Oakville Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 22 Aug 1993, p. 10

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125 Cross Ave. Trafalgar Village 844â€"2668 f your kitchen is 15 years older I or less, any style door from our outstanding selection will fit on your existing cabinets! Choose from our huge assortment of colours, designs, and finishes in price ranges that will fit any budget. Now you can give c anac is on the look out for old cupboard doors. In fact, we‘re willing to pay for them! From now until September 30" 1993, each of your Canac cupboard x Your Orp Canac KitcHen CuPBOARDS DOORS x REWARD: $ 10 PeEn DooRr Hamilton â€" 40 Centennial Pkwy. North (Across from Eastgate Square) 5736030 * existing kitchen must be manufactured by Canac Oakville « 490 Speers Rd. (1/4 mile west of Dorval Rd.) 842â€"5222 CELLINI » SIGNATURE + CANAC CABINETS your kitchen a beautiful faceâ€"lift for less than you think!. But hurry! Your old cupboard doors are valuable for a short time only, and it would be almost criminal to miss out on this special offer! For more details, call or visit Canac. doors* is worth $10.00 off towards the purchase of a brand new door from Canac! That means great savâ€" ings for you... and a refreshing new look for your kitchen! You never know what you‘ll discover while fossicking around in Bronte‘s Harbour Craft Anyone who has ever dabbled in the creative world of dried flowers, grapevine wreathes, beads, rope, leather, and lacing will probably know the inside of Harbour Craft already â€"â€" a commucopia _ what makes her go, she shrugs and smiles. "I have no idea," the native New Zealander states. ‘It‘s just right inside me; it‘s there when I wake up in the mormning and it doesn‘t stop." Good answer. Particularly in light of the fact that ve are chatting in her Bronte craft store where there is a constant trickle of browsers; women signingâ€"up for craft classes, and men showing off their babies (well, okay, one man with a baby). A few folks actually buy things. E f you ask the energetic Judy Collins Though trained originally as a librarâ€" ian, back in Christchurch, Collins points out, ‘TI‘ve done crafts all my life. My grandmother was a fantastic woman It was about six or seven years ago when the old Harbour Craft shop in Bronte was about to go under the wreckâ€" er‘s ball that Collins was offered the business by retiring owner Bev Honchar. For nearly 10 years, the creâ€" ative, easyâ€"going Collins, a mother of two, had worked in the lively craft enviâ€" ronment. She‘d been tempted before by Honchar, but held back because she thought her family needed her more. Needles to say, it‘s a philosophy she lives by. She explains, "I go into some places and they don‘t look you in the eye; they‘re surly and don‘t have time for anything. Everyone would be so much happier if they smiled and made some social contact... it‘s your right to be treated with courtesy." For example, she says, "I believe you should never have to thank anybody for courtesy or kindness. It should be a given." Not to worry. She will eventually share a rare bit of philosophy with the reporter and more. of esoterica â€" where nothing makes perâ€" fect sense until you glue it, paint it, sand it, or tie it in knots. While I wait for the proprietor, a woman is delighted to find a glass eye for her husband (who carves loons), and a troupe of little girls comes across the parking lot from the kid‘s craft session to procure pipe cleaners. Dare I mention the telephone interrupâ€" tions? I am exhausted watching the 50â€" ish Collins do her thing, and worse, I begin to despair of a real conversation. QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS BOX SPRING Hundreds of sofas, love seats, sofa beds, wing chairs, swivel chairs, reclining wing chairs, bedroom + dining room furniture on display, available in this season‘s most wanted styles colours. All mattresses 50% OFF. immediate delivery. Judy Collins SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT... 15,000 SQ. FT. SHOWROOM OVER 500 PIECES MUST BE SOLD. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. TOP QUALITY FURNISHINGS. EVERYTHING MUST Go! And since his wife had no backâ€" ground in business, Michael also sugâ€" gested logically that she "run it like she ran the house." So she did. There was another factor to consider, Harbour Craft then, as now, was more than a business. It was a meeting place for craftspeople â€" mainly women, as well as, an outlet for their wares. While the old building was doomed, perhaps, the tradition could be saved in new premises. Judy talked it over with her university professor husband Michael; he said, "Go for it, Jude." "Words he has since lived to regret," she adds wryly. But working at a job and taking ownâ€" ership of a small business were distinctâ€" ly different propositions. Even though her children, Simon and Sarah, were nearly grown by then, it was a tough decision which was certain to change the pattern of her life. who taught me to knit my first cardigan when I was six years old (yellow with raglan sleeves)." I EIIB LE e $3 ING (See ‘Seldom‘ page 17) Judy Collins

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