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Much heart at Q-Mart

September 8, 2014 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

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Before the Lehigh Valley Mall gathered dozens of retailers into one convenient shopping locale, before Walmart opened its first discount department store and before Craigslist became the online equivalent of a yard sale, there was Quakertown Farmers Market.

Founded as a produce market in 1932 by farmer Stanley Rottenberger, the Richland Township retail hub attracts 30,000 to 40,000 shoppers each week, thanks in large part to its eclectic blend of vendors — from delis and produce places to craft shops and furniture stores.

As a lifelong resident of the Lehigh Valley, I’ve made countless trips to the 170,000-square-foot market, known to locals as “Q-Mart,” and each time it’s an adventure — in a good way. Let me explain.

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Although I can expect longtime staples such as Fleck’s Bakery, Frederick’s Meats, Record Revival and my childhood favorite, Race Place (featuring a slot-car race track), I’m also usually greeted by a handful of new vendors.

To me, Q-Mart, showcasing more than 100 shops, is like a box of chocolates — I never know what I’m gonna get.

If this scenario sounds familiar, allow me to eliminate the suspense and fill you in on the latest offerings.

On a recent trip, I checked out 11 businesses — from tea and wine retailers to clothing and lingerie shops — that have debuted within the past year. I also have the scoop on a new biker shop opening Friday.

The newest stores, which opened in August, include KK Home Basics and B’s Pickles.

KK, owned by Shahnaz and Lutful Alam of Lansdale, sells an assortment of home goods — from towels and tableware to appliances and kitchen utensils.

B’s Pickles, owned by Bernice Lisiecki of Green Lane, is technically a new business, although the space previously housed a similar shop called The Pickle Man.

Lisiecki worked at The Pickle Man for five years and took the reigns this past year when her boss retired.

The business sells everything from jumbo and horseradish dills to sweet gherkins and bread-and-butter chips. There’s also homemade kettle corn and a wide array of barbecue and hot sauces.

If pickles don’t tickle your taste buds, the market also welcomed Zangari Seafood Market in May and Cool Dog Ice Cream Shop in November.

Zangari, owned by Marc Zangari of Allentown, sells an assortment of seafood — from wild ahi tuna, swordfish and mako shark to live blue crabs, lobster tail and littleneck clams. There’s also tasty creations such as crab-stuffed tilapia, bacon-wrapped scallops and Old Bay shrimp salad.

Customers can find weekly specials on the business’ Facebook page and call ahead to reserve their orders at 484-633-6073.

Cool Dog, co-owned by brother and sister Jim and Gina Dimare, serves more than 30 hard ice cream flavors, three soft-serve flavors and a wide array of other cool treats, including root beer floats and chocolate-covered bananas.

“We saw a good opportunity here with high foot traffic and no other ice cream shops,” Gina Dimare said.

The market also offers fresh ways to save on fashions, as evidenced by new and used clothing store Name Brands 4 Less, which opened in May, and The Lingerie Shop, which opened in March.

The Lingerie Shop sells, you guessed it, lingerie — from $10 bras and three-for-$10 underwear to corsets and bustiers. There’s also a back section, separated by a curtain, offering adult items such as lotions, games and bachelorette party favors.

Owner Sherry Sawhney, who also operates the Erogenous Zone and Lady Love shops on South Street in Philadelphia, plans to bring in sexy costumes in time for Halloween.

“I didn’t know what to expect here, but business has been good,” Sawhney said. “The people in Quakertown are freaky.”

Another shop, JessWear Collection, opened June 13 and offers custom embroidery and screen printing.

“Customers can bring us any photo they like and we can put it on T-shirts, jackets, a blanket, even a rug,” co-owner Tracy Williams said.

Other service businesses that have recently taken root at the market include Master’s Gutter Shield Systems, handling installation of new gutters and gutter guards, as well as Spring Hill Chimney Service, a full-service chimney company specializing in stainless steel chimney liners.

The remaining new vendors, Boyd’s Cardinal Hollow Winery and Let’s Steep tea shop, both aim to quench your thirst with a bevy of unique beverages.

Boyd’s, which opened in November, is a Montgomery County-based winery offering more than 25 different wines for tasting and purchase ($11-$50 per bottle).

Selections range from reds and whites to its award-winning jalapeno variety and seasonal selections such as peach and pumpkin.

Let’s Steep, which opened in December, offers more than 100 varieties of loose leaf teas — from black, green and white to chai, rooibos and yerba mate.

According to owner Rebekkah Morasco, many of the herbal blends have medicinal purposes, including Big Lou’s Elixir, named after her father-in-law. The concoction helps with sleep, migraines, restless leg and fibromyalgia, she said.

Customers can purchase their favorite selections in single-serve packets or small ($8) and large ($13) jars. For every $5 you spend in tea, a complimentary single-serve packet of your choosing is offered.

Morasco, a wood shop teacher in the Central Bucks School District, also sells many of her and other artisans’ handmade creations, including cutting boards and shelves, as well as local raw honey.

Let’s Steep appears at other area farmers markets, including Saucon Valley and Hometown, as well Rice’s Flea Market in Solebury Township.

Finally, Biker Apparel Accessories, Etc. plans to open Friday, selling exactly what its name implies, including leather jackets, chaps, patches and gloves.

The shop, which also will do alterations and custom fittings, is the second location owned by Nina Owens of Collegeville. Her original shop is housed inside Nina’s Cleaners, Tailors Custom Drapery in Collegeville.

Fundraising for military organizations, including the Wounded Warrior Project and American Gold Star Mothers, will be a large focus of the business with Owens donating proceeds from a shoe shine station and pictures taken on an in-house Suzuki motorcycle. Info: 610-564-2129.

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Thanking Joan Rivers, comedy’s first real feminist

September 7, 2014 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

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PHOTO: Romina Puga


by Romina Puga

Posted 08/29/2014, 12:15PM

Updated 09/02/2014, 11:59AM

You might be familiar with the floral Japanese male bra that popped up online last week, leaving people confused and amused. You probably said to yourself, “This has to be a joke. This can’t be real.” Well it can, and there’s a market of men who enjoy wearing feminine-looking undergarments, and not because they want to look more like women (sorry ladies).

“There’s no variety in the men’s lingerie sold in department stores. It’s boxers and briefs, and if you’re really daring, maybe a thong!” says Australian male lingerie designer Brent Krause. “There’s no denying department stores sell good quality, functional underwear, and that’s fine for ninety percent of men. But not me.” These mangerie-wearing men like the fabric and feel of nice lingerie and believe it’s time for men to have a chance at feeling sexy in front of the mirror.

If you’re thinking these guys only exist on the other side of the world you’re wrong. Krause’s male lingerie company Homme Mystere states that most of their customers come from the United States. Krause says the U.S. makes up about 40 percent of its customer base, with Western Europe and the UK making up another 40 percent. They even send merchandise to Russia and Canada.

“I don’t think the male bra industry is any larger in Japan than anywhere else. Certainly our numbers show the USA and Europe to be about the same in terms of size with Japan quite a distance behind,” says Krause. “In saying that, our wholesale sales are very strong into Japan, which suggests guys are buying our lingerie but prefer to buy from a local store that speaks the language.”

So who are the guys buying this mangerie?

We sent a survey to Homme Mystere’s customers last week to get a sense of who these men are, and the replies we got were laced with surprises. For one, there’s a big market for male bras, but an even bigger one for beautifully tailored male undies.

One anonymous customer responds to our survey, “I wear panties daily!” Another says, “I wear lingerie daily, always panties, and a bra maybe three to four times a week. And nightly to bed.” While another customer goes as far to say, “No boxers left in my knicker drawer!”

These men are wearing their sensual skivvies more often than traditional male underwear. They’re wearing them to work, to movies, to meetings, everywhere. For men, it’s the nerve-racking taboo equivalent of a woman wearing crotchless panties to mass. You’re sitting there like, “Ooooh nobody knows what’s going on under these finely ironed dress pants!” What a frilly thrill!

Krause wants to elevate underwear in the daily level of priorities. “Choosing a department store brand of underwear each morning is a no-brainer. Choosing a style of Homme Mystere each morning is a little more fun,” he says. “Busy day with meetings – let’s go with PinStripe. Feeling a bit toey – frill thong. Life’s too short for plain underwear!”

Think about it, right now your male co-workers or peers could be rocking a lace bralette and you’d have no idea.

Some of Homme Mystere’s customers have been sporting female-styled lingerie for decades. “I wear a bra, panties, and pantyhose everyday under my male clothes,” says one very open customer. “I have not worn or owned a pair of men’s underwear for about 32 years.”

Another surprise — that maybe shouldn’t be — is that over 90 percent of the Homme Mystere customers who responded to the survey are in heterosexual relationships. Krause says that their customers are mostly over 40, married, and straight.

The survey showed that most of these men’s wives or girlfriends know about their underwear preferences and are ok with it, but their friends and co-workers remain in the dark. One customer says his wife has known since the day they met. “I was very open and honest with her and told her so that she could decide on her own if she wanted to have a relationship with me. We have been happily married for 13 years now, she has never once complained or felt ashamed of me, she loves me for ‘who’ I am not what I wear.”

Another customer says, “In fact [my significant other] likes her own Homme Mystere bra. She’s small breasted and says it fits her better.” Matching his and hers.

Krause spent around six months researching and designing lingerie before putting anything on the market in May of 2009. “We are definitely seeing very large increases in sales on our two sale days each year on Cyber Monday and our stock take sale each May/June,” he says. Apparently Valentine’s Day has become a big day for HM as well. “Sales from women spiked this year,” he says. “I think that’s probably a reflection of many women coming to the conclusion that just because their husband is into lingerie, it isn’t really that big of a deal.”

One man had less luck opening up to his wife about his undergarments, “I told my wife and she was not impressed and demanded that I stop doing it. She also discovered a stash of my panties at one time or another. I will not stop wearing my lingerie but I have to do it secretly and furtively now.”

The Homme Mystere blog added their two cents on why men wearing feminine lingerie does not mean men want to look or feel more like women:

“For some reason, many people still seem to think that Homme Mystere lingerie for men is a gay thing. Clearly this insinuates that all gay guys are effeminate and love to be the ‘girl’ in the relationship. If that was indeed correct, and all gay guys were actually wannabe girls, wouldn’t that make all gay guy couples lesbians?” Very meta.

Besides Japanese retailer Wishroom, Homme Mystere has designed the nicest male lingerie on the market. As many of the men on the survey exclaimed, once they went to Homme Mystere they never went back to boring bundled white cotton briefs.

“The first experience wearing my bra was a very exciting one,” says an HM customer. “Among other sensations, it gave the feeling, as Emily Master’s describes in her book Brassièred, of being embraced by a hug all day. It was, and still is, a beautiful and sexy feeling.” I wish I felt that way about the wiry constricting strap I have to put on every morning.

Another customer gave us a scene-by-scene description of the first time he bought a male bra. “I rushed out to my car and sitting down inside I furtively tore open the parcel. Inside wrapped in pink tissue was my very own sheer soft cupped bra and matching panty… I could hardly wait to try them on so I rushed home to shower first before trying them on. I lay them on the bed, arranging them nicely so that when I came out of the bathroom I would be presented with the sight of my beautiful and sexy bra… I had never done this before and it took a little time to get the back clip done up… I was extremely pleased, even excited and I could see my nipples pressing against the sheer fabric…” We’ll stop there. You get the picture. These guys love fabric.

But even more than making comfortable sexy male camisoles and underthings, Homme Mystere does one thing exceptionally right: it doesn’t judge. Where other male lingerie sites clearly call their customers cross-dressers or fetish-ers, Homme Mystere just talks about its nice fabric. Krause says, “I purposely tried to avoid any link to a fetish or any specific kind of label. If I had done that, it would have meant immediately labelling our customers by default and I have no idea how my customers view themselves.”

One of HM’s customers agrees. “The first [bra] I bought was actually for cross dressing, in which I wasn’t as interested,” he says. “I’ve much preferred the ones from Homme Mystere which are less concerned with faking the shape of a woman.”

Krause is already designing new styles for 2015 that he says has his seamstress is having a little trouble with. “I’m putting a little more effort into the bras and my seamstress thinks I’m a little crazy with a couple of my ideas, but until you try something different, how do you know if it’ll work?” he says. “Might as well have a go.”

So, if you’re a straight man bored with your Gap boxers, would you have a go?

All images credited to Homme Mystere

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