Back to energy efficiency...

Holiday lights



Two years ago we tried LED holiday lights and we were very disappointed. The white lights had an odd blue-ish hue and the lights really did not have very much 'throw'.

Last year we went back to traditional incandescent lamps and the building looked terrific. But, because the lamps are not energy efficient, we had to minimize the amount of time they were illuminated.

This year we went back to LED lights. The lights need to be replaced every year because the squirrels like to chew through the insulation. We opted for a longer icecicles and we are very pleased with the advances of LED technology.

Fall is our favorite time of year




Shop-front


Downtown Red Wing looks spectacular in the fall. The colors absolutely pop and the well preserved buildings look fantastic.

Wetter than water...




Rain


Wow. It has rained nearly every day for the past two months.

We had a very heavy and wet snowstorm in early May and it has been raining almost every day in June.

But this is farm country and this is the growing season, so nobody is complaining.

Go forth and conquer


Devin-2


We are very fortunate to have a steady source of dependable and reliable workers by virtue of the local vocational college.

Minnesota Sate College Southeast Technical has a unique guitar and mandolin building program. These students typically have an uncommon attention to detail and are always mechanically inclined.

We came to know Devin and his girlfriend Hailey this past year while Devin attended the guitar program. Devin is holding his final electric guitar project and Hailey is holding his mandolin project.

We hired Devin last year and he was a terrific employee. He finished his program and immediately landed a job in St. Paul in a guitar shop.

We are delighted to have gotten to know both of them and wish them good luck!




Busy, busy , busy...

CE

It has been busier here than it might appear.

Earlier this year, we became involved in a project to try and measure the local Creative Economy and contrast it to other communities. Armed with this information, the goal becomes to make defensible recommendations going forward.

This is important to our business for obvious reasons, but it is also important to the community because this is where the economy is growing very rapidly.

We couldn't (or even shouldn't) do a significant project like this alone. We partnered with the Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation, Red Wing Downtown Main Street, Inc., Anderson Center at Tower View, Red Wing Arts Association, ArtReach and the Sheldon Theatre of Performing Arts.

This is good company to keep and adds credibility to the final report.

We are proud of the final report and encourage you to download your own copy.

Catch-up/ketchup

Pasted Graphic


We have been very busy re-inventing here at the shop.

To begin with, we have been very focused on slowly unveiling Red Wing Digital. Red Wing Digital is a print-on-demand product that provides unique large-format presentation products, namely the Panel Print and the Acrylic Print. The Acrylic Print is slowly getting ready for production, but it has taken longer than hoped.

Secondly, we have a new business partner. Fine Art Prints on Demand is a United Kingdom company. This is a side of the business (printing and framing fulfillment) we have been quietly working and growing for a number of years. FAPoD is our third customer for this side of the business.

These two developments have driven our third initiative. We are moving our production to a larger facility. We have narrowed our options down and expect to be able to make some final decisions shortly.



Reading outside weather

Read outside


This year spring was about 16-18 days later than normal. It was an especially long winter with a heavy snowpack and it was a very slow warm-up this year.

Normally the reaction would be that a late spring works against the economy. Crops are planted later and the overall growing season will be shorter.

But the benefit of a late spring is that postponed projects and
maintenance issues can be addressed and then when spring finally does arrive, we can sit in the sun and read a book.

Red Wing Digital is officially launched!

Boat houses

It took longer than hoped and it cost more than it should, but Red Wing Digital was finally launched today.

Red Wing Digital is a targeted business that provides products for fine-art and passionate photographers. The initial product is the Panel Print, with more products to follow. What is unique about this web site is the point-and-click selection of the products and the print-on-demand nature of the interface.

The most exciting part of the web site will be the guest contributors. Guests will contribute inside tips for their specific photography niche, with the goal that the web site will become a portal for photographers who are always trying to advance their skills. So far, this will include:

Stacy Bengs (Stacy Bengs Photographer) discussing sports photography and photojournalism,
Barbara O'Brien (Barbara O'Brien Photography), a talented animal photographer,
Clare Polencheck (Off the Cuff Photography), an especially skilled portrait photographer.

It is a privilege to work with such talented and creative individuals and this will be a lot of fun.

The above Panel Print is 'Red Wing Boathouses' by Dr. Jack Alexander and is on display at Red Wing Fairview Hospital.

Visit the new site at RedWingDigital.com.


Barge season begins...

barge


The ice on the Mississippi River has broken up enough to allow for barge traffic to begin moving upstream. This is significant in this area because it officially signals the end of the winter weather.

We had a significant blizzard in December and we never had a mid-winter melt. This means the snow accumulated all winter and we eventually had the fourth snowiest winter on record.

This creates flooding concerns up and down the Mississippi River, but just as the days starting getting longer, we sunk into a prolonged period of weather that hovered around the 32 degree mark. This slowed the melting substantially and the river crested to just below the flood point. Another crest is expected in about three weeks when the run-off from up north reaches this area.

This photo is taken from the Eisenhower Bridge.

Writer's block...

snow-mountain


A rule of thumb in the creativity industry is that if you hit a creative mental roadblock, run as fast and hard as you can into the nearest wall. This head-on collision will reset your entire mental wiring and you will either have cured the writer's block, or you won't even know writer's block is anymore.

Or, look out your window and write what you see.

I have a small mountain of snow immediately outside my work window. It has been larger and was actually completely removed at one point. It will probably just melt in place for the rest of the year. It won't be pretty, melting snow usually isn't.

But it is a hopeful sign of spring. This winter was typically atypical. We had several significant snow falls and a couple of serious deep freezes. We will have flooding and it will be a messy spring.

And the weather forecast today is for more snow.

Wolf Moon over Downtown Red Wing



Wolf Moon-1

This is a photo I try to capture every year. It is the largest and brightest full moon of the year and is called the Wolf Moon.

Last year I missed the opportunity, but the year that (2009) I captured it, but about 5 minutes after it was at its most dramatic (Full Moon over Barn Bluff).

This year I suddenly remembered it was Wolf Moon time and I jumped in my car and drove all over town trying to find an interesting perspective. I pretty much ended up where I shot this moon 2 years ago. You have to be quick becasue this moon rises very quickly.

Shot in RAW, 47mm, 1/200 second at f2.8 hand held.



Please keep arms and legs in the vehicle



bridge

Back in July of this year, there was a blog posting that discussed the first half of the year and what the second half of the year looked like (1st Cutting...).

Now at the end of the year, it seems overwhelming to look backwards. That being said, the point of this entry will be all about the forward.

If there is one lesson learned in this business, it is to trust your gut. If it doesn't feel right, it probably isn't. And if it does feel right, it probably is. 2011 feels very right.

The new web site is close (and late) to being rolled out. Products are being refined and some new projects are already in the queu. It will be very busy and a lot of work.

But it is still a labor of love and that is what really matters.

Thank for your support. We are very grateful for our customers.

Cartooning...


Aamodt_Superheroes

Tentative arrangements have been made to host an art exhibit later this year that will feature the work of contemporary cartoon artists. Britt Aamodt is a friend and her book will be released at about the same time as the exhibit, which is driving this exhibit. Her book will be available at the Minnesota Historical Society Press and can be found at this link. The intention is to invite several artists, exhibit some large format cartoons, have a cartooning Q&A and a book signing in an event spread out over three venues (Best of Times Bookstore, The Sheldon Theatre mezzanine gallery and at our gallery).

You might be asking yourself if cartooning is a legitimate art medium. It is and I would suggest you keep the comment to yourself, lest you become the parodied target of an offended cartoonist.

Therein lies the beauty of cartooning. It can either lampoon or glamorize their subjects. It can be humorous or it can be brutally and uncomfortably frank. It can address real life or it can fabricate an entirely new universe with it's own laws of physics. In other words, cartoon art defies definition.

This exhibit promises to be a lot of fun. I grew up reading the comics and I still read the comics. I love the comics.

This is completely consistent with past exhibits, including the Brown & Bigelow Pin-up exhibit in 2007, the Cream of Wheat original advertising art in 2008 and the original pulp magazine cover art in 2009 (see the illustration trend going here?). Details as they unfold.

Bully Pulpit hiatus...

fog


This note is being added after the fact. May was a nearly overwhelming month between work, a mini-vacation, graduations and non-profit activity. In lieu of posting anything of substance, here is a photo that was taken in May.

Grand Marias, MN on May 24, 2010. The fog was very thick and the air was very gray. Probably not a good idea to stand in the middle of the road, but it was awesome.

Going ultra-wide

Central park-1

Because the sensor in a digital SLR camera is typically smaller than the 35 mm film that it replaced, the physics of the focal point of the lens are changed. This is known as "The Field of View Crop Factor" or sometimes "The Focal Length Multiplier". The net result means your long lens becomes longer and your wide lens becomes narrower.

Wildlife photographers sing the praises of The Focal Length Multiplier because their 200 mm telephoto lens effectively becomes a 320 mm lens. Creative photographers hate it because now a 24 mm lens becomes a 38 mm lens and you can never get wide enough.

My personal lens investment is from the pre-digital era, so I never had the chance to compensate for this effect. All of my lens became too long for many of my purposes. I satisfy my need for wide by occasionally renting a 14 mm ultra-wide lens (effective focal length of 22 mm), which reminds me of the good old days, when a wide lens was truly a wide lens.

Wide is a lot of fun and it also allows me to keep the header imagery fresh.

The story arc of the Marc Chagall project continues...

Amante-1


Just to refresh...a customer had rescued this original Marc Chagall linoleum lithograph from slowly being destroyed by the mounting and the framing (please see: "How to commit art murder", or, "I ruined a masterpiece, but saved on the framing"...). The mats were leeching acid into the art paper, the non-UV glass was allowing the sun to fade the art and the mdf frame was slowly dissolving the art with formaldehyde out-gassing.

The rescued piece will be picked up by the customer today and some type of ceremony will take place to present the art back to the public library. I thought I would share the design details of this project:

It is a double rag mat design (100% acid free) with a filet. The bottom mat is a 1" reveal (this is a museum standard for a design with a filet) and the top mat is a 3.25" reveal. The art paper had some waviness and it is loosely held in place with archival corners on the backside. This allows the art to breathe and respond to the ambient temperature. The outside moulding is called an Amante design and is a classic moulding style. The glazing is a museum quality UV glass, which is almost imperceptible. It was decided not to conceal the staining from the previous mats and try to work the flawed feature into the overall design.

It looks very classy and is totally reversible for future framers in the event of a re-design.

Respect the art. Protect, preserve and present the art.

Does this guy ever stop talking about the new bandshell??

Bandshell-frame

Apparently not.

In any case, it is time for a Red Wing Central Park Band Shell follow-up.

This time last year, the park was a mess. Frozen and snow-covered dirt piles were scattered all over the site. It looked like a project that was going to miss the July 4th deadline. But the Red Wing Construction company is very professional and proud of the product they deliver. The 4th of July deadline was met with days to spare.

After the project was finished, Red Wing Construction presented The Jones Family Foundation (the benefactors of the band shell to the City) with this beautifully framed momento. It is a 36"x32" multi-opening custom framed piece of the band shell from all different angles and during the very first performance. It also includes a custom embossed mat of the Red Wing Construction logo.

We were proud to provide all of the photographs, the printing and the framing and we have since built a few of these pieces for Red Wing Construction.

How to commit art murder, or, "I ruined a masterpiece, but saved on the framing"...

Chagall-2
Signature-1

This is very tragic, but thank God a good samaritan rescued the art.

This original Marc Chagall lithograph had been donated to the local library. Many years ago, somebody made the decision to frame this irreplaceable art with the cheapest framing solution available. This included a cheap mdf frame with standard glass and paper mats. To further insult the art, the art was glued to the back of the mat.

frame

So, let's summarize how this art was nearly ruined;

1) The frame was made from a cheap mdf material which out-gasses formaldehyde (an effective way to dissolve art),
2) The glass provided no UV radiation protection from the sun so fading is inevitable,
3) The mat was a cheap paper mat with acids that leeched into the art and foxing (bacteria) is growing on the paper,
4) The glue. Sigh, don't even get me started about the glue.

A biological, chemical and radioactive attack on the art. A true WMD from an art standpoint.

Friends don't let friends frame drunk.

Be that as it may, it is an amazing piece of creativity.
Chagall was a Jewish Russian-French artist who lived from 1887 until 1985. He was a giant in the art world and an early innovator of Modernism. It really is inspiring to examine.

We are working on a new and completely archival frame design. I will post it when the project is finished.

Sheldon Theatre - Holiday Stroll photo booth follow-up

33

The fundraiser for the Sheldon Theatre this year was like last year; exhausting and fun at the same time. The small army of photography volunteers were a well-oiled machine of diligence and the clients were steady all evening. We raised about $500, which is a 30% gain over last year.

The theme was a bit different this year (early morning Christmas in the 1950's) and the better images were the ones in which the clients became engaged in the fun. Above, Matt (my carpenter in real life) re-creates his proposal to his fiancée.

See? Fun.

Old is still the new new...

RWFG-Sheldon ad


Last year was the first year that we held a fund raiser for The Sheldon Theatre the Friday after Thanksgiving. The idea was to open the doors of The Sheldon to the public during the Downtown Red Wing Holiday Stroll and use their set and costume departments to re-create a family photo at a 1950's Macy's department store.

This year we are excited to work with The Sheldon again on another retro-Christmas family photo event. This year we will re-create the excitement of Christmas morning, circa 1955. To put it in proper perspective, think of the set of "The Honeymooners" (Brooklyn apartment, table, chairs and a table-top tree), throw on an old-fashioned robe (maybe with a night cap or hair curlers) and a few slippers. The photos will be printed using a very dated look (back and white complete with creases).

This will be way too cool for school. And all for $5.00!

Hard Boiled Art exhibit...


Hardboiled art


Details have been finalized for our next original art exhibit. "Hard Boiled Art" presents original pulp magazine cover art from the 1930's to the 1960's. The exhibit will run from November 5th to December 6th, 2009 with a reception that is still to be determined.

This is a unique art form. Pulp magazine covers were very sensational and were considered the most important aspect in the sales of any particular pulp series. The socially acceptable boundaries were often tested and the topics reflected the then current popular culture.

The covers were typically machismo in nature with elements of evil or danger and at least one hero. The 1930's had strong detective and science-fiction followings and the 1960's were all about the 'Red Scare' of the communists.

Regardless of the threat, the damsels in distress typically had a torn blouse. :)

Come and enjoy the exhibit. This is a rare opportunity to see the original art that was used to create the published covers. It is fun and an absolute snapshot of an industry that hardly exists any longer.

The tale of the table under the tent...

Picnic-Table-2

Think of the picnic table under the canopy tent in the parking lot as Social Networking 1.0. It is the most fundamental device for creating community networks.

World problems have been solved and judgment passed on every local politician at this very table.

Just last month under this tent Leah Nesbitt was declared the 2009 Downtown Red Wing Macaroni and Cheese Smackdown Champion (she used all Wisconsin natural ingredients).

At night the little Japanese lanterns are lit up and the table becomes more of a 'night spot' where topics are dissected, examined and reassembled, many times over fermented nectar and usually in hushed voices. In the mornings, it is a destination for coffee and a newspaper.

Night-table

Warren Buffet would appreciate how effective this $70 picnic table is as a marketing tool.

Mac and cheese smackdown

MacnCheese-main_Full


Tomorrow (August 12) the 1st annual Downtown Red Wing Mac and Cheese Smackdown takes place. We are delighted to host and look for forward to a most delicious event. Every small business in Downtown Red Wing is invited to participate.

You might be asking yourself, "What does a mac and cheese smackdown have to do with small businesses?"

Nothing and everything is the answer.

Nothing, because it has nothing to do with business, per se. And everything, because every small business feels the economic challenge these days and providing a small amount of escapism has real value.

There is always room and time to have fun. And nothing says fun like a mac and cheese smackdown.


Pulp cover art...


Pulp-art-1


Pulp cover art has a unique place in art history. It has terrific nostalgia appeal for anybody who enjoyed The Hardy Boys, comic books or even a peek at The Old Man's collection of True Detective or Stag magazines. It had the specific purposes to grab your attention on the newstand in a crowded field of competitor's and to evoke an emotion, usually with a provocative image of impending peril or suggestive sensuality. Common elements usually include a couple of 'toughs', a large breasted woman and a 'citizen' or a 'hero'. The above example (original on the left, Rudolph Zirn, 1939) has all three.

We are excited and delighted to announce a gallery exhibit of original pulp cover art. The show will open in October (date tbd) and will include both the original art and the subsequent ephemera the originals were used to produce. The colors are extremely vivid and the techniques used by the artists to project a response is fascinating.

This is the third year in a row that we have had the pleasure of working with Grapefruit Moon Gallery in presenting their collection of illustration art. In 2007 we presented original pin-up art (here and here) and in 2008 we presented original Cream of Wheat advertising art. Pulp magazine art is yet another sub-genre of illustration art that we are proud to present.

The 'pulps' were fiction magazines that were very popular from about 1930 to 1960. The term 'pulp' comes from the cheap paper typically used in production (cheap paper has a lot of wood pulp). The magazines became noteworthy for their provocative covers. The covers became so important that in many cases the covers were designed first and the text was designed around the covers. Pulp magazines were also a major employer of short story authors and the subsequent demise of the pulp industry created a vacuum for these authors that has never been filled.

Oil or gouche paintings are used to create the original cover art. The colors are intentionally vivid to compensate for the primitive printing technology at the time. Several pulp cover artists (i.e., Frank Paul and Margaret Brundage) became accomplished artists in this genre and attracted a following. Pulp art has recently experienced a renaissance in popularity and is widely sought by collectors.

More details as they evolve but I thought this teaser would have value.

New Red Wing Shoe Store and Museum

Moving boot

Red Wing is a company town and the name of that company is the Red Wing Shoe Company.

Red Wing Shoe (or 'The Shoe' to the locals) has been manufacturing shoes and boots in Red Wing for over 100 years. The company manufactures and sells purpose-built footwear. Some of their target markets include oil and gas, construction, iron workers, agriculture, hunting and hiking. Their largest manufacturing plant is in Red Wing, Minnesota. Almost all other footwear today is manufactured and imported from low cost countries, so a work boot made in the USA is unique.

The Shoe is paternal about the City of Red Wing. When The Shoe announced last year that they were going to purchase a blighted downtown building and create a flagship shoe store and museum, it was a major announcement, especially locally.

This past week The Shoe moved their World's Largest Boot (20x a normal boot) from a warehouse to the new store. It was an exciting event that garnered a lot of attention. As exciting as that was, the energy level is even higher inside the store as employees scramble to meet an aggressive deadline in opening the new store.

Red Wing Shoe understands the value of visuals and is an image-oriented company. We are proud to have provided the graphics and framing for this exciting new venue. The store opens August 3rd and the museum later this month.

inside the store

New name - new web site - new challenges

Untitled-2

People who invent snappy metaphors to describe business principles might say something like; a small business today is like a great white shark, always on the move, never resting, never sleeping. That sounds way too contrived, so it would be best to simply say that a business must constantly ask itself what it does for a living, and is it where it wants to be in doing that thing it does.

The name change is more a matter of acknowledging how this business has evolved. We frame and we print and we do anything in between. Also it was time to freshen up the logo; shine our shoes, so to speak. This was harder than you might think because the fonts used are fabricated for our needs. It isn't an off-the-shelf font, but it does have a basis in the history of this business. But it is too difficult to explain without hand gestures.

The new web site is another matter. The changes appear to be mostly cosmetic, but under the hood it is an entirely different animal. It would take a rocket scientist to explain the differences and unfortunately, one isn't immediately availible.

With any new web site, it is very easy to be driven crazy trying to chase down every image resizing requirement or some dropped html code. This is called 'overhead' and produces no income. Overhead bad. Income good.

But, you do what you have to do, when you have to do it.

The final chapter of the Central Park Bandshell being built

An interesting day today, to say the least. The electricians showed up early to double-check the power (remember that the bandshell had not been fully tested up to this point) and install the sound equipment. People also showed up early to set up their lawn chairs and then went home again. It must be an unwritten rule that a lawn chair is a legally binding stake claim.

Promptly at 3:30 the ceremonies began, which was the official opening of the Bandshell. The Jones Family Foundation was thanked for their generous donation to the City of Red Wing. This really is an amazing gift; this is akin to having a second Sheldon Theatre, except it is an outdoor venue.

Rosanne Cash

Several Fiddler on the Roof selections were sung (a teaser for an upcoming production) and Rosanne Cash and her husband came out and performed for about 90 minutes. It was a straightforward performance, very professional and simple (two guitars). Just a class act. Then Roomful of Blues picked up the tempo for the next 90 minutes. The skies cleared (it was spitting rain on occasion) and the Sheldon Brass Band took the stage and played mostly some traditional John Philip Sousa music.

Sheldon Brass Band


It was the final score, which was Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, that something truly remarkable happened. Right at the crescendo, right at the peak of the music, cannons began firing off explosions and all the church bells in town started ringing. Red Wing has a lot of church bells and between the Brass Band, the cannons and the church bells, it was a very moving experience. Several people started spontaneously crying and it is hard not to get choked up thinking about it now. The Sheldon Theatre deserves a ton of credit for making this an amazing day in Red Wing history.

It has been fun charting the progress of the newest neighbor in our neighborhood. But now it is time to move on to other curious topics.

Central Park Bandshell T - 3 days

Bandshell-side

The Red Wing Central Park Bandshell appears to be ~99% complete. The railings need to be anchored and the grass needs to be mowed one more time. It seems right-sized for the park; not too big and not too small.


Bandshell-front

The side walls (six total) all pivot open when needed. The inside ceiling has a complete lighting system. It isn't clear what purpose the two round towers to each side serve. They each have doors as well, and when opened close the gap between the towers and the shell. It might be both dressing rooms and off-stage space. One of the very interesting aspects of this location is that in every direction a church steeple can be seen.

From the Bandshell

This is the view from the bandshell looking out. The balustrade wall was built in 1880 when Hamline University owned this land.

Bandshell-behind

Even the view behind the Bandshell is impressive. The activities begin on July 4th at 3 pm, The Sheldon Phoenix Theatre, Rosanne Cash, Roomful of Blues, the Sheldon Brass Band at 9 pm (complete with cannon) followed by fireworks over the Mississippi River. Awesome.

Central Park Band shell T - 7 days

Old-bandshell-1

It is a week before the Red Wing Central Park Band shell grand opening and it looks like the project will finish right on schedule. All of the landscaping is in, the roof is finished and the walls are just finishing up. Photos will be posted this week.

This photo is what the bandshell replaced. It essentially was a semi-circular stage with no walls, roof or sound (except those two primitive speakers on each side). One feature that did carry over from the old stage is the two small curved staircases in the front.

"Green side up!" T - 12 days


sod

88 degrees and humid, but dry.

The landscaping and sod arrived this morning and by the end of the day all of the greenery should be installed. In speaking with some of the subcontractors, the project is slightly ahead of schedule.

Back-door

For anybody who is curious about the mysterious little back door; it leads into a vary narrow and small utility room. The circuit breaker box and the water meter are in this room. Kind of disappointing.

The walls arrive tomorrow (rumor has it).

Central Park Bandshell T - 17 days

Bandshell-2

The first of 32 - 1/2" laminated and tempered glass windows were installed today in the back wall of the shell. This promises to be one of the more striking design elements of the Bandshell. It should really open up the entire shell from both sides. The limestone block is quarried in Winona, Minnesota and each block is hand-cut. The pattern is random. The keystone blocks are manufactured in a factory.

Rain is forecast for the rest of the week.

Central Park Bandshell T - 19 days

Bandshell-1


It is hard to tell if the Bandshell is ahead or behind schedule. The irrigation system was installed today and the handicap access ramp concrete was also poured. Fill was being spread by the hard working Sentence to Serve crew. Sentence to Serve are nonviolent offenders that work on community improvement projects. There are mixed feelings about Sentence to Serve labor; on the one hand working outside is better than killing time in a cell. On the other hand it is an easy source of cheap labor for communities that can become too easy to use.

The sod is scheduled to be laid on June 29, which seems awfully close to the July 4th dedication. The entire park (one city block) will be re-sodded.

The ghost signs of Red Wing

ghost-signs

Red Wing is unique because it has such an authentic core downtown. This doesn't mean it is frozen in time. Rather, it has more to do with having traceable roots. Buildings are typically not torn down, and when they can be salvaged and restored, they are.

One of the lasting elements that are easily overlooked are the ghost signs of Red Wing. Sometimes called fading ads or brick-ads, they are remarkable in their staying power. Red Wing has many brick buildings and there are several examples of ghost signs all over town. You need to look close to see the Coca-Cola ghost sign. The Hotel Haven sign is pretty much illegible.

The above corner is Plum and East 3rd Street (SE corner) in Downtown Red Wing.

The June update of the Central Park Bandshell

bandshell


The Red Wing Central Park Bandshell continues to make progress. The roof is on, but not yet shingled. The foundation work seems to be complete, judging by the dirt fill that was brought in. The back wall will be glass and the shell walls will be the next significant milestone.

The inauguration of the Bandshell will be on Saturday, July 4th, 2009. The schedule of events are as follows (all times are pm):

+ 3:45-4:30 The Phoenix Theatre will sing selections from their upcoming production of 'Fiddler on the Roof' (free!)
+ 5:00-6:00 Rosanne Cash (free!)
+ 6:45-8:00 Roomful of Blues (free!)
+ 8:45-9:30 Sheldon Brass Band finishing with 1812 Overture, complete with real cannon! (free!)
+ 10:00- ?? Fireworks over the Mississippi River (free!)

Eat. Shop. Play. Local.

Eat-shop-1

Recently a letter to the editor of the local newspaper made the argument for funding art at the elementary school level. Apparently there has been discussion about reducing the amount of art received in elementary schools because of budget pressures. The typical solution has been to increase the tax levy and ask the tax payers to pay more.

A more sustainable approach is to simply spend local. Every dollar spent locally in a community can have up to three times the multiplier tax return to the community versus buying from an out-of-state big box retailer, all without raising taxes a single cent. Let's use two simple examples:

Example 1) A citizen spends a dollar at a local big-box retailer. Taxes are exchanged for that dollar spent and the dollar is promptly deposited in an out-of-state bank account somewhere in Four Corners, Arkansas. That dollar is retired as far as the local economy is concerned.

Example 2) A citizen spends a dollar at their local custom frame shop. Again, taxes are exchanged but this time the local frame shop owner races to their local bank to cover the check they wrote to the local plumber to have their hot water heater repaired. The plumber in turn cashes that check to buy a silk suit from Josephsons Clothing Store. Tom from Josephsons then uses that money to buy himself a beer next door at The Staghead Restaurant to celebrate having finally sold that XXXL silk suit.

The same dollar has contributed to the local economy three separate times, each time participating in the overall tax exchange and actively contributes to the cash flow of four different local employers.

Red Wing Downtown Main Street is focused on exactly these types of issues. The Eat-Shop-Play-Local tag-line could include many other action verbs (Buy. Stay. Invest.), but the point is to think about where your money goes after you spend it.

Visit the DTMS web site or the DTMS Facebook page and consider joining this non-profit organization.

Who photographs the photographer?


A paradox.

There is a village with a very special barber. He has a sign in his window that says “I cut the hair of everyone in the village who does not cut his own hair.” The question becomes; who cuts the barber's hair?

====================================
For the past several mornings I have been getting up at 5 am to try and take a specific photo at sun rise, which is around 5:45 am (are you impressed yet?). This time of year the sun rises directly to the east of The Eisenhower Bridge over the Mississippi River. At sun rise the barge traffic begins moving for the day, heading north-bound for the Twin Cities.

For those keeping score, The Eisenhower Bridge was dedicated in 1960 and is 1,631 feet long (1/3 mile). It is 35 feet wide (two lanes) and is 65 feet over the river.

The shot I wanted didn't happen today because of low clouds on the horizon. The early barge traffic was already on the move when the sun started to peek out, so things did not coordinate this time.

The shot below is the only shot of merit that I took. Pretty, but not what I needed or wanted.

IMG_6198-1


I go home and then get to work this same morning when my friend Tim e-mails me the following photos and asks me if I knew who was on the bridge (look close). The first photo was taken within a minute after mine, judging by how his sun seems ever so slightly higher (factoring in the difference in height) and the wake from the fishing boat. The second photo was a minute later (I keep a corner of my eye on those oncoming tractor-trailer mirrors).

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Photos courtesy of Tim Alms.

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Back to the barber; we don't know who cuts his hair. It is a self-contradiction.

Does the barber cut his own hair? No, because the barber cuts only the hair of those that don't cut their own hair.

Does the barber not cut his own hair? No, because then the barber would then cut his own hair, because he cuts the hair of those that don't cut their own hair.

Using an even more difficult explanation, the barber is trying to be a part of his own set, those that do not cut their own hair. But the set cannot include the barber because he is the set. This is the contradiction.

Johnny Cash's eldest daughter...


This is a big deal. A free concert at the new Central Park Bandshell by Rosanne Cash is a fantastic way to inaugurate this beautiful new venue.

If your musical tastes include country, folk, rock and the blues, then circle Saturday July 4, 2009 on your calendar. Go to
www.RosanneCash.com for details.

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The Shell takes shape...

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The Central Park Bandshell took a big leap forward yesterday when the crane arrived to install the ironwork. The entire back wall will be glass, so the bandshell will be inviting from both sides. The roof shape is supposed to create a better acoustical environment. The rendering on the bottom image is the architectural orthographic projection.

The actual audience will not be semi-transparent.

Stewy's on Main

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Another restaurant opened in Downtown Red Wing. Stewy's on Main will serve breakfast, lunch and dinner and provide a full bar offering.

Stew approached us a month ago and gave us free reign (with his final approval) to design attractive wall images . It was decided to focus on local iconic scenes, with a focus on both sides of the Mississippi River.

Panel Prints are used. This is a print on hardboard and mounted with a reverse frame to create a wall stand-off and laminated with a linen finish. The beauty of this product is that it is very contemporary, pool table flat, no glass is used and it creates a very nice drop-shadow effect. Each image is either 40"x40" or 27"x40".

The first grouping of three are all Downtown Red Wing photos, with the common denominator of the violin-playing model. These were printed with a brown sepia tone.

The second grouping is from the Maiden Rock Flood Run in 2004. Same image tone, different effect.

One wall is all about elegance and grace and the other wall is all about machines and chrome.

Yin and Yang. Joanie loves Chachi.

Red Wing Photography Club Exhibition of Photographs

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On April 18th, 2009 at the Goodhue County History Center (1166 Oak Street, Red Wing, MN) the Red Wing Photography Club will present an Exhibition of Photographs.

Ardent readers will remember that this club was formed about this time last year. This is the first time this club has formally exhibited members’ photographs. Assuming there isn't a like-wise repeat of the Rolling Stones incident in Altamont, CA, it is likely this group will exhibit again.

The rules were pretty simple: no more than three pieces and nothing larger than 16"x20". And like most good photographers, the rules were almost immediately broken.

It is a non-juried, non-themed, non-competitive, not-for-sale exhibit.  The objective is for members to share their favorite images and for many members to exhibit for the first time.

A public reception is April 18th at 2 pm at the History Center.

I did the poster layout. It is absolutely derivative of a wpa poster from the 1930's (read: rip-off).

You're welcome and thank you.

Central Park Bandshell 2 month update...


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Mostly the bandshell is shrouded under plastic right now, so there is very little to see. Loyal readers may want to see the architectural rendering of the bandshell layout. It is going to be awesome!

Upon further review...

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By going backwards through telephone directories (this is known as a 'Jim Rockford') and speaking with Barb Tittle, it was possible to stitch together a more complete history of this building.

This building has a very significant photography (and real estate) lineage.

312 West Avenue chronology:

1894 - 1902 Lidberg Studio (original location)
1902 - 1920 Lidberg Studio (new location)
1920 - 1936 E. H. Lidberg Real Estate
1937 - 1947 Davison Studio
1948 - 1949 Wood's Studio
1950 - 1952 Hodge Studio
1953 - 1979 Chalet Studio
1980 - 2004 InComm Realty and Maas Realty (later Coldwell-Banker)
2005 - 2007 Gary-Donald Arts, a private art dealer
2008 - Present Red Wing Portrait Studio (and Red Wing Framing Gallery)

For
73 years, out of a total 115 years, this building has been home to 6 different photography studios. For 40 years out of this same 115 years, this building has been home to at least 3 (if not 4) real estate companies.

Draw your own conclusions.

This building has historical bones...


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1894 - Andrew Lidberg, an immigrant from Jarpen, Sweden builds and opens The Lidberg Studio at 443 W. 3rd Street, Downtown Red Wing, Minnesota (the corner of W. 3rd Street and East Avenue), which is immediately next door to Charlie Wah's Chinese Laundry. The Daily Republican on April 9th, 1894 writes, "Mr. Lidberg opened his gallery today, and it is a fine one. He will employ only competent workers and work at the lowest living prices."

1899 - Upon graduating from Red Wing High School, Andrew 's son Edward joins the studio full time. The Lidberg's begin producing the first series of colored souvenir post cards of Red Wing and the surrounding area. The photos were exposed on glass plates and developed at the studio. Negatives were then produced and sent to Germany to be lithographed into color post cards. These postcards are now collector items with a passionate following.

1902 - Local businessman T.B. Sheldon donates money to the City of Red Wing to build the country's first city-owned theater. To make room for the Sheldon Theatre, The Lidberg Studio is moved across the park mall to 312 West Avenue where the building is located today. A glass wall is oriented to the east to provide natural light illumination for portraiture photography.

1910? - Andrew Lidberg retires. Frank Booth, a graduate of Effingham School of Photography in Illinois, joins the studio.

1915 - Because of the war in Europe, it becomes increasingly difficult do receive color lithographs from Germany. Senator Knute Nelson has to intervene to get a production run of postcards released. Production is moved to Chicago (Acmegraph Company) and Milwaukee (E.C. Kropp Company).

1915 - Edward Lidberg begins his real estate career and the photography business begins to wind down. By 1920 the building is a full-time real estate office.

1920 - 1953 Very few building details. The best guess at this point is that from approximately 1920 to 1936 it was a real estate office and from about 1937 until 1953 it was various photography studios.

1953 - The Chalet Studio opens. This portrait studio is owned and operated by Ms. Louella Champs.

1972 - Edward Lidberg dies.

1978 - The Chalet Studio closes. The building is in very rough shape with the roof in danger of collapsing.

1979 - The building is repaired and restored by Dick Tittle. It becomes home to InComm Realty and Maas Realty

2008 - The building becomes home to Red Wing Framing Gallery and Red Wing Portrait Studio.

What goes around, comes around. Even if it takes 114 years.

Red Wing from Barn Bluff...

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Barn Bluff vigilantly watches over Downtown Red Wing immediately from the east. This means the bluff casts a shadow every morning and says goodbye to the sun every day. The bluff is a long and narrow rock and the length of the bluff runs east and west for about a mile. It is an easy hike along the south side to the lookout over Downtown Red Wing. The top of the bluff is about 400 feet above the Mississippi River (immediately to the right in the above photo).

There was an unusual thaw this February and that opportunity was leveraged to get this photo. Once the tree buds start popping out, the details become hidden. If you look closely, our shop is the small triangle of lights in the upper left corner.

As with most mid-winter thaws, it toyed with our emotions, giving us a taste of nicer weather, only to slap us with a cold front and a dump of snow.

Back to muc-lucs and stocking caps.

Central Park Bandshell update...


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The Red Wing Central Park Bandshell is beginning to grow from the ground. The footings are in place and concrete forms are beginning to define the shell itself. I am impressed how progress was not slowed down by the sub-Arctic weather. The Red Wing Construction crews are true professionals.

I anticipate that this will have a major impact for the positive for the entire community. This will be a beautiful new performance venue to compliment the Sheldon Theatre. There will be music, live theatre, public gatherings, stand-up comics, outdoor movies, special events, etc. It is going to exciting and electric.

The grand opening is targeted for July 4th, 2009.

Full moon over Barn Bluff

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Last night (Saturday, 01-10-2009) the moon was full and it will be the largest and brightest full moon of 2009.

This month's full moon is known as the Wolf Moon, from Native American folklore. The January full moon is also known as the Old Moon and the Snow Moon.

A full moon rises right around sunset, no matter where you are. That's because of the celestial mechanics that produce a full moon: the moon and the sun are on opposite sides of the Earth, so that sunlight hits the full face of the moon and bounces back to our eyes.

At moonrise, the moon will appear even larger than it will later in the night when it's higher in the sky. This is an illusion that scientists can't fully explain. Some think it has to do with our perception of things on the horizon vs. stuff overhead.

This shot was taken at 5:06 pm. f3.2, 1/320 sec, iso 1250, -1.67 EV, 70 mm focal length, hand held. I used levels to pull some details back into the image, but not so much to destroy the polarized sky. A very modest amount of unsharp mask.

Mister Becker's neighborhood...

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Won't you be my neighbor?

It has been an unusually cold and snowy and cold winter so far (cold is mentioned twice because it has been just that cold), but it hasn't slowed down neighborhood activities.

Just a half block from the shop, the new Red Wing Central Park Bandshell is slowly growing from the ground. This project is the result of a generous donation from a local family foundation and is going to have a major impact on the cultural community. The first use of the bandshell is scheduled for July 4, 2009 and it will have regularly scheduled community and cultural activities going forward. It is an exciting design and promises to have excellent acoustics.

On the wall outside the shop, I am field testing some new large format materials to see how cold tolerant they are. The image is a self-portrait photo taken by my son. The colors were de-saturated and the image highlights were blown out to create this very interesting "Chuck Close" effect. I slit the image every 4" to create movement in the wind and the final image size is 6 feet wide by 10 feet tall.

Chuck Close is a terrific artist. He is a photo-realist and paints portraits on a massive scale. And in this case, size does matter.

Meanwhile, The Giant Dan is always smiling in the neighborhood of make-believe.

Beauty and the beast...

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A contrast in projects.

Beauty:

The first project is for the new Norton's Downtown and Lucky Cat Lounge. This restaurant-lounge-fine wine store has some very large and high walls and it needed a tasteful image that befits the atmosphere of this white linen restaurant.

The image used is
The Flaming June and was selected for its gracefulness, color and image impact. It is one of the first things you see when you enter the restaurant from the parking lot and walk towards the hostess station.

The final image size is 8' x 8' and it is printed on a satin fabric with an unfinished and unweighed bottom edge. Because of the 'hand' and drape-ability of the fabric used, the entire image has a beautiful waft to it as it moves with the air circulation, almost as if it were breathing.

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Beast:

Right next door to Norton's restaurant, the new Red Wing Shoe Company store is being built. This store will be a showcase for The Shoe, which has their world headquarters directly across the street. Red Wing Shoes are simply the best made boots and shoes in the world. I wear my Model 414 boots for nine months out the year and I personally vouch for the high quality and ruggedness of their products.

This project is labeled the beast because of the conditions that these images have to tolerate...beastly. The weather was -15 F with snow and high winds when they were installed. The construction wall is literally 6 inches from Highway 61 and the images have to tolerate heavy truck traffic, rocks, dirt, grime and salt. And, of course the weather extremes.

Each image (there are two) is 6' x 15'. It is a reprint of the architectural concept drawing, with an opening date and The Shoe logo. A heavy-duty scrim material was deployed and it was further re-enforced with the thickest laminate available. The edges were treated with a super glue-like adhesive and 1/2" weather resistant, re-inforced nickel grommets were used every 2.5 feet.

Too much fun.

Old is the new new

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Last night was the 7th annual Red Wing Holiday Stroll. This event is hosted by the Downtown Red Wing Mainstreet organization and is meant to be an alternative to the enclosed mall exodus that typically occurs the day after Thanksgiving.

Anybody downtown can pretty much define whatever activity they want to do during the stroll and many merchants provide discounts and free snacks. We opted to work with The Sheldon Theatre to create a fun family event that is both corny and nostalgic.

It was decided to re-create an Eisenhower-era tradition…the family Christmas photo.

We settled on a fakey outdoor-looking Christmas photo set, obviously taken indoors, very much like you might find at a Macy’s Department Store in 1955. This allowed us to use period overcoats, hats and fake snow to re-create the era and move clients in and out of the set quickly. 15 minutes later they would stop by our shop to pick up a keepsake 5”x7” photo, printed in period fashion and in a stylish envelope. Most clients ‘got it’ and really became involved in the spirit of the event.

All for $5 and all the proceeds went to the Friends of The Sheldon, which is the fund raising arm of The Sheldon.

A small army of volunteers was recruited and it was a mostly-smooth workflow of production. There were a lot of laughs and there are too many people to thank here that made this work. Ideas are already brewing for next year.

Good times.

CSI: Red Wing

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I grew up on
Dragnet. I know how crimes of this nature are solved.

First you interview all the neighbors, learn what they may have seen or heard. Talk fast, so they answer fast. When they begin to wander off topic (as citizens will do), bring them right back on topic. Rattle their cage a bit and leave a business card in case they think of anything later.

Then look for motive. Investigate the victim and see if there are any gambling or large debts owed. Find out if there is a 'dame' involved. Follow-up on any motel matchbook covers or cocktail napkins you might find.

This case quickly boiled down to one of two theories: an expert sharpshooter with a middle-European accent was poised on the roof of The Sheldon Theatre and, in a case of mistaken identity, attempted an assassination under the cloak of darkness.

Or...

Two punks in a p-o-s car fired a wrist rocket at my window and several of my neighbor's windows.

Thanks.

The World needs more corn (and cheese)...

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The neighborhood

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It is about time I introduce my neighbors to the wired world. I absolutely love this neighborhood. It is very diverse (young, old, rich, poor, brown, black, red and white) and it is very pedestrian-friendly. There are parks, churches, stores, homes and libraries.

Clockwise from the upper left:

St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church is immediately to the south of our shop and we share an alley. It is a massive brick building and looks to have had several additions over the years. It is one of only three Reconciled in Christ (RIC) Lutheran congregations in Southern Minnesota, which means it welcomes everybody, regardless of sexual orientation. Way cool.

Directly across the street is Christ Episcopal Church. This is one of the oldest churches in Red Wing (150 years!) and also one of the most active. I have come to know several of the members and I am very impressed with the level of activism and community involvement. Again, another very open-minded congregation. Honk when you see Lottie out tending the lawn.

The Sheldon Theatre is actually just on the other side of the Episcopal lawn. The Sheldon is the jewel of Red Wing. It is a city-owned live theater and was built in 1904. Our building was originally located where the Sheldon is now and was moved to accommodate the construction (our building was Charlie Wah's Chinese laundry at the time...more about that in a future post). The Sheldon is part of the cultural core of Red Wing.

Across from the Sheldon is the Red Wing Public Library (kitty-corner from us). This is an anthill of activity. The Red Wing old-timers (of which there are many) long for the old Red Wing Carnegie-Lawther Free Library, which was a marble pillar building and very grand in stature, but only 3,500 square feet. The current library was built in 1969 and is over 27,000 square feet. I like the current architecture, horizontal limestone with a copper top that has a beautiful weathered patina. It is very 1969, but will probably never be loved like it should because of the building it replaced.

Right next door to us is a commercial building with rental apartments above (our building is on the extreme left in the photo). Dirk Griffin has the insurance agency on the corner and is also in the salt water fish business. He is into it. Chris's Cuts is a single chair barber shop, $14 cuts. Chris has a very loyal clientele and people flow in and out all day long. Kent Laugen is an attorney and is next to Chris. Kent has a focus on family law.

Finally, I need to acknowledge the neighbors directly above us, and that would be the squirrels who live in the black walnut tree that towers over our shop. The squirrels were here before we arrived and they make sure I know that. They enjoy dropping things on my head when I am sitting outside the shop and then they taunt me.

Snow in July?

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Actually, July is the only month in Minnesota to never have recorded snow. The earliest snowfall in Minnesota was August 31, 1949 (Duluth, MN) and the latest snowfall was June 4, 1935 (Mizpath, MN...which is also interesting because mizpath is Hebrew for watchtower).

The photo on the left was taken this past March 31 from the front shop window. It was the day before the new shop opened and it was one of these last-gasp March snowfalls that we get every year. They are kind of sloppy, but very pretty. The photo on the right was taken moments ago from the same vantage point. The view from the shop is worth the visit alone.

Interesting difference in just three months. Tomorrow I will begin taking exterior and interior shots.

Save The Chief, re-revisited...

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Here are some snapshots from last week's walking tour of The Chief Theater. The first shot is from the lobby looking back towards the street (the updated restrooms would be on the right side and the kitchen is on the left side). The second shot is from the balcony looking towards the original screen. The third shot is the kitchen galley. The pizza ovens are gone and the walk-in meat cooler is behind me. The fourth shot is from the screen stage looking back towards the theater. I have other photos, but this is enough to get the idea of the condition of the interior.

In summary, it looks almost exactly like it did a year ago when I walked through it. The general condition is very good, there are some very nice wood appointments and the mechanicals are all new or nearly new (plumbing, HVAC and roof). The kitchen is nearly new and there are three walk-in refrigerated rooms/coolers. The bar takes up a significant part of the main floor and the basement needs a good bleach scrub.

The owner suggested a selling price of $1.3MM, but he will entertain offers. The basic footprint is about 5,000 square feet, with multiple interior levels.

For the Red Wing community, the opportunity is that this is one of the last authentic downtown single screen movie theaters in the area. Once it is gone, it is gone forever.

Save The Chief, revisited...

This past week, myself and a small group of local citizens, along with two members of the Red Wing HRA had the opportunity to tour the inside of the Chief Theater. The purpose was two-fold; (1) determine the current status and (2) stimulate creative ideas from a group of creative people.

I will post some photos and feedback later this week (right now I am late for a family dinner), but in the mean time, I wanted to thank everybody who participated.

Save The Chief

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Here are my arguments for why The Chief Theater should be protected and re-opened as an authentic downtown single-screen theater.

Just to recap why this is even an issue:

The Chief Theater opened in downtown Red Wing on January 21st. 1939. It was one of three downtown movie theaters and operated in a continuous fashion until 1994. Since then, it has been a bingo hall, a senior's center and several notorious bars. It is currently empty and has been for sale for over a year. The last business was a bar that was a trouble spot and a source of crime. The police were called on a regular basis. The bar closed when the liquor license was revoked because the operators had not bothered to get liability insurance.

The interior is actually in terrific shape. The main floor has been leveled (unfortunately) with poured concrete, but the restrooms have been updated, the roof and mechanicals are brand new and there is a full kitchen line complete with a walk-in cooler and two pizza ovens. The original screen is still in place. The projection room and the equipment are long gone, but the core of the screening room still exists (sans seats).

An argument could be made to save The Chief for either nostalgic or historic purposes. I feel an argument based on economic development is much stronger. With proper management and focus, a downtown theater can revitalize and re-energize a community. The Normal Theater in Normal, Il and the Riverview Theater
in Minneapolis are success stories and the neighborhoods have thrived because these theaters have encouraged community investment. Restaurants, coffee shops, retail, housing and hotel projects have been attracted to these theaters because of the thriving foot traffic it creates and the sense of community.

Many of these types of theaters fail, mostly because of poor management. The successful theaters succeed because the screens are worked very hard. The Riverview can show up to four different movies on a given weekend day; something in the mornings for young families, early matinees for retired folk, early evening for couples and a midnight cult favorite. Not to mention film festivals, large group meetings and even rented for church services if necessary.

It attracts commerce, culture, young families and retirees. It is exactly what a core downtown needs to prosper and it is unique to Red Wing.

Downtown Red Wing has a terrific opportunity to save something that other communities have had, lost and now regret. Red Wing government agencies are always talking about smart, long term investments. They only need to look at 325 Bush Street.

Done deal

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The legal mumbo-jumbo has been signed and it is official...we are moving! The new location is around the corner from our current space (1 block to the West and 1 block to the South, per Mother Google) and the address is 312 West Avenue.

The new space offers several benefits and a few compromises:

Benefits:
+ We can play the music painfully loud without concern to shared-wall neighbors.
+ Our own parking!
+ A phenomenal view.
+ I will finally be able to sit in morning sunlight in my sleeveless t-shirt and tan my face with a reflector board as street thugs stop to pay their respects.

Compromises:
- No longer will we be gently lulled by the engine braking of tractor-trailors barreling through town.
- My current space has this amazing tin ceiling that I have enjoyed for over 5 years. It will be missed.

We will have a 30 day overlap and will begin the move-in as of March 1st.