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Village Squire, 1978-02, Page 151 Pulling style inthe /€itchen Colleen Stephenson and Leigh Dennison think you don't have to sacrifice beauty for price When you're artistic you just naturally want beautiful things around you. even when you're at work in your kitchen. The basic belief that you might as well have a cheap beautiful glass as a cheap ugly one is what led Leigh Dennison and Colleen Stephenson to open Stephenson's in Stratford last April. Leigh is a graphic artist by training. Colleen is stage manager at the Stratford Festival. Both have artistic tastes and it shows in their shop. the displays and the goods sold. The main feature of the store is stylish kitchenware with a modern contemporary look so foreign to most of the humdrum utensils in the average Canadian kitchen. The two women have been friends for the past four years and used to talk about the possibility of opening a shop. They were interested in well-designed things, and they noticed that no one in Stratford was selling that kind of product so they decided if they were going to open a shop it would be in that area. They found a vacant building on Ontario street and, Leigh says, everything just sort of fit into place. For Colleen the shop was a way of having something to do in the winter when the theatre wasn't in operation (though this year with its earliest ever start on rehearsals, that gap has been small). For Leigh it was a chance to do something that combined her interests. A Toronto native, she studied at the London (England) College of Design and at the University of Waterloo in fine arts. While there, she took a job in the summer running Gallery Pascal in Stratford. She liked the town and decided to stay. She commuted to college in Waterloo and taught art classes at The Gallen, Stratford and worked at a local bookstore and at the Festival. Nov:, however, her full attention is given to the store. Colleen, who came to the city eight years ago, makes the pair a good team because her experience as a stage manager makes her a good business woman, Leigh says. One of the most trying things for them when they opened was coming up with a name for the shop, Leigh recalls. They spent a good deal of time going through dictionaries looking for just the right name. They thought of many campy, boutiquey names but rejected them all. They saw that most of the businesses in the city were named after the people who ran them so eventually came up with a good name: Stephenson's. The name is apt because not only is it Colleen's name, but Leigh's name was Stevenson before she was married. The couple opened the show in a redecorated law office last April stocking it with, Leigh says, "the kind of thing I collect around me in my own house". She likes things well designed and functional she says and the items on sale bear that out. One of the frustrations for the couple has been trying to find that kind of thing manufactured in Canada. They have looked desperately, Leigh says, and have found a few Canadian things that meet their standards not enough. The result is that most of their merchandise is imported from Germany or particularly Scandanavia. The lack of well-designed Canadian goods is frustrating, Leigh says. There is no reason why items can't be well designed and manufactured here in Canada. We have the resources here but manufacturers don't get into good design because they don't feel that's where the market is. The store just hasn't been able to gel things that correspond with the quality of the Scandanavian design made here, she says. The manufacturers may not feel there is a market for VILLAGE SQUIRE/FEBRUARY 1978, 13. '