and the Chamber of PAGE EDITOR: MICHAEL AYYASH FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 9 dren this holiday season dea to a as good er Room t such a a bright But his what will will it t misses es solue finally roof to sh illusa lesson have a d that is ecomes retired.” 6.99), by a young ndfather oseph is s granda jacket. blanket mations button. is nothke someable to ng. The ditional y pages r appeal six and ks. Here category a Scotia. 99), by Halifax hty Big Kositsky, former Amerivia the s is also k enjoys latest Camelot n about mystical uides are Magic age chilistorical fits this front of y Potter see the in their m came s by J.K. nd the , Harry Secrets ($10.95), Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban ($11.95), and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (only available in hard cover, $35). Harry Potter is a 10-year-old boy who has grown up with his uncle, aunt and fat cousin Dudley. Harry is shocked to discover that his parents were wizards and were killed by an evil sorcerer when he was a baby. He discovers he is a wizard too. Soon he finds himself at Hogwart’s, a boarding school for magical children. There he makes friends with other students and they have exciting adventures. They battle Lord Voldemort, the evil sorcerer who killed Harry’s parents. In The Secret of Platform 13 ($6.99), by Eva Ibbotson, brings the world of fantasy home. A gump [door between worlds] opens under platform 13 at King’s Cross Station in London and several magical creatures come into our world to find their prince. But the prince is a spoiled brat who is quite determined not to be rescued. Not everything in this category is magical, however. Because of Winn-Dixie ($8.99), by Kate DiCamillo, chronicles the relationship between 10-year-old Opal Buloni and the stray dog she befriends, Winn-Dixie. Set in small-town Illinois during the 1930’s, A Long Way from Chicago ($8.99), by Richard Peck, is a series of connected short stories as Joey and Mary Alice recount their annual, twoweek visits with their grandmother. Grandmother is sometimes aweinspiring and intimidating, but always fascinating. One moment she’s threatening a nasty neighbour with a gun, the next she’s catching the sheriff in his underwear. Young Adults Set in Newfoundland, Charlie Wilcox ($9.95), by Sharon E. McKay, is a historical fiction. The title character has a club-foot and is unable to join his father on the sealing boats. One night his father is bragging that Charlie will be the first in the family to go to university, but Charlie only hears his father say that will never be able to go sealing. Anxious to prove himself, Charlie hides on a boat, but later realizes that it’s not a sealer, but a ship carrying troops to the First World War. Soon Charlie finds himself in the middle of the fighting. While Bridget Jones’s Diary captivated adult audiences, Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snoggings ($9.95) has gained a similar following in a younger crowd. Written in diary form, the book is a hilarious story about 14-year-old Georgia Nicolson as she grows up in a house with her three-year-old sister, annoying parents and wildcat Angus. ◆ Woozles, 1533 Birmingham St. Train sets and wiggly giggly balls; Woozles has toys, too One half of Woozles Children’s Bookstore is packed with books. The other half with toys. Lisa Doucet highlights some of the popular picks for this holiday season. The two train sets on display in Woozles are always busy. Kids play with them while their parents shop. The Brio Beginner Railway Expansion Set ($39.99) is enough for kids to play conductor at home. Smaller pieces and expansions can be added over time. Spy Toys, by Wild Planet, can keep kids entertained for hours. The Spy Camera ($30.99) is a pair of sunglasses with a small camera mounted on the side. Complete with film and a remote, the camera is a fun way for kids to take pictures. The XP-4 Spy Pen ($19.99) is much more than a pen. A snap-on scope allows long distance spying, or closeup magnifying. A small light makes writing in the dark easy, or can it become a flashlight. There’s even a light sensor alarm. Groovy Girls ($13.99) will likely be the dolls for the season. Made completely of soft cloth, the dolls don’t have buttons or loose parts that can come off and pose a threat to infants. With bright outfits and hairstyles, the dolls are fun for kids to play with. They’re even becoming collectors’ items. Playmobil is another type of toy that is popular at Woozles. Similar to Lego character, Playmobil allows children to build imaginary lands and move characters around. The sets cost from $3.99 for single characters to $200 for larger sets. The pirate ship ($129.99) is the most popular set at the store. The Wiggly Giggly Ball ($12.99) is a great gift for infants. Its bright colours and easy grips make it irresistible for babies. But the real drawing point of this toy is that it wiggles and giggles when kids move it. Two-year-old Ben Czenze plays with a train set at Woozles as he waits for his parents. Don’t forget children’s classics — from used bookstores When buying books, remember that many old classics can be bought with pocket change at used bookstores. Kids have loved some of these for generations. Readers around the world love Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables. The adventures of P.E.I.’s favourite redhead are exciting to each new generation. With nine books in the series, there’s enough reading to keep kids busy for some time. The Little House on the Prairies series, by Laura Ingalls Wilder, is another classic that records the joys and sorrows of settlers in the American West. There are nine books in this series as well. Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory are vividly imaginative and have movie versions that can put pictures to the words. J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings trilogy are fantasy masterpieces that have taken readers on exciting adventures with dwarves and hobbits, ogres and dragons. Tolkien will only become more popular when the Lord of the Rings movie comes out in December. The Chronicles of Narnia, by Tolkien’s long time friend, C.S. Lewis, are among the best-loved children’s books of all time. In The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the most famous of the series, four children are transported from wartime England to the land of Narnia. There they meet Mr. Tumnus, a confused little fawn, some talking beavers and many other amazing characters as they fight the White Witch to end the perpetual winter that grips the land. The few coins invested in some of these priceless treasures will pay dividends. Used bookstores have some of the best bargains in the world. PAGE 10 THE COMMONER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 Words worth wrapping for Christmas By Stephanie Roberts The Commoner Pondering why dogs are better than men, how to punish your lover for his or her cheating heart, or how to maintain your dwarf fruit orchard? Know somebody who is? Look no further than The Book Room for answers bound between hard and soft covers. Why Dogs Are Better Than Men offers this insight: “Men don’t eat cat turds on the sly.” Try to put a price on that gem. Try $13.80. The Love Voodoo Kit lets you poke pins into a hot pink doll according to individual needs for revenge. Is he quick to the trigger? Go for the jugular. Sick of her halitosis? Give her a heart attack. Curious? Shell out $14.95. Maintaining Your Dwarf Fruit Orchard ($4.95) is one booklet in a series by Storey Books. Did the rugrats next door reap the labours of your vegetable patch too early? First, make memo to self: rim garden with shards of metal in spring. Then, despair not. Your vegetables will not rot, not if you pick up a copy of 52 Great Green Tomato Recipes ($4.95). Teenagers don’t realize that it is harder to buy books for them than to be them. They don’t know angst like their book-buying parents know angst. Declench those jaws and don’t capitulate by stuffing their stockings with money and candy. The Book Room’s selection of young adult fiction is modest, but not barren. Red Dog ($24.95) is the recent novel by French author Louis de Bernieres about Australia’s bestloved dog. Linda Sawler, who rearranges books in the store, recommends Martin the Warrior ($8.99), the first in the Redwall series about a mouse who wants to take over the world. If you cannot resist the Tolkien trend snag The Hobbitt ($9.99). If you are lucky enough to have a friend with a sense of humour, he or she deserves this book: How To Be A Canadian, Even If You Are Already One ($19.95) by brothers Will and Ian Ferguson. It’s a gut-chortling romp through hills and dips of all things Canadian. Looking for something simultaneously attractive and repellent? Look no further than Lady Cottington’s Pressed Fairy Book ($14). It is exactly what it sounds like: desiccated winged fairies flattened like last autumn’s lawn compost between pages. Erin Duke, who shops at The Book Room, calls it “weird.” Duke would prefer to receive Hateship, Friendship, Stephanie Roberts / The Commoner Linda Sawler, who works at The Book Room, prepares to wrap books for a customer — a service provided free of charge. Courtship, Loveship, Marriage ($34.99), the latest literary excursion by Alice Munro. Stumped still? Let your senses guide you. Beguiling titles beckon from the shelves: Dolce Agonis (Nancy Huston, $29.95); Dave Loves Sophie to Death (Robb Forman Dew, $19.95); Portrait in Sepia (Isabel Allende, $31.80); and How Escape with a good book this winter Birthday Letters, by Ted Hughes: A collection of poems from Hughes to his wife, Sylvia Plath. Stunning in their raw poignancy. Enduring in their effect. Galileo’s Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith and Love, by Dava Sobel: Sobel unwraps a story set in 17th century Italy, between Sister Marie Celeste and her father, Galileo, the founder of modern science. Letters reveal the emotional connection they shared, and provide a touching glimpse into Galileo’s historical struggle. Atonement, by Ian McEwan: Breathstopping. All Over But The Shoutin’, by Rick Bragg: Bragg recounts, pitilessly, the horror of a life lived with a harddrinking, then absent, father, mud poor, in white-trash town, Alabama. Underlying all is his love for his mother, and trying to atone for the cruelties of life she endured to protect him. Canadian Oxford Dictionary, by Katharine Barber: The perfect partner, with a glass of port, on a long winter’s night. Since the first edition of 1998, 150 words have been added. French Laundry Cookbook, by Thomas Keller: Art or food? You decide. Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Saw There, by Lewis Carroll: Irresistible tale, where everything happens backwards, of what curiosity can do to a little girl. Yes, she is that Alice. This is the story of what happened before she and Dinah fell into the rabbit’s hole. STEPHANIE ROBERTS bookIDEAS Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette, by Judith Thurman: Thurman chose the title for her biography of the French writer from a letter Andre Gide wrote after Colette published Cherie. Gide praised Colette’s insight into the “least admitted secrets of the flesh.” Unabashedly sensual, Colette created the modern French woman. Pilates on the Ball, by Colleen Craig: It’s fun. Promise. Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy: Tolstoy was compelled to write this book after a neighbour’s spurned mistress flung herself in front of a train. Anna and Count Vronsky: passion, empathy, betrayal and death mark the relationship of the modern era’s quintessential lovers, challenged in status only by Pasternak’s Lara and Dr. Zhivago. to be Good (Nick Hornby, $35.99). Any of these is sure to please a discerning reader. For the corporate type, pick up something more appropriate. Jack: Straight from the Gut ($42.95) is an inspirational look at how one man reached the apex of his business career. Yearning to bare your soul to your loved one by presenting her with a book of poetry that reveals your true, infinitely more appealing, self? You are out of luck. The Book Room does have a poetry section, but there’s nothing on the four sparsely decorated shelves worth looking at, except Lives of the Poets ($50). At least you can read about your favourite poets. For geeks on a literary bender, Riddle of the Compass: The Invention that Changed the World ($37), is a fascinating foray into the history and science of the compass. For anyone that loves pretty pictures, The Canadian Landscape ($37.95) will take you on a journey across our home and native land. Even Greyhound can’t carry you from here to Vancouver for that price. Also visually stunning, Steel Wheels Rolling ($60) pays photographic homage to that shuttling beast of sexual imagery, the train. The mystery buff of the family will appreciate any of Sue Grafton’s escapist, yet still believable, tomes. P for Peril, ($38.99), is the latest. Others — from A to O — are available in paperback ($9.99). Also recommended, Robert Crais’s La Requiem ($9.99), one in a series featuring detective Elvis Cole. “It took me a book or two to get over the Elvis bit,” says Bernice Leeson, who works at the store, “but once I did, I got right into it.” Other picks by Leeson include Longitude ($16.99), the story of the development of the chronometer, and The Fiery Cross ($39.95), a monolith of a historical novel, perfect for those who think big is better. Long to escape the mind-numbingness of the festive season? Venture to another land with Africa: An Artist’s Journal ($58) a stunning pictorial at the most mysterious of continents. If that’s too far from home, lace up those Timberlands and away you go with Hiking Nova Scotia’s Trails ($14.95). Take a book. ◆ The Book Room, 1546 Barrington St. PAGE EDITOR: JAKE KENNEDY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 11 Dragons take flight at Black Market By Dan Schnare The Commoner One of the first things you see in the Black Market is a skull-topped walking stick hanging by the door. More wooden skulls, as well as little coffins, line a back shelf. The store also carries hemp clothing and accessories, large masks, and tongue studs. In other words, you can find a lot of stuff here that Sears doesn’t carry. You can also buy incense, candles, and jewelry at the small Grafton Street store. But you can’t get “smoking” paraphernalia; that’s next door at Mary Jane’s. It’s a common mistake: when someone mentions the Black Market, people ask, “Can I get a bong there?” Sorry, but no. Stefanie Bruce who’s been working at the Black Market for seven months, says jewelry is a popular item. She mentions a woman who bought “$1,000 worth of rocks” from her. “Like nine rings, 10 pendants, and maybe five necklaces,” she says. The counter is full of rings (for fingers and toes) and body jewelry, such as tongue studs and nose rings. The wall opposite is covered with necklaces and chokers made from beads and hemp. Baskets full of bracelets are scattered around the store. When you enter, a wave of perfumed air hits you. It’s from the large incense display near the back. The Black Market seems to have every scent imaginable, as well as accessories such as wooden holders. The scent can be a bit overwhelming, but it’s easy to get used to. A good gift idea would be a flying dragon (some $14, some $18). These are hanging wooden dragons with moving wings. The dragons cover the ceiling of the store; some even have tails that hang low enough to brush people’s heads as they walk around. Most of what the Black Market sells is available in more than one price range. Bedsheets, some embroidered, some made from imported linen, for example, range from $20 to over $100, and things such as wooden masks and mirrors have similar price spreads depending on size and detail of carving. There is one thing you won’ t be able to find at the Black Market, though. “We had a request for a funky tie clip,” Bruce says. “I thought that was pretty weird. We were fresh out, though.” Her most unusual request was more sinister. “I had a girl having demons haunt her once,” she says. “She needed things to get rid of her demons.” Bruce didn’t say if she could help the girl. ◆ The Black Market, Dan Schnare / The Commoner Siobhan Murphy hangs out behind the bracelets at the Black Market. Under $20 • Toe rings ($9, $11, and $12) • Flying dragons ($14) • Hemp wallets ($9.50) $20 - $50 • Round mirror with carved wooden frame ($49) • Skull walking stick ($27) • Body jewelry (about $40 for a tongue stud) Hockey playing Santa scores big at Annabelle’s By Nathan Sager The Commoner Flipping through the poster display at Annabelle’s Framing & Collectibles Ltd., you stop abruptly when a particular image catches the eye. It’s an enlarged black-and-white of a publicity photo: A young boxer stands over four young musicians lying flat on their backs, as if all had been kayoed by the same punch, but are grinning nevertheless. There’s a story behind this picture: It was 1964, and Cassius Clay was in Miami training to fight Sonny Liston for the heavyweight title. The Beatles were playing a gig in town during their first U.S. tour, and it occurred to someone that the Fab Four and the future Muhammad Ali together would make a good photo for the wire services, never mind a poster selling for $38 some 30 years later. Annabelle’s has about 1,500 prints, by store manager Debbie Williams’s estimate. They range from the reprints of works by artists such as Monet and Munch, to the usual suspects from American pop culture: Bogie, Elvis, JFK, and Marilyn. “People will come in with all kinds of requests,” she says. “We have people come in asking if we have a print of the Monet that’s down at the art gallery. Or someone will come in and ask about something they saw in a movie or on TV.” Williams says she keeps such requests on file, and has approximately 25 to 30 catalogues on hand she can make special orders from. Usually this means prints of lesser known paintings, or posters from 1940s films. PAGE EDITOR: CHRISTINE KAY Moving around the small shop, there seem to be a lot of different things being sold. The poster display occupies quite a bit of floor space, but there are plenty of ornaments, cards, and trinkets for sale. Some of the cards include movie stills. A display behind the counter shows some of the colours and types of frames available, apparently just a fraction of what Annabelle’s has in stock. The price range is quite broad — from $1.99 for tree ornaments with Santa playing soccer or wearing a lumberjack’s mackinaw, to prints for over $500. Those tree ornaments are part of a large Christmas display: there’s a “nautical” Santa collection, including one of Saint Nick in a fisherman’s yellow rain slicker ($2.49 and up). Williams says people often buy these for family members who have moved out of the region. Even if it’s highly hoaky, it’s hard not to chuckle at a nativity scene with snowmen ($54.95). Near the cash register, are patchwork glass ornaments which sell for $17.95 to $39.95. The artist puts together three-quarters of the frame, then slides odd-shaped, colourful pieces of glass between the panes before closing them in. These are a little more elaborate than the blown glass ornaments near the door ($12.95), the type you hang in a window to reflect light, and make it change colour. Right next to this are some gargoyle figurines, one of which has a sword that when unsheathed turns out to be letter opener ($15.95). It’s the type of gift that might wow a Harry Potter or a Lord of the Rings fan. At the back of the store is a large card display. Probably the most eye-catching are the $50 - $100 • Singing Bowl — brass bowl played by rubbing a stick along its rim (3 sizes at $65, $85, and $95) • Large wooden casket box ($56) • Wooden skeleton CD holder ($59) $100 + • Large Nepalese carved wood mask used for spiritual protection ($120) • Gold embroidered bedsheets for a double bed ($132) Under $20 • Nautical Christmas ornaments — ceramic minatures of Santa ($1.99 to $2.49) • Birthstone diaries with a lock and a person's birthstone ($9.95) • Blown glass ornaments ($12.95 and up) $20 - $50 • Christmas Teddy Bear ($26.99) • Decorative sprinkler heads: Even with snow, keep the gardener on your list in mind ($24.95) Nathan Sager / The Commoner Santa tree ornaments, $1.99 and up. Thistledance cards ($2.75), which are created by local artists, including Susan Aikins and Geoff Butler. The cards are glossy, with rich colours, and inside allow you to write a more personal message than relying on Hallmark. Williams says the store does try to support local artists; there are quite a few prints hanging on one wall, including several by Maurice Crosby for $61. To a newcomer to the region, Crosby’s prints would be idyllic depictions of Atlantic Canada: dorries tied to a dock, a small fishing village, the Bluenose II at full mast. For $2 per gift, Annabelle’s offers gift wrapping — “men seem to appreciate that,” Williams says. ◆ Annabelle’s Framing & Collectibles Ltd., 5475 Spring Garden Rd. $50 - $100 • Nativity scene snowmen ($54.95) • Maurice Crosby prints ($61) $100 + • Prints of paintings, up to $564. PAGE 12 THE COMMONER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 200 streetLEVEL What’s the best gift you’ve given or received? surprised me with a “roomMyfullboyfriend of balloons, about waist deep, Amy Lamb Mount Allison student and my friends were all hiding under them. I thought it was just a room full of balloons. It’s our 3-year anniversary next week.” this scarf “ My best friend crocheted for me out of eyelash fabric last year for Christmas. It’s a pretty cool scarf.” Jen Levert Hostess me a whole suit. “ My parents boughtI even got shoes Jayson Kilchie Ikon Business Solutions and socks and a green dotted tie to go with it. It was the most expensive thing they ever bought me. It’s also been useful — I’ve worn it a couple of times.” days before “ I got married twoChristmas; I would say that’s a good gift!” Edwina Moore Retired bookkeeper For a really extravagant gift, this 85-point diamond is set in a 14-karat white gold ring. But you might have to sell your car because it costs $10,575. Golden gifts for the rich... ...and for everyone else at FireWorks Gallery If you’re afraid of spiders stay away from the jewelry case on the far left-hand side of FireWorks Gallery on downtown Barrington Street. But if you’re one of the many people looking for a piece made by Halifax designer Lizzy Bugs then it’s the place to go. A spider pin made of sterling silver from this collection will cost you about $65. If a spider won’t communicate the right message to that special someone, how about a 14-karat white gold ring with a sparkling 85-point diamond in the centre? Just $10,575. Michelle Peppitas, the gallery’s studio manager, says the more ornate the piece is, the more expensive it is. Story and Pictures FireWorks, however, carries pieces that suit almost anyone’s By Christine Kay aesthetics and budget. The least The Commoner expensive pieces include imported jewelry from Nepal and Bali made of amber, silver and semi-precious gem stones. The earrings start around $15 and bracelets range between $30 and $35. The store carries custom-made work you won’t find in other stores. Chris Shute, another Halifax designer, is renowned for his Celtic-inspired pieces. One is a silver brooch with a shield-like shape. Instead of a regular pin, the shield’s fastener is a miniature sword. It costs about $165. Another collection, made by a group of artists from Manitoba called Silver Stone, stems from the new and rising trend of Feng Shui (a Chinese philosophy of design which follows nature’s patterns). Each piece has a Chinese character on it such as the symbol for “enlightment.” FireWorks Gallery has a wide variety of pieces you won’t see in bigger stores, and it also carries its own line. The FireWorks line goes from very simple pieces, like a keltic knot band in white gold for $500 to an intricate triangular gold pendant for $1,495. This pendant isn’t only gold, it also has a large opal in the centre of it, a pearl and 12 small diamonds. FireWorks jewelry ranges from simple to extravagant and from reasonable to wildly expensive. With such a range in products, the gallery has a very eclectic clientele. Singer-songwriter Sarah MacLachlan comes in whenever she’s in town, says Peppitas. But then so do people you’ve never heard of, and who’ve never been in Frank magazine — or even the Halifax Herald. Gina Morrison, a Halifax bartender, has been a Fireworks’ regular for the last two-and-a-half years, though her boyfriend, Eric, goes in more often then she does. Modern and fun is key at FireWorks. It even has two budgies to the right of the entrance who help customers break the ice. “If people are shy,” says Peppitas, “they can start by talking to the birds.” There are no five-for-$5 racks at the FireWorks Gallery — there aren’t any racks at all — but there’s a huge selection. You can spend an hour in there “just looking, thank you.” Whether the piece costs as much as a car or as little as a dinner for two at McDonald’s, there’s no drive thru at FireWorks — especially on Christmas Eve. So shop early! ◆ FireWorks Gallery, 1569 Barrington St. Fireworks’s manager, Michelle Peppitas holds an oversized tree ornament ($45). Halifax designer Chris Shut, is known for Celtic pieces like this broach ($165). PAGE EDITOR: TODD MACKAY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 13 streetLEVEL What’s the best gift you’ve given or received? I was in India and my boyfriend gave my brother a gift to bring with him when he visited me. It was a Star Wars T-shirt, black socks and a CD.” “ Debbie Jorgensen Second year Dalhousie Law Halifax’s Strange Adventures shop owner Calum Johnston (left) is immortalized in the Dec. ‘97 issue of DC’s Superman: The Man of Steel comic book. Find super gifts for superhero lovers at Strange Adventures Comic Bookstores By Michael Ayyash What happened on that bus, and how they wound up in Illinois in the beginning of Dogma, is told in the comic book Chasing Dogma ($20). Even scenes that weren’t filmed in Clerks, another Kevin Smith movie featuring Jay and Silent Bob, are available as the Clerks comic book ($17.95). “These kinds of comics are selling a lot more now because of the movies,” says Johnston. Not all comics are cheap, though. You could spend an entire month’s salary on a single comic book. The first-ever issue of the new X-Men, published in 1975, costs $800. Strange Adventures has already sold two copies. Other collector items are also available for various prices. The Commoner You don’t have to go far to get the best comic books in the world. Halifax’s Strange Adventures Comic Bookshop was named the world’s greatest comic shop in 1996 by Previews Magazine. The prize: to appear in the comic book of their choice. Store owner Calum Johnston chose Superman and appeared in the Dec ’97 issue. Comic book fans can expect to find almost any comic book they’re looking for at Strange Adventures, including the much-anticipated Dec. 5 release of Frank Miller’s Dark Knight Strikes Again ($12). The three-issue series is a sequel to the 1986 groundbreaking Batman: The Dark Knight Returns ($23.50), a success in both the comic industry and the mainstream media. Not only comic books Bringing people back in “We’ve had a lot of people who aren’t comics collectors coming in to reserve a copy of this series,” says Johnston. “This issue brought people back in.” The Ultimate Spiderman trade paperback ($22) is another hot seller at the store. The collection includes the first seven issues of the series and has been selling at a rate of three volumes per week. But comics aren’t all about superheroes and villains. Maus, for example, is a comic book about the Holocaust ($54.50). Ghost World ($13.95) is about two girls who just graduated from high school. The comic book, which was later made into a movie, is about their summer before college. From Hell, the newly-released movie about Jack the Ripper, is also based on a comic book with the same name ($54). PAGE EDITOR: JENNIFER VARDY A frame from the Dec. ‘97 issue of Superman featuring Halifax business Strange Adventures. Ever wonder what happened to Jay and Silent Bob between the movies Chasing Amy and Dogma? Well, there is a comic book by creator Kevin Smith to tell that story. Chasing Amy, a movie released in 1997, ends with Jay and Silent Bob leaving on a bus. They reappear in Dogma two years later. Even people who do not like comics might find themselves glued to the plot of Chasing Dogma or Maus, or just checking out the old action figures they loved as kids. The store has a large selection of comicbased toys. Mage Knight is a miniature army game, similar to toy soldiers. But the characters are all fantasy-based, ranging from small knights ($1.75) to large chariots ($35). The characters do battle according to the rulebook provided in the starter kit ($25). Each character has powers that diminish every time it loses a fight. The starter kit includes 10 or 15 painted miniatures, a rulebook and a measuring ruler that determines the distances each fighter can move. Other action figures, such as Transformers ($75) and Simpsons characters ($14.50) are also available. ◆ Strange Adventures, 5262 Sackville St. I got scuba diving lessons from my “parents, but I told them I wanted that. I also got a kitten once. My mom used to ask us every year for a peaceful Christmas — that my brother and I wouldn’t fight for once. But we still did.” Kathryn Wallace First year student Dalhousie University I was a kid, my parents bought “me When a wine-coloured bike that I never asked for. A big bicycle. I still have it, to this day. It’s at our summer cottage. The grandkids were riding it up until a few years ago.” Barb MacIntosh Retired up an old graduation picture “proofI blew of my mother and gave her the picture and a graduation ring. She had me just two months after she graduated, so she didn’t have any money to get pictures done.” Jennifer Whaite Northumberland College student PAGE 14 THE COMMONER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 There’s more than turnips and greens at the market The Brewer y Market on Lower Water Street sells a variety of arts and crafts as well as fruits and vegetables. It’s open Sat., 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Twigs, Plants and Gifts vendor Susan Trussoni sells handmade olive oil soaps and creams. Items include a gift box ($9), bath salts ($2), and loofa sponges ($8). Jorna Pottery Works’ Debbie Jorna makes and sells smooth, glazed serving dishes (small $42, large $68), chalices ($28), milk pans ($30 to $48), tumblers and mugs ($16) out of stoneware clay. The pottery glaze is safe for food. Dishes come in light purple, turquoise, green and black. Pictures and story by Jasmine Budak Frances Grant-Feriancek Chocolatier makes six homemade truffle flavours: Baily’s Irish Cream, Black Raspberry, Grand Marnier, Hazlenut Centre, Mocha Kahlua and Double Chocolate. A box of 12 costs $19, a box of 6 costs $10 and a box of 4 costs $7. Michelle Yorke makes glass-bead and semi-precious-stone jewelry. Items include rings ($12), pins ($8), bracelets ($15), anklets ($20), and barrettes ($15). For more market gifts, please see BREWERY MARKET on page 15 The price keeps dropping at Urban Cottage This second-hand and antique store is ‘like a continuous garage sale’ Jake Kennedy The Commoner For $143.10 you can take home a handcranked phonograph which is tucked away in a corner of the Urban Cottage secondhand and antique store. Come back on Nov. 22, and if it’s still there it’ll cost you only $135.15. Urban Cottage works pricing in an interesting way. When a customer brings in an item (all items are sold on consignment), a price is agreed upon. Every two weeks, the price goes down by 5 per cent. When the price hits an agreed upon minimum, the item sits in stock until someone takes it home. So the pair of bob-skates that started at $29 on July 16, dropped to $17.40 on Nov. 5, and the old tin lock box — which sold by the time I walked out of the store — had dropped to $7.20 on Oct. 8. People bring in items that have been sitting in their basements for years. The store takes 40 per cent of the sale price to get rid of it. It’s like a continuous garage sale. Simon Thibault, assistant manager of the store, says 75 per cent of the items get sold. He expects items like a ’50s style green cloth chair, which started at $160 in May, to eventually sell. It’s now $96. One day it will appeal to someone who walks in. “Some of the stuff that comes in here is hideous,” Thibault says. “But that’s just my opinion. Somebody else will come in and think it’s the greatest thing ever, and that Panda bear cookie jar May 28 June 11 June 25 July 9 July 23 Aug. 6 Aug. 20 Sept. 3 Sept. 17 $35 $33.25 $31.50 $29.75 $28 $26.25 $24.50 $22.75 $21 what I think is really cool is hideous.” One item open to a debate over aesthetic value is the orange glass pitcher that stands about 2 feet tall. With its long, slender curves and piercing orange colour, it’s a throwback to the ’70s. The original price Pig cookie jar Dec. 28 Jan. 11 Jan. 25 Feb. 8 Feb. 22 March 8 March 22 $35 $33.25 $31.50 $29.75 $28 $26.25 $24.50 was $50, but will be down to $42.50 as of Nov. 27. Two other items grab your eye right away in the cluttered store: the two cookie jars displayed on a fuschia linoleum-topped Please see LOW PRICE on page 15 PAGE EDITOR: MICHAEL GANLEY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 THE COMMONER PAGE 15 BREWERY MARKET, continued from page 14. (Left) Mark Kustudich makes bongo drums ($100 to $350) in a range of sizes. Wooden slats fit together to form the base of the drum, while the drumming pad is leather, with or without hair. (Right) Lorna Rogers makes and sells mirrors cased in old wooden window frames. Where the glass panes once were, there are now shiny mirror panels. Frames are sanded and “antiqued” to retain their rustic quality. Some frames are decorated with lightly painted flowers. Mirrors range from $135 to $175 depending on their size and shape. (Left) Tiffany Stapells’ handpainted glass-ware items include tea-light holders ($13), salt & pepper shakers ($25) and refrigerator magnets ($10). Designs include lizards, dolphins, lighthouses and cats. (Left) Mark Grantham’s prints are adaptations of his original paintings. His subjects include Halifax streets and dark wintry scenes of snow-capped trees and cars. Prints come in clip-frames and range in price from $40 to $60. They also come in packs of eight Christmas cards ($20). (Right) Barbara Holzmark’s handmade custom leather shoes, boots and sandals ($120 to $350). They come in purple, green, pink, tan and brown. The Urban Cottage is ‘all about democratizing beautiful’ LOW PRICE, continued from page 14. kitchen table. The panda bear cookie jar has been in stock for a while, having hit its low price of $21 on Sept. 17. The other cookie jar — although it’s not a companion piece, you really can’t have one without the other — is the pig-shaped cookie jar with “cookie” written across its side. It hit its low price way back in March. You can now pick it up for only $24.50 (down from the original $35). Whatever you’re looking for, chances are Urban Cottage has three of them in stock. If not, they do keep an eye out for specific items for customers. The whole point of the store is to make sure these items don’t get boxed away forever. “It’s all about democratizing beautiful,” says Thibault. “Not only rich people should have access to really cool and beautiful stuff. We let everyone have a chance at it.” ◆ The Urban Cottage, 1819 Granville St. PAGE EDITOR: MICHAEL GANLEY (Right) (Left) Phonograph Sled Oct 11 Oct 25 Nov 8 Nov 22 Dec 6 Dec 20 Jan 3 Jan 17 Jan 31 Aug 17 Aug 31 Sep 14 Sep 28 Oct 12 Oct 26 Nov 9 Nov 23 Dec 7 $159 $151.05 $143.10 $135.15 $127.20 $119.25 $111.30 $103.35 $95.40 $75 $71.25 $67.50 $63.75 $60 $56.25 $52.50 $48.75 $45 “It appeals to everyone, from students to tourists to business people. It’s totally unpretentious.” —SIMON THIBAULT PAGE 16 THE COMMONER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 Halifax Folklore Centre strikes a chord with music lovers Downtown music store has plenty of gifts for the beginning and the experienced musician By Dan Schnare The Commoner The guitar hangs above the main counter, just waiting for someone to pick it up and take it home. The light from a nearby lamp bounces off the burnt orange finish, still shiny almost 40 years after the guitar was created. It’s a 1962 Gretsch Model 6120, the same kind of guitar that Chet Atkins used to play. And it’s the kind of axe that guitar fanatics dream of owning. And how much does this beauty cost? Halifax Folklore Centre salesman David Bradshaw chuckles as he says “call us for the price.” In other words, it’s expensive. Store owner Tom Dorward says the guitar is in “110 per cent” condition, meaning it’s actually in the same condition as when it left the factory. This model even has the original store tags, which makes it even more valuable and desirable. It’s on consignment at the Folklore Centre, and Dorward says the owner wants at least $4,700 for it. Of course, there are many other guitars, as well as violins, banjos, mandolins, and basses in the store. You could go for the second-hand no-name electric guitar hanging in the corner ($139.99). It’s small, simple, and has an early ’80s “Van Halen” paint job (red finish crisscrossed with white stripes). It would be great for a beginner. On the other side of the store, a row of Martin guitars line the wall. Right now they’re on sale. The first in the row is a lowerend DX-1 ($799.99). Further back is a D-28 ($2,699.99), one of the most desired Martin models (older D-28s can sell for tens of Dan Schnare / The Commoner This 1962 Gretsch Model 6120, at $4,700 plus, is too expensive for a beginner. Halifax Folklore Centre has many guitars for novices. thousands of dollars). Martins are perfect for bluegrass players (many won’t play anything else), but anyone looking for a high-quality acoustic guitar would be delighted to find one under the Christmas tree. Again, for people who want to buy a less expensive acoustic guitar, the Folklore Centre has plenty from the LaSiDo company, including Normans, Art & Lutheries, and Seagulls. Made in Canada, these guitars range from around $200 to over $1,000. They’re a bit smaller than most guitars, which makes them easier for smaller people to play. As well, they have a very warm and deep sound. Another instrument is the Samick 12string acoustic ($199.99) near the back of the store. Samick is infamous for making cheap and inferior guitars, but sometimes they produce something good, and this model is decent. The workmanship is a bit rough in places, but it plays well and sounds fine. For under $200, it’s really not bad. The Folklore Centre also has quite a few electric guitars. A black Gibson Les Paul Custom ($2,999.99) hangs close to the Gretsch above the counter, placed directly above the cash register. In the middle of the store sits a rack of Jay Turser guitars ($249.99). These are inexpensive copies of Fender and Gibson designs, and they’re often sold as part of “starter kits” that include the guitar, a small amp, and accessories such as a case, a strap, a tuner, and some picks. The kits sell for around $300. If a new guitar isn’t on your Christmas list, the Folklore Centre also has books and accessories. A popular gift is a penny whistle that comes with an instructional book ($20). The centre also has assorted brands of guitar strings, such as the new D’Addario EXP strings, which are specially coated to last longer ($17.99). There are some guitars that aren’t for sale. They’re behind the counter simply to be eye candy. One is a 1956 Gibson Les Paul Junior, which was originally intended to be a beginner guitar. They were also popular with punk musicians in the ’70s. Next to the Les Paul is an even older Gibson acoustic. Each is worth thousands of dollars, but Tom Dorward isn’t selling them. Holidays are more meaningful and more relaxing without the rush to buy presents JASMINE BUDAK viewPOINT years, but Christmas seems to spark a massive spending spree on objects that are void of meaning. In their desperation, last minute shoppers reach for the generic: picture frames, star-shaped candles and socks splattered with grinning Santa faces. Gifts mean more when they’re carefully Danelectro effects pedals ($69.99) Under $20 • D’Addario EXP strings ($17.99) • Levy’s M8 cotton guitar strap ($12.99) • Vintage guitar calendar ($17.99) $20 - $50 • Feadog penny whistle and book ($20) • Reader’s Digest “Merry Christmas” songbook ($39.95) • Seiko ST-747 chromatic tuner ($44.99) $50 - $100 • Danelectro “Grilled Cheese” distortion pedal ($69.99) • Warwick 5-guitar stand ($69.99) “Martin Guitars” book ($54.99) $100 + • Epiphone EJ-200 acoustic guitar ($659.99) • Second-hand Fender American Standard Stratocaster electric guitar ($999.99) • Yorkville Bass Master 100 bass amp ($399.99) ◆ Halifax Folklore Centre, 1528 Brunswick St. Discovering the joy of not giving A few years ago, my family and some close friends decided to stop exchanging Christmas presents. My knee-jerk reaction was to protest and beg my parents for the winter boots I needed that year. But then I remembered my jewelry box full of hideous gold chains and trinkets and my bureau, home to bottles of spicy perfumes. And don’t get me started about my hoard of beeswax candles, incense and fruity lip balms. I don’t mean to sound ungrateful. I’ve received some thoughtful gifts over the Dan Schnare / The Commoner chosen and reflect the neat peculiarities you’ve come to know about someone. An old boyfriend once gave me a goofy clown puppet that pops out of a cone. It was a strange gift, but he knew I had a mild obsession with puppets. Often, just seeing someone is enough. On my 23rd birthday a few years ago, I was surprised to wake up and find my godparents in the kitchen grinning at me behind a simple bouquet of flowers. They had driven an hour and a half to catch me before I went to class that morning. I started blubbering right there in the kitchen still in my flannel pyjamas, my uncombed hair matted to my head from sleeping. I was floored that they’d made such an effort to see me on my birthday. Their visit meant more to me than any CD or gift certificate ever would. Now, without the frantic rush to buy Christmas presents, my holidays have been strangely calm. I lie around the family room with my bare feet propped up by the fireplace watching Dad flip channels in search of a basketball game. While I help Mom attend to gurgling pots on the kitchen stove, I chuckle because my friends are suffering in a shopping mall trying to buy golf balls for their dads. I come home now to spend time with my family, not because I need new socks. PAGE EDITOR: NATHAN SAGER