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MILWAUKEE (CBS 58) -- Peppers need heat to grow, and those who crave them love the spice of life they add to their meals.
On CBS 58 Sunday Morning, Michael Schlesinger introduces a military veteran growing nearly two dozen varieties, a small business that began on his doorstep.
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Friday, December 23, 2022
Bush talk sonic experimentation for new record The Art Of Survival - Guitar.com
The alt-rock greats return with a vital, positive new record full of explorative new sounds.
Bush’s ninth record is aptly named The Art Of Survival. But the longevity implied by such a name isn’t just a neat reflection of the band’s tenacious attitude: the LP as a whole arrives into a world racked with chaos, but its message is, despite the maelstrom, we as a species persist – not just Bush.
Such a topic for an album, especially now that Bush have embraced a harder, heavier sound, might be at risk of being 45 minutes of misery. But as frontman Gavin Rossdale puts it, the record avoids taking a “mournful or self-piteous” approach – instead, it’s “about the success stories of humanity’s survival against the odds. People just find a way to push through. We’ve all obviously suffered in varying degrees. I think the nature of life is the art of survival. Everyone is being tested all of the time, but we find a way.”
There’s not really a better time to highlight humanity’s resilience. Coming out of a global pandemic, there’s no let up in the global chaos. For Rossdale, The Art Of Survival encompasses it all – the pandemic, war, racism, and threats to women’s bodily autonomy. Along with Rossdale and lead guitarist Chris Traynor, let’s dive into five of their favourite tracks for the new record, and see how they crafted the polished, modern hard rock within.
Conversations with Gavin Rossdale and Chris Traynor transcribed by Karen Ruttner
Gavin Rossdale: “My favourite part is the opening riff – it’s just infectious and undeniable. It sets the tone for the record – it’s the precursor for what’s to come: heavy and snappy. [Producer] Erik Ron loves his Kemper. When I worked with him before, he was much more amp-oriented, but now I think Kemper has got it to a point where they’ve got a signature model with him, which he loves – so we were all about the Kemper on this track.
“More Than Machines was getting a song through the eye of a needle, and simultaneously, I really had been bothered about the whole issue going on around women’s rights. The label asked me for another track, and I was annoyed at them – because that’s just my ego – but my creative side said, ‘oh good, you know what? You didn’t nail this subject you wanted to tackle, and maybe you can make something more immediate – it’s constructive criticism.’ When people lay the gauntlet down to you, challenge you, it’s a win-win, because if you come up with something good, they’re right. And if you come up with something good, you’re right. And if you come up with something really really good, everyone’s right, even though your ego didn’t like the journey. That’s what happened.
Chris Traynor: “I love the pre-chorus because, to me, it sounds really big and rude and it’s kind of unexpected and an unusual part, especially for this band. Erik Ron laid down this 808 kick drum – very retro hip-hop. It really reminded me of Missy Elliot, so I was trying to think of something that would be like a guitar sample in a cool Missy Elliot song, and that’s why it’s so sparse and broken up. I wanted it to feel like it dropped into a hip-hop track for a second.
“A lot of Bush songs have slide guitar, and I started getting into fretless guitar because it’s like a slide, but it’s just a little bit of a different voice. I love that sound, so I borrowed Dweezil Zappa’s fretless guitar. If you ever want a really weird guitar, and you don’t know anybody else that has one, Dweezil Zappa will have one – he had three fretless guitars in his studio. So I borrowed one, and I did these overdubs with Erik because we wanted to make it sound pretty modern, but gnarly. We used an Electro-Harmonix Pitchfork – we pitched the sound up and down, and we used a fuzz, which is a classic kind of Bush thing, but with that sound. So it kinda ties into the history of Bush, but it’s a more modern take on it.
“I love using guitars that aren’t mine or that are new, because every guitar has its own song in it, so it was really cool to borrow that guitar from Dweezil.”
Gavin Rossdale: “The main riff is my favourite guitar moment of this track. It was such a massive sound, and when I got that, it was funny, because I’ve never written a song before where I was really clear that it should open a record. Like, this really sets the tone, the intention of the record – this is the vibe.
“Writing this, I was really just being experimental, exploring, challenging myself, finding out what all my drum programs could do. Nick DePirro, who’s a great guitar player, he introduced me to Neural DSP, so I’ve entered that world. I did all my guitars on Neural. My friend Tosin Abasi – I used his guitars on the record – has a plugin. And Gojira have a really great setting. And you know, you start with a sound – someone gets an amazing sound and then you modify it, you make it your own.
“That was a turning point for me, because I’ve usually got like three or four amps connected trying to make it happen, but basically going for the same sound, and then when I came across this new stuff, I was like – I dunno about my amps anymore, this is really good!”
Chris Traynor: “Right at the very end, I think on the last day, I was doing the guitar tracks and the bridge of this song – I did this kind of octave up pitched guitar sound that really elevates it. I was just listening to it this morning and I love it, it’s a cyclical theme that loops over the chords that are going on underneath. I think it really takes the song into a different place, because the song is so heavy, and you need that break, that kind of lift.”
Gavin Rossdale: “The way that I originally had it, it was a real long bass intro and I had all these vocals on it, and it was beautiful. And I went away, I went off to a baseball game, and I came back and Chris and Erik had completely changed it. Suddenly it opened with the vocal and then went into the big intro. That wasn’t my preferred way of doing it – I had a more sinewy, Peter Gabriel beginning, and they went for a slam-dunk beginning.
“I mean, I get it – I get what they did, but I still prefer my kinda Gabriel beginning! I think the intro sets the song up great, but I love long basslines – I grew up on dub, so for me, having a long bassline that goes round and round for ages before a song starts is normal. I don’t have to have an orgasm as soon as a song starts.
“It’s going to be weird [when we start playing this one live] because I’m always going to have to be at the microphone when the song starts [laughs] which is not my favourite thing to do. But in and of itself, that’s a good thing – because it’s different to everything else.”
Chris Traynor: “We did a lot of stuff with guitars on this record that was kinda soundscapey and trying to, again, trust Erik and do stuff that’s more modern. So there’s a lot of stuff on this track that doesn’t sound like guitar but is. In the chorus, I used – ironically, a ‘63 Gibson SG Junior with a P90, which is a very old sounding guitar, but I used it for all these chimey effects in the choruses and in the intro, which sound like keyboard pads. And one of the tricks that I did on this song in particular, is I’ll play a guitar part and then I’ll double it with the keyboard. So it kind of mixes in so you can’t tell.”
Chris Traynor: “I love the breakdown of this one. It was something that was inspired at the last minute when we were doing pre-production before Nick came in on the drums. It has a lot of frenetic energy, and then really opens up. One of the things I absolutely love, Nick, on the re-intro of the verse, just plays this incredibly cool beat where he’s partially using the rims of the drums, and that is super inspiring to me. I think the song is in 6/8 – somebody will probably correct me, but I’m pretty sure it’s not 3/4, it’s 6/8 – and I love that feel. I’ve always loved that kind of feel and bands who’ve done that before – Quicksand, Tool, Helmet. Gavin, when he wrote the base of that track, the meat of that initial riff – he has a really cool computer-y part, computer noises that are going on in the verse.
So when I came in, I just basically added on top of that a little bit more movement on the riff in the chorus. I think it harkens back to old Bush – there aren’t a lot of parts on old Bush songs. Like, Little Things – it’s basically one set of chord changes. When Gavin and I went on tour opening for U2, I was amazed that all their songs are just one part, and they just do dynamics – they go up and down. That was a real lesson for me. This song has that – different variations on a theme.”
Gavin Rossdale: “I have a rock career that’s never gone down the blues [path], and yet this is probably my most bluesy riff. It’s right up there with like, well, I wish it was like Stevie Ray Vaughan met The Black Keys!
“Each song is there to exist on its own and yet compliment the others. The record is really consistent – there’s two mellow tracks because nobody wants to be riffing for an entire record, that’s ridiculous. So just for the sake of decorum and dynamics, there’s a couple of mellow songs in there to pull at your heartstrings – if you have any feelings. And if you don’t, they won’t. If you just care about guitar, you won’t care about those songs!
Bush’s The Art Of Survival is out now.
Guitar.com is the world’s leading authority and resource for all things guitar. We provide insight and opinion about gear, artists, technique and the guitar industry for all genres and skill levels.
© 2022 Guitar.com is part of NME Networks.
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/bush-talk-sonic-experimentation-for-new-record-the-art-of-survival-guitar-com/?feed_id=9227&_unique_id=63a54114588b3
Bush’s ninth record is aptly named The Art Of Survival. But the longevity implied by such a name isn’t just a neat reflection of the band’s tenacious attitude: the LP as a whole arrives into a world racked with chaos, but its message is, despite the maelstrom, we as a species persist – not just Bush.
Such a topic for an album, especially now that Bush have embraced a harder, heavier sound, might be at risk of being 45 minutes of misery. But as frontman Gavin Rossdale puts it, the record avoids taking a “mournful or self-piteous” approach – instead, it’s “about the success stories of humanity’s survival against the odds. People just find a way to push through. We’ve all obviously suffered in varying degrees. I think the nature of life is the art of survival. Everyone is being tested all of the time, but we find a way.”
There’s not really a better time to highlight humanity’s resilience. Coming out of a global pandemic, there’s no let up in the global chaos. For Rossdale, The Art Of Survival encompasses it all – the pandemic, war, racism, and threats to women’s bodily autonomy. Along with Rossdale and lead guitarist Chris Traynor, let’s dive into five of their favourite tracks for the new record, and see how they crafted the polished, modern hard rock within.
Conversations with Gavin Rossdale and Chris Traynor transcribed by Karen Ruttner
Gavin Rossdale: “My favourite part is the opening riff – it’s just infectious and undeniable. It sets the tone for the record – it’s the precursor for what’s to come: heavy and snappy. [Producer] Erik Ron loves his Kemper. When I worked with him before, he was much more amp-oriented, but now I think Kemper has got it to a point where they’ve got a signature model with him, which he loves – so we were all about the Kemper on this track.
“More Than Machines was getting a song through the eye of a needle, and simultaneously, I really had been bothered about the whole issue going on around women’s rights. The label asked me for another track, and I was annoyed at them – because that’s just my ego – but my creative side said, ‘oh good, you know what? You didn’t nail this subject you wanted to tackle, and maybe you can make something more immediate – it’s constructive criticism.’ When people lay the gauntlet down to you, challenge you, it’s a win-win, because if you come up with something good, they’re right. And if you come up with something good, you’re right. And if you come up with something really really good, everyone’s right, even though your ego didn’t like the journey. That’s what happened.
Chris Traynor: “I love the pre-chorus because, to me, it sounds really big and rude and it’s kind of unexpected and an unusual part, especially for this band. Erik Ron laid down this 808 kick drum – very retro hip-hop. It really reminded me of Missy Elliot, so I was trying to think of something that would be like a guitar sample in a cool Missy Elliot song, and that’s why it’s so sparse and broken up. I wanted it to feel like it dropped into a hip-hop track for a second.
“A lot of Bush songs have slide guitar, and I started getting into fretless guitar because it’s like a slide, but it’s just a little bit of a different voice. I love that sound, so I borrowed Dweezil Zappa’s fretless guitar. If you ever want a really weird guitar, and you don’t know anybody else that has one, Dweezil Zappa will have one – he had three fretless guitars in his studio. So I borrowed one, and I did these overdubs with Erik because we wanted to make it sound pretty modern, but gnarly. We used an Electro-Harmonix Pitchfork – we pitched the sound up and down, and we used a fuzz, which is a classic kind of Bush thing, but with that sound. So it kinda ties into the history of Bush, but it’s a more modern take on it.
“I love using guitars that aren’t mine or that are new, because every guitar has its own song in it, so it was really cool to borrow that guitar from Dweezil.”
Gavin Rossdale: “The main riff is my favourite guitar moment of this track. It was such a massive sound, and when I got that, it was funny, because I’ve never written a song before where I was really clear that it should open a record. Like, this really sets the tone, the intention of the record – this is the vibe.
“Writing this, I was really just being experimental, exploring, challenging myself, finding out what all my drum programs could do. Nick DePirro, who’s a great guitar player, he introduced me to Neural DSP, so I’ve entered that world. I did all my guitars on Neural. My friend Tosin Abasi – I used his guitars on the record – has a plugin. And Gojira have a really great setting. And you know, you start with a sound – someone gets an amazing sound and then you modify it, you make it your own.
“That was a turning point for me, because I’ve usually got like three or four amps connected trying to make it happen, but basically going for the same sound, and then when I came across this new stuff, I was like – I dunno about my amps anymore, this is really good!”
Chris Traynor: “Right at the very end, I think on the last day, I was doing the guitar tracks and the bridge of this song – I did this kind of octave up pitched guitar sound that really elevates it. I was just listening to it this morning and I love it, it’s a cyclical theme that loops over the chords that are going on underneath. I think it really takes the song into a different place, because the song is so heavy, and you need that break, that kind of lift.”
Gavin Rossdale: “The way that I originally had it, it was a real long bass intro and I had all these vocals on it, and it was beautiful. And I went away, I went off to a baseball game, and I came back and Chris and Erik had completely changed it. Suddenly it opened with the vocal and then went into the big intro. That wasn’t my preferred way of doing it – I had a more sinewy, Peter Gabriel beginning, and they went for a slam-dunk beginning.
“I mean, I get it – I get what they did, but I still prefer my kinda Gabriel beginning! I think the intro sets the song up great, but I love long basslines – I grew up on dub, so for me, having a long bassline that goes round and round for ages before a song starts is normal. I don’t have to have an orgasm as soon as a song starts.
“It’s going to be weird [when we start playing this one live] because I’m always going to have to be at the microphone when the song starts [laughs] which is not my favourite thing to do. But in and of itself, that’s a good thing – because it’s different to everything else.”
Chris Traynor: “We did a lot of stuff with guitars on this record that was kinda soundscapey and trying to, again, trust Erik and do stuff that’s more modern. So there’s a lot of stuff on this track that doesn’t sound like guitar but is. In the chorus, I used – ironically, a ‘63 Gibson SG Junior with a P90, which is a very old sounding guitar, but I used it for all these chimey effects in the choruses and in the intro, which sound like keyboard pads. And one of the tricks that I did on this song in particular, is I’ll play a guitar part and then I’ll double it with the keyboard. So it kind of mixes in so you can’t tell.”
Chris Traynor: “I love the breakdown of this one. It was something that was inspired at the last minute when we were doing pre-production before Nick came in on the drums. It has a lot of frenetic energy, and then really opens up. One of the things I absolutely love, Nick, on the re-intro of the verse, just plays this incredibly cool beat where he’s partially using the rims of the drums, and that is super inspiring to me. I think the song is in 6/8 – somebody will probably correct me, but I’m pretty sure it’s not 3/4, it’s 6/8 – and I love that feel. I’ve always loved that kind of feel and bands who’ve done that before – Quicksand, Tool, Helmet. Gavin, when he wrote the base of that track, the meat of that initial riff – he has a really cool computer-y part, computer noises that are going on in the verse.
So when I came in, I just basically added on top of that a little bit more movement on the riff in the chorus. I think it harkens back to old Bush – there aren’t a lot of parts on old Bush songs. Like, Little Things – it’s basically one set of chord changes. When Gavin and I went on tour opening for U2, I was amazed that all their songs are just one part, and they just do dynamics – they go up and down. That was a real lesson for me. This song has that – different variations on a theme.”
Gavin Rossdale: “I have a rock career that’s never gone down the blues [path], and yet this is probably my most bluesy riff. It’s right up there with like, well, I wish it was like Stevie Ray Vaughan met The Black Keys!
“Each song is there to exist on its own and yet compliment the others. The record is really consistent – there’s two mellow tracks because nobody wants to be riffing for an entire record, that’s ridiculous. So just for the sake of decorum and dynamics, there’s a couple of mellow songs in there to pull at your heartstrings – if you have any feelings. And if you don’t, they won’t. If you just care about guitar, you won’t care about those songs!
Bush’s The Art Of Survival is out now.
Guitar.com is the world’s leading authority and resource for all things guitar. We provide insight and opinion about gear, artists, technique and the guitar industry for all genres and skill levels.
© 2022 Guitar.com is part of NME Networks.
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/bush-talk-sonic-experimentation-for-new-record-the-art-of-survival-guitar-com/?feed_id=9227&_unique_id=63a54114588b3
Thursday, December 22, 2022
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Fiat Lux Fuses Fine Jewelry, Body Piercing and Vivid Imagination - INSTORE MAG
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OWNER: Marie McCarthy; URL: fiatluxsf.com; FOUNDED: 2011; Opened featured location: 2021; AREA: 500 square-foot showroom; 1,000 square feet total; Buildout cost: $80,000; DESIGNER: Noz Design; TOP BRANDS: Fiat Lux, Venyx, Celine Daoust, BVLA, Digby and Iona; EMPLOYEES: 2 full-time, 1 part-time
WHAT DO YOU get when you mix designer jewelry with elevated and vibrant interior design, a high-end piercing studio, a tattoo parlor sensibility and a dash of punk-rock rebelliousness? The newest location of San Francisco-based Fiat Lux, the brainchild of owner Marie McCarthy.
By 2021, McCarthy already owned a body art studio that had pushed the medium into the luxury space, as well as a beloved 10-year-old neighborhood jewelry store that felt dark and edgy. It’s unsurprising, then, that her second location of Fiat Lux is equally innovative, giving San Francisco’s Pacific Heights residents a one-of-a-kind jewelry shopping and luxury piercing experience.
Just 500 square feet, the retail space still gives a sense of airy openness. That’s due to a combination of thin-profile cabinet showcases lining the showroom walls and well-lit, bright white surfaces punctuated by pops of color. The concept, developed by interior designer Noz Nozawa, is both chic and whimsical, a perfect fit for the residents of posh Pacific Heights.
Owner Marie McCarthy (right) with head piercer Perry Doig and interior designer Noz Nozawa.
“We’d just been through a pandemic, and I wanted something joyful. I wanted to make something really over the top, really different from what people have in their homes or that they would traditionally see in the retail space,” says McCarthy.
As luck would have it, Nozawa was a client of head piercer Perry Doig, and she hit it off with McCarthy just as she was considering opening a second location.
“We talked nonstop for an hour,” says McCarthy of their first encounter. “She has titles like ‘The Queen of Color’ and has been featured in Architectural Digest. I said, ‘OK universe, I hear you.’”
McCarthy says that it was great to go into a project with someone with whom she had already formed a connection. “We understood each other, so it made the project easy and joyful. If I could, I would design a new store with her every year.”
What looks like art on the walls is actually wallpaper surrounded by light blue trim. Local artist Caroline Lizarraga was enlisted by store designer Noz Nozawa to drip gold resin from the top of the wallpaper, which demonstrates the store’s rebellious spirit in subtle fashion. A seating area features a vintage couch reupholstered in modern stripe.
Pierced with Light
While the showroom is light, inviting and conducive to conversation, that’s not all there is to this iteration of Fiat Lux. Clients who arrive for a piercing are led from the showroom into a small hallway painted with images of the store’s jewelry by local artist Caroline Lizarraga (McCarthy calls this hallway a “palate cleanser”). Through a doorway straight ahead, clients enter the “procedure room” — an unexpectedly large space that feels part medical examination room and part Victorian dining room, with light blue walls, white trim and a stunning art deco chandelier.
The procedure room was conceived and built out by Doig, who had envisioned creating a luxury piercing space for years. “A piercing studio was once thought of as a scary place,” says Doig. “I wanted to give people a place that was more gentle, where they could let down their guard.”
Doig says that the piercing industry itself is only 45 years old, and that for the first 20 years, it had a reputation as being for sexual deviants and the gay community. Then, it morphed into a punk-rock-like subculture, a thing people would do to break from social norms. When Doig was hired as head piercer in 2012, the original location of Fiat Lux was just a year old, and he and McCarthy shared a vision to show their clientele that piercings could simply be a way to wear more fine jewelry.
“When I say ‘high-end piercing,’ it’s a mixture of selling jewelry that, piercing or not, anyone would look at and say, ‘That’s beautiful,’ and also having a studio where people come to us because we have a reputation for being welcoming, gentle and attentive,” says Doig. “We want to give people 30 minutes, 45 minutes, an hour. I don’t want people to say, ‘I know this place that does piercings,’ I want them to say, ‘I have a friend who does piercings.’”
Pops of color and unique touches like jaguar-shaped cabinet pulls lend personality to the Fiat Lux showroom.
Wild Kingdom
Back in the showroom, the colorful trees and animals on the walls are the first thing to draw the eye. The art appears to be murals but is in fact expensive wallpaper by Voutsa. The master stroke is gold resin drips, painted by Lizarraga, that start at the top of the wall panels and trickle downward.
“Noz said she wanted me to buy this expensive wallpaper, and then she would destroy it with gold drips,” says McCarthy. “I said, ‘You are so wild, and I’m in.
Let’s do it.’”
Adds Doig: “We had a reputation at the other location for being a little bit punk rock, so we needed to do something that was a little bit destructive. Ruining expensive wallpaper seemed like the perfect touch.”
The tiled floor is painted with a black-and-white striped snake by Lizarraga with a blue gemstone in its forehead (traditional for snake jewelry), and art deco pendant lighting hangs elegantly from the ceiling. An octagonal showcase occupies the center of the show floor and displays fine jewelry manufactured especially for piercings. Around the perimeter, the wall showcases are painted a cornflower blue that’s slightly darker than the wallpaper panel trim.
While some jewelry retailers might shy away from bright colors that could compete with their product for attention, McCarthy says the colors help create an atmosphere of joy and wonder. “People come in and are inspired, and that translates over to the jewelry. They see the space first and are excited and blown away, then they move to the jewelry and it’s like nothing they’ve seen, so it really works well together.”
The piercing room is quiet and elegant with a chandelier overhead.
The design by Nozawa fuses vintage and modern, a combination that McCarthy has always loved. In fact, the store’s inventory reflects the same blend of old and new, incorporating vintage and estate jewelry with new jewelry by independent designers.
“I’m particularly interested in small-batch handmade jewelry. I find it more sentimental and important,” says McCarthy. “I have put some jewelry in the Fillmore [Pacific Heights] location that I’ve always loved. I had seen one designer 10 years before at the Goldsmiths’ Fair in London that didn’t fit my brand at the time, but at Fillmore, I could scoot the edges of the brand a little bit so I could bring in the designers that I had been personally obsessed with for a long time.”
Unlike other stores, which often organize their jewelry by designer, Fiat Lux organizes product by theme. “I have a case for flora and fauna, one for eye talismans, one for the human condition, one for architecture, etc. It’s more difficult than grouping by designer, but I wanted to create a little more magic and story so I have more talking points with the client,” says McCarthy.
Doig says this strategy helps Fiat Lux to sell more jewelry to each client. If the jewelry is organized by designer, says Doig, it makes it too easy for people to go directly to what they know. “So if you’re buying based on the designer, you may not get an opportunity to see what other piece may play well with that person’s jewelry. Mixing it up by theme and design element gives people an opportunity to branch out their collection beyond the designers they already know.”
Straight ahead through the showroom is a short hallway leading to the piercing room.
Humble Beginnings
At the age of 23, McCarthy dreamed of a space that would combine tattoos and piercing with fine jewelry. Her then-landlord saw something in the aspiring entrepreneur and gave her the money to start the business: Rose Gold’s Tattoo & Piercing, which she still owns today.
After about 15 years in business, McCarthy decided to separate the jewelry operation from the tattoo parlor. She started with $12,000 and opened “the littlest store in San Francisco”: a 200 square-foot store in the Mission District called Fiat Lux. (The store later moved to a larger location nearby.)
“It was dark and punk rock and really cool,” says McCarthy. “That’s how I was at that time, going to rock and roll shows and partying and having fun. Now that
I’ve grown up a little bit, the new iteration is still punk rock in spirit but a little richer.”
She explains that her idea “has always been exuberance, whether it’s in the punk rock black metal version at Mission or the wild atmospheric fizzy colors at Fillmore. It was to go from a hectic color out front to a calming hallway in the middle to the relaxing atmosphere of the piercing room; an amuse bouche to a palliative to duck confit in clear broth.
“We give a high-end luxury experience with the freedom of being tongue in cheek. People find it refreshing and freeing.”
1. LIGHT IN LATIN. “Fiat Lux” is Latin for “let there be light.” It’s about radical transparency and education, as well as the permanence and impermanence of light, says McCarthy. “We’ve always been open with facts and education about jewelry, even doing workshops with our clients to help them to better understand the medium. Our logo is the eye radiating knowledge.”
2. NEXT-LEVEL PIERCING. When McCarthy began in the jewelry business, she brought her piercing and tattoo shop background with her — and the goal was to integrate the two. “I noticed there was a big part of the population who didn’t feel comfortable going into street shops to get pierced, so I wanted to open it up to those people,” she says. “Piercing can be spontaneous and a fun placeholder for jewelry, or it can be therapeutic.”
3. TALE OF TWO VIBES. The location in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood is vastly different from the original Mission District location. In fact, the Fiat Lux website offers browsers the choice of “Punk Rock” (Mission location) or “Pinkies Up” (Fillmore location). “It’s like a cool punk rocker and their eclectic, cool aunt,” says McCarthy. “The Mission location attracts tattoo artists, bartenders and hairstylists. I still have that at Fillmore, but there’s a new client over there, too. Regardless, our clients are always cool, always interested in seeing something different from the norm.”
4. ANIMAL PULLS. One of the many special touches in the Fillmore Street location is the jaguar handles on the jewelry cabinets. But they weren’t the first creature-shaped pulls used at Fiat Lux. “Fifteen years ago, I got a pair of cobra door handles at a flea market,” says McCarthy. “I got them home and I was like, ‘Who do I think I am? I don’t have French doors, where will I use these?’ So I used them in the Mission space. I found jaguar handles for the cabinets at Fillmore because I like to have continuity.”
5. SNAKE CHARM. In addition to the giant snake painted in the center of the showroom floor, McCarthy jokes that Fiat Lux must have the largest collection of snake jewelry in the world. Why? “They’re a symbol of transformation,” she explains. “I feel like the last three years have changed all of us a lot. So I took that as our spirit animal at the Fillmore location.” The snake is also a symbol of eternity and was used in wedding jewelry during the Victorian period, she adds.
A marketing person once told McCarthy that she had already alienated half the public by producing “F U” jewelry, so they should be political on social media as well. “I am from the Midwest, so I didn’t think we could do it, but it worked,” says McCarthy. “We’re outspoken and don’t worry about it. Some people post on our feed that they love the jewelry but wish we would leave the politics out of it. The other half love us because we say and do things like that.”
What is your team like?
McCarthy: “Our staff sometimes feels like the United Nations of retail, everyone is so different and weird and delightful. There are no lukewarm emotions, you either love us or hate us. We’re very proud to be able to offer simple things like health insurance, Thursday lunches together, mini-golf dates. We are definitely like a small-ish family. We spend a huge part of our lives at work so it better be fun! And we better be happy!”
Thursday lunches and mini-golf dates sound fun. Tell me more about how closely you work and play with your team.
McCarthy: “It would not be an exaggeration to say I walk into the Mission location and almost hear birds singing in there. Everyone cooks for each other and takes care of each other. It’s kind of awesome. Everyone has a voice and makes decisions together. I never call it my store; it’s our store. We do it together and everyone ‘s work is equal. I think people feel that they have a mission here and that their work is fulfilling. We try to have monthly outings where we can hang out with each other outside the shop. We’ll play miniature golf and say whoever wins gets a piece of jewelry. We’re competitive!”
You mention charity and development of jewelers. Why are you motivated to give back, and in what ways?
McCarthy: “We want people to care and be proactive about themselves. We try to do it in a way that doesn’t seem like marketing. We really want to help. So we have a black jewelers initiative, but we don’t promote it, because it’s not about us doing the work, it’s about the work. We recognize there isn’t as much diversity in jewelry as there should be. We’re always careful where we put our money; we want to make a difference. We take applications locally, choose one person and pay for their coursework at a jewelry school here in San Francisco. After they’re done, we give them studio time here in our studio and try to help them with job placement. Helping people get their foot in the door where they may not have that opportunity. When people hear about it, people want to help. We mention it because we want people to apply – we post about it once or twice – but we’re not like companies saying, ‘Look at how good we are.’”
You describe the Fiat Lux experience as high-end luxury while also being tongue-in-cheek. Can you tell us how that manifests itself?
McCarthy: “Everyone goes into a jewelry store expecting jewelers to be a little bit shady for some reason. We understand that. And because we’re in pursuit of the truth, sometimes we’ll use that. One of my favorite examples is I was doing something in the shop and my partner, Alexei Angelides, was selling engagement rings to these two women, and they were special ordering something, so he said, ‘OK, now’s the time when you give me all your money and you leave with nothing.’ I just started laughing. They started laughing too. We’re just not afraid to say those things, and it takes people off guard and they think it’s funny. They know we’re good-hearted and don’t want them to buy anything that they’re not super excited about. If someone wants to learn about different diamonds, I’m happy to sit down with them for an hour and explain diamonds to them and what is or isn’t an investment. So they get a high-end experience – I will take as much time as they need – but I will also be brutally honest and funny about it.”
What made you believe you could launch a successful gallery with just 200 square feet and $12,000 in capital?
McCarthy: “My rent on Haight Street was about $20,000 per month between both shops. I moved the jewelry store and the tattoo shop at the same time, so I was a little cash poor, but I had built a community with a lot of small designers, and they were supportive. And people volunteered to work in the space at the beginning. But I felt good about it and I usually go with my intuition. I wanted to start very neighborhood-y and really interesting without a high price point. I still have very good friends who started as clients from those days. Over the course of a year or two, I started pushing the price point up and getting more inventory, letting it build itself. Eventually I moved the business, opened another business and started doing popups.”
What was the inspiration for the wall treatment?
McCarthy: “Usually, we do murals at our locations, but this time, Noz said she wanted me to buy this expensive wallpaper, and then she would destroy it with gold drips. I said, ‘You are so wild, and I’m in. Let’s do it.’ The wallpaper takes conventional subject matter like a garden scene, but the faces of the animals are blurred out like a modern painting. Using something that’s both vintage and modern speaks the loudest in all the jewelry I carry as well. And people come in every day and ask if it’s a mural or wallpaper. I like it when people are confused, it makes it more fun.”
How much did the design firm influence the overall look of the store or any particular elements?
McCarthy: “Both of us really love vintage furniture. When you’re working with interior designers, sometimes they don’t get into that very much. She also found the couch and reupholstered it in modern stripe. She understood that I love the contrast between vintage and modern, and she took that and ran with it. The small seating area in the back, each element came to the shop at a different time. It amazed me how well they worked together. Every time a new piece came, I would send her a text and tell her she was a genius. In her mind, she did it all at once, but I got to experience each piece as it came in, and that was really special.”
What influenced your approach to jewelry display?
McCarthy: “I feel very strongly that displays shouldn’t be distracting from the jewelry. You really need it to be the main focus. In my other location, I use only wood and natural materials, but because this location is so colorful, I wanted to use more colorful velvets. Somehow they still fade to the background and the back of the cabinets are white. I like to have most of my jewelry out.”
Tell me about the area where the store is located.
McCarthy: “Fillmore Street is a bit of a higher-end neighborhood. It’s surprisingly diverse. The dog scene is unmatched. There’s a groomer around the corner and she came in to talk jewelry. I had to stop her to tell her, “I’m sorry, your dog looks like Tina Turner.” And she was like, “I know.” So we may start having an equal number of dog and jewelry pics on our Instagram.
People are more interested in vintage jewelry here than in the other location, so I’m excited about that.”
Piercing is a big part of your current business. Tell us how that came to be and why you think that is the case.
McCarthy: “When I started in piercing, we were piercing with steel and titanium and giant balls, a more hardcore look. We’ve been fundamental in pushing the industry into fine jewelry, so it seemed a natural progression for us. In Fillmore, instead of a lot of piercings, people tend to get one or two but with really knockout jewelry. Our piercer, Perry, who I’ve worked with for over 10 years, is pure magic and he loves jewelry. I also noticed there was a big part of the population who didn’t feel comfortable going into street shops to get piercing, so I wanted to open it up to those people. It can be spontaneous and fun placeholders for jewelry, or it can be therapeutic. We wanted to make a new venue that fit a different clientele.”
Welded bracelets are also a big part of your current business. Why do you think that is?
McCarthy: “We opened Fillmore last May, and it was just when people in San Francisco were starting to come out of their hermit caves [from the pandemic]. We’re not the first people to do welding, but we talked about it and no one was really doing it anymore. We decided we were interested in it because it’s experiential jewelry. We did it for press parties, and people were crying because they were so over the moon. I’m interested in it because it also explores temporality, permanent impermanence. Tattooing on one end, to piercing, to welding, to jewelry you wear every day. People are still really into it, but so many people are doing it now that the meaning is getting a little watered down. But it’s one of my favorite things to do. I get to sit down with a client for 15 minutes and really have an experience with them. Sometimes I’ll ask them about the first piece of jewelry they ever got. Sometimes they’re celebrating a relationship. It’s as special for me as it is for them.”
You talk about the importance of recognizing and connecting with your target client. Please describe how you are able to do each one: recognize, and then connect.
McCarthy: “My target client has broadened a lot. We connect with them through truthfulness and humor. Our main focus is not on money and never has been. I do things all the time because I think they’re funny, like we make tiny ‘F U’ hands and I was crying laughing, thinking of pavéing them. But people are buying them. Our clients know we’ll tell them the truth and that we’ll laugh and have a drink together. It can be honest and open. When that’s your approach, your client base expands because everyone can connect with that. I’m actually a very shy person, so my deepest thoughts I’ll send out in newsletters. Or if it’s the pandemic, I’ll do stupid funny things like drink water with people on Instagram. But I’m extremely honest in those things, and people feel it. People used to come into the store with tears in their eyes and want to give me a hug, and I would say, ‘It’s the pandemic, don’t give me a hug!’”
You describe the operational side of jewelry retailing as a challenge. How do you overcome that?
McCarthy: “I started this mentorship program, and I always talk to mentees at the beginning of their career, and they want to know how they can design and make jewelry while also managing the books and doing social media. I tell them it’s impossible and to just do their best until they can hire someone to help them. Every small businessperson struggles with wearing so many hats. It’s important to take things off your plate that you don’t enjoy or are not good at. I did the books for our businesses forever and I didn’t like it; it took up so much of my mental space. When I finally hired a bookkeeper, I wished I had done it long before. The sooner you can hire someone to help you with those things, the better your life is going to be. So even if you think it’s a stretch, it’s important to get some things off your plate.”
Is your plan for growth to continue to add new stores, or do you see growth potential in the two existing locations?
McCarthy: “People are always presenting opportunities to me, and it’s very difficult to say no, so I’m not sure. It’s hard for me to understand how people open stores in different cities; I like to keep everything close to home. I could imagine opening another location in the Bay Area, but also three stores and a web store and a child are a lot of things to maneuver. I was doing a lot of popups in Larkspur, and all my clients there were asking for me to have a store there, and I was like “the paint isn’t even dry on Fillmore yet.” I have always seen growth in Mission so far, between 5 and 10 percent, which is amazing. I really feel like I will never open up the same store. Every location has something a little different. So it would have to have some angle that I’m not already doing.”
Trace Shelton is the editor-in-chief of INSTORE magazine. He can be reached at [email protected].
For nearly three decades, Suzanne and Tom Arnold ran a successful business at Facets Fine Jewelry in Arlington, Va. But the time came when the Arnolds wanted to do some of the things you put off while you’ve got a business to run. “We decided it was time to retire,” says Suzanne, who claims the couple knew how to open a store, how to run a store but “didn’t know how to close a store.” So, they hired Wilkerson to do it for them. When she called, Suzanne says Wilkerson offered every option for the sale she could have hoped for. Better still, “the sale exceeded our financial goals like crazy,” she says. And customers came, not only to take advantage of the going-out-of-business buys and mark-downs, but to wish a bon voyage to the beloved proprietors of a neighborhood institution. “People were celebrating our retirement, and that was so special,” says says.
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SEPTEMBER 2022
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OWNER: Marie McCarthy; URL: fiatluxsf.com; FOUNDED: 2011; Opened featured location: 2021; AREA: 500 square-foot showroom; 1,000 square feet total; Buildout cost: $80,000; DESIGNER: Noz Design; TOP BRANDS: Fiat Lux, Venyx, Celine Daoust, BVLA, Digby and Iona; EMPLOYEES: 2 full-time, 1 part-time
WHAT DO YOU get when you mix designer jewelry with elevated and vibrant interior design, a high-end piercing studio, a tattoo parlor sensibility and a dash of punk-rock rebelliousness? The newest location of San Francisco-based Fiat Lux, the brainchild of owner Marie McCarthy.
By 2021, McCarthy already owned a body art studio that had pushed the medium into the luxury space, as well as a beloved 10-year-old neighborhood jewelry store that felt dark and edgy. It’s unsurprising, then, that her second location of Fiat Lux is equally innovative, giving San Francisco’s Pacific Heights residents a one-of-a-kind jewelry shopping and luxury piercing experience.
Just 500 square feet, the retail space still gives a sense of airy openness. That’s due to a combination of thin-profile cabinet showcases lining the showroom walls and well-lit, bright white surfaces punctuated by pops of color. The concept, developed by interior designer Noz Nozawa, is both chic and whimsical, a perfect fit for the residents of posh Pacific Heights.
Owner Marie McCarthy (right) with head piercer Perry Doig and interior designer Noz Nozawa.
“We’d just been through a pandemic, and I wanted something joyful. I wanted to make something really over the top, really different from what people have in their homes or that they would traditionally see in the retail space,” says McCarthy.
As luck would have it, Nozawa was a client of head piercer Perry Doig, and she hit it off with McCarthy just as she was considering opening a second location.
“We talked nonstop for an hour,” says McCarthy of their first encounter. “She has titles like ‘The Queen of Color’ and has been featured in Architectural Digest. I said, ‘OK universe, I hear you.’”
McCarthy says that it was great to go into a project with someone with whom she had already formed a connection. “We understood each other, so it made the project easy and joyful. If I could, I would design a new store with her every year.”
What looks like art on the walls is actually wallpaper surrounded by light blue trim. Local artist Caroline Lizarraga was enlisted by store designer Noz Nozawa to drip gold resin from the top of the wallpaper, which demonstrates the store’s rebellious spirit in subtle fashion. A seating area features a vintage couch reupholstered in modern stripe.
Pierced with Light
While the showroom is light, inviting and conducive to conversation, that’s not all there is to this iteration of Fiat Lux. Clients who arrive for a piercing are led from the showroom into a small hallway painted with images of the store’s jewelry by local artist Caroline Lizarraga (McCarthy calls this hallway a “palate cleanser”). Through a doorway straight ahead, clients enter the “procedure room” — an unexpectedly large space that feels part medical examination room and part Victorian dining room, with light blue walls, white trim and a stunning art deco chandelier.
The procedure room was conceived and built out by Doig, who had envisioned creating a luxury piercing space for years. “A piercing studio was once thought of as a scary place,” says Doig. “I wanted to give people a place that was more gentle, where they could let down their guard.”
Doig says that the piercing industry itself is only 45 years old, and that for the first 20 years, it had a reputation as being for sexual deviants and the gay community. Then, it morphed into a punk-rock-like subculture, a thing people would do to break from social norms. When Doig was hired as head piercer in 2012, the original location of Fiat Lux was just a year old, and he and McCarthy shared a vision to show their clientele that piercings could simply be a way to wear more fine jewelry.
“When I say ‘high-end piercing,’ it’s a mixture of selling jewelry that, piercing or not, anyone would look at and say, ‘That’s beautiful,’ and also having a studio where people come to us because we have a reputation for being welcoming, gentle and attentive,” says Doig. “We want to give people 30 minutes, 45 minutes, an hour. I don’t want people to say, ‘I know this place that does piercings,’ I want them to say, ‘I have a friend who does piercings.’”
Pops of color and unique touches like jaguar-shaped cabinet pulls lend personality to the Fiat Lux showroom.
Wild Kingdom
Back in the showroom, the colorful trees and animals on the walls are the first thing to draw the eye. The art appears to be murals but is in fact expensive wallpaper by Voutsa. The master stroke is gold resin drips, painted by Lizarraga, that start at the top of the wall panels and trickle downward.
“Noz said she wanted me to buy this expensive wallpaper, and then she would destroy it with gold drips,” says McCarthy. “I said, ‘You are so wild, and I’m in.
Let’s do it.’”
Adds Doig: “We had a reputation at the other location for being a little bit punk rock, so we needed to do something that was a little bit destructive. Ruining expensive wallpaper seemed like the perfect touch.”
The tiled floor is painted with a black-and-white striped snake by Lizarraga with a blue gemstone in its forehead (traditional for snake jewelry), and art deco pendant lighting hangs elegantly from the ceiling. An octagonal showcase occupies the center of the show floor and displays fine jewelry manufactured especially for piercings. Around the perimeter, the wall showcases are painted a cornflower blue that’s slightly darker than the wallpaper panel trim.
While some jewelry retailers might shy away from bright colors that could compete with their product for attention, McCarthy says the colors help create an atmosphere of joy and wonder. “People come in and are inspired, and that translates over to the jewelry. They see the space first and are excited and blown away, then they move to the jewelry and it’s like nothing they’ve seen, so it really works well together.”
The piercing room is quiet and elegant with a chandelier overhead.
The design by Nozawa fuses vintage and modern, a combination that McCarthy has always loved. In fact, the store’s inventory reflects the same blend of old and new, incorporating vintage and estate jewelry with new jewelry by independent designers.
“I’m particularly interested in small-batch handmade jewelry. I find it more sentimental and important,” says McCarthy. “I have put some jewelry in the Fillmore [Pacific Heights] location that I’ve always loved. I had seen one designer 10 years before at the Goldsmiths’ Fair in London that didn’t fit my brand at the time, but at Fillmore, I could scoot the edges of the brand a little bit so I could bring in the designers that I had been personally obsessed with for a long time.”
Unlike other stores, which often organize their jewelry by designer, Fiat Lux organizes product by theme. “I have a case for flora and fauna, one for eye talismans, one for the human condition, one for architecture, etc. It’s more difficult than grouping by designer, but I wanted to create a little more magic and story so I have more talking points with the client,” says McCarthy.
Doig says this strategy helps Fiat Lux to sell more jewelry to each client. If the jewelry is organized by designer, says Doig, it makes it too easy for people to go directly to what they know. “So if you’re buying based on the designer, you may not get an opportunity to see what other piece may play well with that person’s jewelry. Mixing it up by theme and design element gives people an opportunity to branch out their collection beyond the designers they already know.”
Straight ahead through the showroom is a short hallway leading to the piercing room.
Humble Beginnings
At the age of 23, McCarthy dreamed of a space that would combine tattoos and piercing with fine jewelry. Her then-landlord saw something in the aspiring entrepreneur and gave her the money to start the business: Rose Gold’s Tattoo & Piercing, which she still owns today.
After about 15 years in business, McCarthy decided to separate the jewelry operation from the tattoo parlor. She started with $12,000 and opened “the littlest store in San Francisco”: a 200 square-foot store in the Mission District called Fiat Lux. (The store later moved to a larger location nearby.)
“It was dark and punk rock and really cool,” says McCarthy. “That’s how I was at that time, going to rock and roll shows and partying and having fun. Now that
I’ve grown up a little bit, the new iteration is still punk rock in spirit but a little richer.”
She explains that her idea “has always been exuberance, whether it’s in the punk rock black metal version at Mission or the wild atmospheric fizzy colors at Fillmore. It was to go from a hectic color out front to a calming hallway in the middle to the relaxing atmosphere of the piercing room; an amuse bouche to a palliative to duck confit in clear broth.
“We give a high-end luxury experience with the freedom of being tongue in cheek. People find it refreshing and freeing.”
1. LIGHT IN LATIN. “Fiat Lux” is Latin for “let there be light.” It’s about radical transparency and education, as well as the permanence and impermanence of light, says McCarthy. “We’ve always been open with facts and education about jewelry, even doing workshops with our clients to help them to better understand the medium. Our logo is the eye radiating knowledge.”
2. NEXT-LEVEL PIERCING. When McCarthy began in the jewelry business, she brought her piercing and tattoo shop background with her — and the goal was to integrate the two. “I noticed there was a big part of the population who didn’t feel comfortable going into street shops to get pierced, so I wanted to open it up to those people,” she says. “Piercing can be spontaneous and a fun placeholder for jewelry, or it can be therapeutic.”
3. TALE OF TWO VIBES. The location in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood is vastly different from the original Mission District location. In fact, the Fiat Lux website offers browsers the choice of “Punk Rock” (Mission location) or “Pinkies Up” (Fillmore location). “It’s like a cool punk rocker and their eclectic, cool aunt,” says McCarthy. “The Mission location attracts tattoo artists, bartenders and hairstylists. I still have that at Fillmore, but there’s a new client over there, too. Regardless, our clients are always cool, always interested in seeing something different from the norm.”
4. ANIMAL PULLS. One of the many special touches in the Fillmore Street location is the jaguar handles on the jewelry cabinets. But they weren’t the first creature-shaped pulls used at Fiat Lux. “Fifteen years ago, I got a pair of cobra door handles at a flea market,” says McCarthy. “I got them home and I was like, ‘Who do I think I am? I don’t have French doors, where will I use these?’ So I used them in the Mission space. I found jaguar handles for the cabinets at Fillmore because I like to have continuity.”
5. SNAKE CHARM. In addition to the giant snake painted in the center of the showroom floor, McCarthy jokes that Fiat Lux must have the largest collection of snake jewelry in the world. Why? “They’re a symbol of transformation,” she explains. “I feel like the last three years have changed all of us a lot. So I took that as our spirit animal at the Fillmore location.” The snake is also a symbol of eternity and was used in wedding jewelry during the Victorian period, she adds.
A marketing person once told McCarthy that she had already alienated half the public by producing “F U” jewelry, so they should be political on social media as well. “I am from the Midwest, so I didn’t think we could do it, but it worked,” says McCarthy. “We’re outspoken and don’t worry about it. Some people post on our feed that they love the jewelry but wish we would leave the politics out of it. The other half love us because we say and do things like that.”
What is your team like?
McCarthy: “Our staff sometimes feels like the United Nations of retail, everyone is so different and weird and delightful. There are no lukewarm emotions, you either love us or hate us. We’re very proud to be able to offer simple things like health insurance, Thursday lunches together, mini-golf dates. We are definitely like a small-ish family. We spend a huge part of our lives at work so it better be fun! And we better be happy!”
Thursday lunches and mini-golf dates sound fun. Tell me more about how closely you work and play with your team.
McCarthy: “It would not be an exaggeration to say I walk into the Mission location and almost hear birds singing in there. Everyone cooks for each other and takes care of each other. It’s kind of awesome. Everyone has a voice and makes decisions together. I never call it my store; it’s our store. We do it together and everyone ‘s work is equal. I think people feel that they have a mission here and that their work is fulfilling. We try to have monthly outings where we can hang out with each other outside the shop. We’ll play miniature golf and say whoever wins gets a piece of jewelry. We’re competitive!”
You mention charity and development of jewelers. Why are you motivated to give back, and in what ways?
McCarthy: “We want people to care and be proactive about themselves. We try to do it in a way that doesn’t seem like marketing. We really want to help. So we have a black jewelers initiative, but we don’t promote it, because it’s not about us doing the work, it’s about the work. We recognize there isn’t as much diversity in jewelry as there should be. We’re always careful where we put our money; we want to make a difference. We take applications locally, choose one person and pay for their coursework at a jewelry school here in San Francisco. After they’re done, we give them studio time here in our studio and try to help them with job placement. Helping people get their foot in the door where they may not have that opportunity. When people hear about it, people want to help. We mention it because we want people to apply – we post about it once or twice – but we’re not like companies saying, ‘Look at how good we are.’”
You describe the Fiat Lux experience as high-end luxury while also being tongue-in-cheek. Can you tell us how that manifests itself?
McCarthy: “Everyone goes into a jewelry store expecting jewelers to be a little bit shady for some reason. We understand that. And because we’re in pursuit of the truth, sometimes we’ll use that. One of my favorite examples is I was doing something in the shop and my partner, Alexei Angelides, was selling engagement rings to these two women, and they were special ordering something, so he said, ‘OK, now’s the time when you give me all your money and you leave with nothing.’ I just started laughing. They started laughing too. We’re just not afraid to say those things, and it takes people off guard and they think it’s funny. They know we’re good-hearted and don’t want them to buy anything that they’re not super excited about. If someone wants to learn about different diamonds, I’m happy to sit down with them for an hour and explain diamonds to them and what is or isn’t an investment. So they get a high-end experience – I will take as much time as they need – but I will also be brutally honest and funny about it.”
What made you believe you could launch a successful gallery with just 200 square feet and $12,000 in capital?
McCarthy: “My rent on Haight Street was about $20,000 per month between both shops. I moved the jewelry store and the tattoo shop at the same time, so I was a little cash poor, but I had built a community with a lot of small designers, and they were supportive. And people volunteered to work in the space at the beginning. But I felt good about it and I usually go with my intuition. I wanted to start very neighborhood-y and really interesting without a high price point. I still have very good friends who started as clients from those days. Over the course of a year or two, I started pushing the price point up and getting more inventory, letting it build itself. Eventually I moved the business, opened another business and started doing popups.”
What was the inspiration for the wall treatment?
McCarthy: “Usually, we do murals at our locations, but this time, Noz said she wanted me to buy this expensive wallpaper, and then she would destroy it with gold drips. I said, ‘You are so wild, and I’m in. Let’s do it.’ The wallpaper takes conventional subject matter like a garden scene, but the faces of the animals are blurred out like a modern painting. Using something that’s both vintage and modern speaks the loudest in all the jewelry I carry as well. And people come in every day and ask if it’s a mural or wallpaper. I like it when people are confused, it makes it more fun.”
How much did the design firm influence the overall look of the store or any particular elements?
McCarthy: “Both of us really love vintage furniture. When you’re working with interior designers, sometimes they don’t get into that very much. She also found the couch and reupholstered it in modern stripe. She understood that I love the contrast between vintage and modern, and she took that and ran with it. The small seating area in the back, each element came to the shop at a different time. It amazed me how well they worked together. Every time a new piece came, I would send her a text and tell her she was a genius. In her mind, she did it all at once, but I got to experience each piece as it came in, and that was really special.”
What influenced your approach to jewelry display?
McCarthy: “I feel very strongly that displays shouldn’t be distracting from the jewelry. You really need it to be the main focus. In my other location, I use only wood and natural materials, but because this location is so colorful, I wanted to use more colorful velvets. Somehow they still fade to the background and the back of the cabinets are white. I like to have most of my jewelry out.”
Tell me about the area where the store is located.
McCarthy: “Fillmore Street is a bit of a higher-end neighborhood. It’s surprisingly diverse. The dog scene is unmatched. There’s a groomer around the corner and she came in to talk jewelry. I had to stop her to tell her, “I’m sorry, your dog looks like Tina Turner.” And she was like, “I know.” So we may start having an equal number of dog and jewelry pics on our Instagram.
People are more interested in vintage jewelry here than in the other location, so I’m excited about that.”
Piercing is a big part of your current business. Tell us how that came to be and why you think that is the case.
McCarthy: “When I started in piercing, we were piercing with steel and titanium and giant balls, a more hardcore look. We’ve been fundamental in pushing the industry into fine jewelry, so it seemed a natural progression for us. In Fillmore, instead of a lot of piercings, people tend to get one or two but with really knockout jewelry. Our piercer, Perry, who I’ve worked with for over 10 years, is pure magic and he loves jewelry. I also noticed there was a big part of the population who didn’t feel comfortable going into street shops to get piercing, so I wanted to open it up to those people. It can be spontaneous and fun placeholders for jewelry, or it can be therapeutic. We wanted to make a new venue that fit a different clientele.”
Welded bracelets are also a big part of your current business. Why do you think that is?
McCarthy: “We opened Fillmore last May, and it was just when people in San Francisco were starting to come out of their hermit caves [from the pandemic]. We’re not the first people to do welding, but we talked about it and no one was really doing it anymore. We decided we were interested in it because it’s experiential jewelry. We did it for press parties, and people were crying because they were so over the moon. I’m interested in it because it also explores temporality, permanent impermanence. Tattooing on one end, to piercing, to welding, to jewelry you wear every day. People are still really into it, but so many people are doing it now that the meaning is getting a little watered down. But it’s one of my favorite things to do. I get to sit down with a client for 15 minutes and really have an experience with them. Sometimes I’ll ask them about the first piece of jewelry they ever got. Sometimes they’re celebrating a relationship. It’s as special for me as it is for them.”
You talk about the importance of recognizing and connecting with your target client. Please describe how you are able to do each one: recognize, and then connect.
McCarthy: “My target client has broadened a lot. We connect with them through truthfulness and humor. Our main focus is not on money and never has been. I do things all the time because I think they’re funny, like we make tiny ‘F U’ hands and I was crying laughing, thinking of pavéing them. But people are buying them. Our clients know we’ll tell them the truth and that we’ll laugh and have a drink together. It can be honest and open. When that’s your approach, your client base expands because everyone can connect with that. I’m actually a very shy person, so my deepest thoughts I’ll send out in newsletters. Or if it’s the pandemic, I’ll do stupid funny things like drink water with people on Instagram. But I’m extremely honest in those things, and people feel it. People used to come into the store with tears in their eyes and want to give me a hug, and I would say, ‘It’s the pandemic, don’t give me a hug!’”
You describe the operational side of jewelry retailing as a challenge. How do you overcome that?
McCarthy: “I started this mentorship program, and I always talk to mentees at the beginning of their career, and they want to know how they can design and make jewelry while also managing the books and doing social media. I tell them it’s impossible and to just do their best until they can hire someone to help them. Every small businessperson struggles with wearing so many hats. It’s important to take things off your plate that you don’t enjoy or are not good at. I did the books for our businesses forever and I didn’t like it; it took up so much of my mental space. When I finally hired a bookkeeper, I wished I had done it long before. The sooner you can hire someone to help you with those things, the better your life is going to be. So even if you think it’s a stretch, it’s important to get some things off your plate.”
Is your plan for growth to continue to add new stores, or do you see growth potential in the two existing locations?
McCarthy: “People are always presenting opportunities to me, and it’s very difficult to say no, so I’m not sure. It’s hard for me to understand how people open stores in different cities; I like to keep everything close to home. I could imagine opening another location in the Bay Area, but also three stores and a web store and a child are a lot of things to maneuver. I was doing a lot of popups in Larkspur, and all my clients there were asking for me to have a store there, and I was like “the paint isn’t even dry on Fillmore yet.” I have always seen growth in Mission so far, between 5 and 10 percent, which is amazing. I really feel like I will never open up the same store. Every location has something a little different. So it would have to have some angle that I’m not already doing.”
Trace Shelton is the editor-in-chief of INSTORE magazine. He can be reached at [email protected].
For nearly three decades, Suzanne and Tom Arnold ran a successful business at Facets Fine Jewelry in Arlington, Va. But the time came when the Arnolds wanted to do some of the things you put off while you’ve got a business to run. “We decided it was time to retire,” says Suzanne, who claims the couple knew how to open a store, how to run a store but “didn’t know how to close a store.” So, they hired Wilkerson to do it for them. When she called, Suzanne says Wilkerson offered every option for the sale she could have hoped for. Better still, “the sale exceeded our financial goals like crazy,” she says. And customers came, not only to take advantage of the going-out-of-business buys and mark-downs, but to wish a bon voyage to the beloved proprietors of a neighborhood institution. “People were celebrating our retirement, and that was so special,” says says.
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Woman’s Elaborately Painted Bathroom Looks Like the Cutest Wallpaper - DenGarden
Putting up some wallpaper isn’t all that it is cracked up to be - at least not unless you find some really awesome peel-off wallpaper that works perfectly for you! But for the most part, wallpaper can be hard to remove, and many homeowners prefer painting their wall, even if it offers more detail than just slapping some paint up.
And yet one homeowner decided to take painting her walls to a whole new level, with an attention to detail that we can only admire!
Lindsey Spears, self-proclaimed ‘Painting Mama’ on Tiktok, has gone above and beyond when it comes to painting the walls of her bathroom. Her ability to freehand art onto her walls is enough to have our jaws dropping, and we love the combo of colors and shapes and the sheer creativity of everything involved here!
After about two hours spent painting, Lindsey has a bathroom with some gorgeous looking mural-like walls in a semi retro flower theme. A huge amount of details adds to the overall look, including dots and dashes, lines and abstract flowers, as well as the larger color blocking that makes everything else pop. There seems to be hundreds of little aspects that the eye can follow, and no matter how long you spend in this room you will likely always find something new.
And it isn’t just one accent wall! Lindsey had the patience and creativity to do every wall in her bathroom, and to be honest, we’d probably have stopped after just one! Commenters are gushing over the look, many proclaiming their envy over how easy she made it look (thanks to lots of practice on her part), or even wishing they could get her to come out and do the same look to their own walls!
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/womans-elaborately-painted-bathroom-looks-like-the-cutest-wallpaper-dengarden/?feed_id=9177&_unique_id=63a2950837631
And yet one homeowner decided to take painting her walls to a whole new level, with an attention to detail that we can only admire!
Lindsey Spears, self-proclaimed ‘Painting Mama’ on Tiktok, has gone above and beyond when it comes to painting the walls of her bathroom. Her ability to freehand art onto her walls is enough to have our jaws dropping, and we love the combo of colors and shapes and the sheer creativity of everything involved here!
After about two hours spent painting, Lindsey has a bathroom with some gorgeous looking mural-like walls in a semi retro flower theme. A huge amount of details adds to the overall look, including dots and dashes, lines and abstract flowers, as well as the larger color blocking that makes everything else pop. There seems to be hundreds of little aspects that the eye can follow, and no matter how long you spend in this room you will likely always find something new.
And it isn’t just one accent wall! Lindsey had the patience and creativity to do every wall in her bathroom, and to be honest, we’d probably have stopped after just one! Commenters are gushing over the look, many proclaiming their envy over how easy she made it look (thanks to lots of practice on her part), or even wishing they could get her to come out and do the same look to their own walls!
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/womans-elaborately-painted-bathroom-looks-like-the-cutest-wallpaper-dengarden/?feed_id=9177&_unique_id=63a2950837631
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