The Woven bag!
Ok, these bags are rad. They can be used as a large as a purse. Or can be used as your own bag at the grocery store. The woven bag is durable so it can be filled with books and taken to class. A bigger woven can be hauled to the laundry mat (with your dirty laundry in it. Obviously). What we're trying to say here, is the list of stuff this bag can help you do in style is endless.
Want to know what's even better? 99% of these bags are gender neutral so they can be carried by a Jack or a Jane.
We have the bags in stock now, and will continue to provide them whenever possible. Come get one and put a kitten in it!
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5208 Ballard Ave
Monday-Saturday 11-7
Sunday 11-5
Monday-Saturday 11-7
Sunday 11-5
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
20twenty’s All-Women Fall Show
Saturday, October 9th 2010 7pm
The fine folks over at 20twenty want you to come help us celebrate our first time
hosting an all-women’s art opening! This show combines seven incredible local
female artists in one great big super-show. All of these ladies work in mediums
across the board, but share one thing in common: They continuously inspire and
never cease to amaze, in their craft, talent, styles, attitudes and life views. We
are excited to show some of the most beautiful fiber art, soft sculpture, paintings
and collages we’ve ever seen. And lucky us! The wonderful Shana Cleveland of
The Curious Mystery will be playing some special tunes towards the end of the
night!
So, come on down folks! Saturday October 9th, 7p! Help us celebrate what the
ladies of Seattle are creating! Get inspired, make some new friends and be
merry. Fall, let’s do this.
LUCY BRENNAN
Lucy Brennan's soft sculptures, illustrations, books, and wearables often relate
to the body, family, songs, stories, and snacks. Her art objects and playthings
celebrate pattern, color, texture, and form using materials including felt, magic
marker, embroidery floss, watercolor, and found fabrics.
http://www.LucyAlmaBrennan.com
SHANA CLEVELAND
Shana Cleveland enjoys the beach year-round
http://www.thecuriousmystery.com/
Nichole Rathburn makes work with the urge to encourage empathy; to put in
physical form the feelings and sensation of what even the smallest moment of
understanding between human beings can be. Not to cheapen them, but in the
hope that a physical touch can resonate emotionally within the viewer and spread
to the actions in their life, adding bit by bit to the world those moments that drive
the human race forward.
(Please touch the art.)
JESS REES
"Looking towards the future, I see an eerie ambiguity as to what will become
of the the natural state of the planet. This has caused me to look at natural forms
and patterns with a complexion more curious than ever before. Through my
works, I want to pass along my fascination and confront the waning stewardship
for our environment.
The role I play is of the scientist, discovering the undiscoverable. The
works I create are perhaps a reflection of changes to come to the fragile state of
nature, and are intended to be both contemplative and playfully imaginative"
http://www.jessrees.com
MADELENA ROMANSIC
"I was born and raised in Seattle. As long as I have been alive, I have loved
the process of creating—be it with cardboard, colored
pencil, or yarn. Art for me is more like an uncontrollable bodily
function than a form of communication, as indicated by the constant
state of disaster in my room.
After attending college at both California College of the Arts and
Seattle Central Community College, I graduated from the University of
Washington with a bachelor of arts in math. This, like many of my
other endeavors, was an idea conceptualized and brought to fruition by
sheer curiosity.
I’m into art as a way of getting the things in my head to exist in
3-space— much like those cool 3-D printers. I like making wearable
art because I like the thought of the things I make going out and
having a life of their own out in the world."
STACEY ROZICH
Stacey Rozich is a native to the Pacific Northwest region of the United
States. She attended California College of the Arts in San Francisco where she
studied illustration, and now attends Seattle Central for graphic design.
Combining what she learned in school and her years of drawing from her over-
active imagination, Stacey has created a storybook narrative of beasts and
patterns all playing into a world of cultural folktales.
http://mysterymeats.blogspot.com/
KENDAL TULL-ESTERBROOK
Kendal Tull-Esterbrook is a Seattle based illustrator and storyteller who's
focus is on hand-rendering eerie, meticulous works which breathe new
appreciation into common forms as well as pay homage to anatomical
frameworks that would otherwise spend their living existence in pitch dark.
lubdubart.com
Saturday, October 9th 2010
7pm
20twenty
5208 Ballard Ave. Seattle
206.706.0969
Saturday, October 9th 2010 7pm
The fine folks over at 20twenty want you to come help us celebrate our first time
hosting an all-women’s art opening! This show combines seven incredible local
female artists in one great big super-show. All of these ladies work in mediums
across the board, but share one thing in common: They continuously inspire and
never cease to amaze, in their craft, talent, styles, attitudes and life views. We
are excited to show some of the most beautiful fiber art, soft sculpture, paintings
and collages we’ve ever seen. And lucky us! The wonderful Shana Cleveland of
The Curious Mystery will be playing some special tunes towards the end of the
night!
So, come on down folks! Saturday October 9th, 7p! Help us celebrate what the
ladies of Seattle are creating! Get inspired, make some new friends and be
merry. Fall, let’s do this.
LUCY BRENNAN
Lucy Brennan's soft sculptures, illustrations, books, and wearables often relate
to the body, family, songs, stories, and snacks. Her art objects and playthings
celebrate pattern, color, texture, and form using materials including felt, magic
marker, embroidery floss, watercolor, and found fabrics.
http://www.LucyAlmaBrennan.com
SHANA CLEVELAND
Shana Cleveland enjoys the beach year-round
http://www.thecuriousmystery.com/
Nichole Rathburn makes work with the urge to encourage empathy; to put in
physical form the feelings and sensation of what even the smallest moment of
understanding between human beings can be. Not to cheapen them, but in the
hope that a physical touch can resonate emotionally within the viewer and spread
to the actions in their life, adding bit by bit to the world those moments that drive
the human race forward.
(Please touch the art.)
JESS REES
"Looking towards the future, I see an eerie ambiguity as to what will become
of the the natural state of the planet. This has caused me to look at natural forms
and patterns with a complexion more curious than ever before. Through my
works, I want to pass along my fascination and confront the waning stewardship
for our environment.
The role I play is of the scientist, discovering the undiscoverable. The
works I create are perhaps a reflection of changes to come to the fragile state of
nature, and are intended to be both contemplative and playfully imaginative"
http://www.jessrees.com
MADELENA ROMANSIC
"I was born and raised in Seattle. As long as I have been alive, I have loved
the process of creating—be it with cardboard, colored
pencil, or yarn. Art for me is more like an uncontrollable bodily
function than a form of communication, as indicated by the constant
state of disaster in my room.
After attending college at both California College of the Arts and
Seattle Central Community College, I graduated from the University of
Washington with a bachelor of arts in math. This, like many of my
other endeavors, was an idea conceptualized and brought to fruition by
sheer curiosity.
I’m into art as a way of getting the things in my head to exist in
3-space— much like those cool 3-D printers. I like making wearable
art because I like the thought of the things I make going out and
having a life of their own out in the world."
STACEY ROZICH
Stacey Rozich is a native to the Pacific Northwest region of the United
States. She attended California College of the Arts in San Francisco where she
studied illustration, and now attends Seattle Central for graphic design.
Combining what she learned in school and her years of drawing from her over-
active imagination, Stacey has created a storybook narrative of beasts and
patterns all playing into a world of cultural folktales.
http://mysterymeats.blogspot.com/
KENDAL TULL-ESTERBROOK
Kendal Tull-Esterbrook is a Seattle based illustrator and storyteller who's
focus is on hand-rendering eerie, meticulous works which breathe new
appreciation into common forms as well as pay homage to anatomical
frameworks that would otherwise spend their living existence in pitch dark.
lubdubart.com
Saturday, October 9th 2010
7pm
20twenty
5208 Ballard Ave. Seattle
206.706.0969
Sunday, September 12, 2010
RECORD SWAP!
20twenty will be hosting a Record Swap and if you're reading this, you're definitely invited.
WHEN: October 8, 2010
5:00-10:00
WHERE: 20twenty (duh)
5208 Ballard AVE NW
WHY: We all have records that we don't listen to. This could be for various reasons. Here are
a couple...Maybe you thought you were buying Lionel Ritchie's album "Can't Slow
Down"when in fact you read the title wrong and you bought "Truly: The Love Songs."
Maybe you thought you like Reggae more than you actually do. In any case, there is
definitely someone out there that can, and will appreciate your neglected vinyl. Come
swap them for free!
John Shin Sound Wave, 2007 Installation at Museum of Arts & Design, New York, 2008
http://www.jeanshin.com/index.htm
WHEN: October 8, 2010
5:00-10:00
WHERE: 20twenty (duh)
5208 Ballard AVE NW
WHY: We all have records that we don't listen to. This could be for various reasons. Here are
a couple...Maybe you thought you were buying Lionel Ritchie's album "Can't Slow
Down"when in fact you read the title wrong and you bought "Truly: The Love Songs."
Maybe you thought you like Reggae more than you actually do. In any case, there is
definitely someone out there that can, and will appreciate your neglected vinyl. Come
swap them for free!
John Shin Sound Wave, 2007 Installation at Museum of Arts & Design, New York, 2008
http://www.jeanshin.com/index.htm
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