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They have been keeping the doors open for quite some time now, much to the chagrin of the green people and to the relief of the merchandise people.
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I saw this on Saturday. The two most egregious clutterfvcks occur in Atwater Ink & Paint's window, where kitchen gadgets have been unceremoniously hung OVER the sketches at the artist's desk, and Los Feliz Five and Dime, where merchandise is now physically sitting on, and obscuring, the beautiful Jody Daily designed book jackets. :(
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MiceChat is saying the same thing with a little bit of explanation (emphasis mine):
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Hummm... I know I walked down Buena Vista Street more than once recently, and rode the Red Car Trolley down it as well.... But I'll be dammed if I remember anything on it.
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I remember one specific instance because I was inside waiting for Lani when she walked up to the door, stopped, and primped herself in the mirrored glass while I was watching. Then I made fun of her. |
I visited Buena Vista Street several times before I realized there were shops behind the facade between the entrance and the Piggy Cafe. I finally found everything when I got the idea to wander in past the ice cream counter. It's better now that they open the doors once in a while.
As far as the windows go, I like the mix of old and new. (Another thing I'd missed before was the upper floors of the buildings. I was walking out after dark a few weeks ago and suddenly noticed the lighting on the upper levels. I had to walk back and take a good look at the variety of architectural detail up there. Spectacular.) |
Checked tonight and the doors were closed.
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My take:
The buildings look like the fake facades in Hollywood Backlot. It's the same generic, boring merchandise you can find just about anywhere else anyway. Nothing special. Trolley car and some of the Cars merch is new, and the Hallowe'en goodies are good, but mostly it's the same things we've seen everywhere else. |
I was there this Wednesday. The merch in the window sucks. I never liked it on Main Street either. The doors were still closed which is fine by me.
I love the closed doors. It's much classier, much more realistic. I was always aware of shops inside and have done my share of "shopping" (read: looking around, since I don't buy things in general). I love opening the smaller doors and feeling like I'm going to enter a period shop. I see the point that they aren't super inviting and people don't think to go inside. There aren't any easy answers to that one, so I figure whatever they do is inevitable. The place is supposed to make money, so if it doesn't I don't feel justified in complaining. Oh well. |
Signage on doors, such as, "We're open! Come on in!," or, "Air-cooled, for your shopping pleasure!" should do the trick. It would also be smart to draft the streetmosphere characters in this effort, even going so far as to create a department store manager for Elias and Co.
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