Written by Ridgefield Chamber of Commerce
This past year has been especially hard on relationships of all kinds, and this Valentine’s day it is perhaps more important than ever to send a special someone a special something to keep the smiles up. With the big ‘love day’ fast approaching, the Ridgefield Chamber of Commerce is urging residents to support local when shopping, especially as most local businesses are now offering online purchase options as well as local delivery.
“Ridgefield is such a beautiful and wonderful town, and we want to remind all our residents in order to keep the charming local feel they need to support the local businesses that make it that way. Valentine’s Day is a huge season for many of our members, yet so many are seeing their usual gift revenue go to large chains,” said Sarah Grossman, the Executive Director of the RCOC. “At this point, everything from amazing chocolates to spa gifts, from to jewelry to books, from baked goods to
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Launching her brand at the beginning of the pandemic wasn’t in Jane Herman’s business plan, but it worked to her advantage. It turns out that Herman’s single product, a boyish jumpsuit made to her exacting specifications in five shades of garment-washed Japanese cotton twill and raw ecru denim, is very well-suited to lockdown living. The Jump One “is highly functional; it looks cool, but it’s not too ‘fashion,’ and I found that there are a lot of women out there that it really resonated with,” Herman says. Before she knew it last year she’d sold 500 of them.
Inside the Californian suburb where US elites are hunkering down during the pandemic
Just 28 miles up the coast from LA, a former hippie enclave is now home to titans of finance sheltering from Covid-19
Pamela Anderson on the beach
Credit: Alamy
Malibu was always a town that attracted artists, designers and creative souls from all walks of life. Despite the celebrity residents, the vibe was one of understated, hippie chic. That is until Covid-19 enticed a new wave of one percenters seeking warm weather and the bucolic surfer lifestyle. Now, just about every house is rented (at up to $200k per month), and owners who once only came for the summer have decided to stay put here.
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