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Lyndhurst Hosts Fall Crafts This Weekend

Three hundred artists and exhibitors will appear at this 28th annual, three-day show.

 

At the twenty-eighth annual Fall Crafts at Lyndhurst, in Tarrytown, approximately 300 artists and craftspeople will be on hand to offer their wares. More than 15,000 visitors are expected to attend the three-day fair, Friday through Sunday, Sept. 21-23.

Outdoor booths and indoor stands (in two mammoth tents) will display jewelry, stylish clothing, leather, glassware, ceramics, woodwork, scenic photography, sculpture, handcrafted furniture, quilts, prints and paintings.

The cruise and resort-wear collections of Colombian born designer Sandra Baquero will include a wrap that can be worn twelve different ways.

Don Hart will demonstrate wood turnings to include small wooden pens.

White Plains resident Deborah Loeb Bohren will offer color prints of urban environments taken around the globe (including Venice, Havana, Cusco and Paris) and unaltered by Photoshop.

Jacqueline Johnson, a Yonkers resident, will show necklaces, earrings, bracelets, brooches and chains made from tiny beads using a single needle.

Cortlandt Manor resident Susan Obrant will demonstrate her versatility with  crocheted fashions, handbags and hats, and paintings that include watercolors, pastels, pencil and crayon drawings.

The Arm-of-the-Sea Puppet Theater will entertain children at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday with the first appearance of the Reguvenary River Circus at this show. The production features dozens of masks and puppet characters together with music by Dean Jones in a tale that moves from mountain peaks to the deep blue sea.

Local artists with work on display

  • Ardsley. Susan Ullman. Paper collage
  • Bedford. Lynn Pullman. Wearable fiber
  • Buchanan. Margaret Lent Buchanan. Wearable fiber
  • Cortlandt Manor. Susan Obrant. Wearable fiber
  • Cortlandt Manor. Soli Pierce. Wooden painted bowls
  • Katonah. Suzanne Schwartz. Metal jewelry
  • Mamaroneck. Libby Denenberg. Mixed media mosaics
  • New City. Jeffrey Sherman. Photography
  • Peekskill. Kevin Burnett. Painting
  • Port Chester. Brian Toohey. Belts
  • Stony Point. Ronnee Peters. Stained glass
  • Tarrytown. Karen Fairborne. Metal jewelry
  • Warwick. Julie Hammet-Cone. Metal jewelry
  • Warwick. Jacques Hemsi. Metal jewelry
  • Warwick. Claudia Pflueger. Painted gourds
  • White Plains. Deborah Bohren. Photography
  • Yonkers. Jacqueline Johnson. Non-metal jewelry
  • Yonkers. Sam Spano. Mixed media plant holders

To see the full exhibitor list, click here.

Fifteen food concessions and thirty food-product merchants will also participate in the twenty-eighth staging of this event. New to the show—A Taco Pacifico truck. Food-related vendors include Bella's Home-Baked Goods, Betty Jane's Sweet Delights, Dutch Desserts, Everything About Crepes, Heittmann's Nuts, Island Cow Ice Cream, Udder Ideas Fudge and Warwick Valley Winery.

The show is managed by Artrider Productions, formed in 1983 to run crafts shows at Lyndhurst and elsewhere by Stacey Jarit and her husband and co-director Jeff Sobel, formerly a town planner for the Village of Tarrytown. Laura Kandel is the assistant director. The National Trust for Historic Preservation is the show sponsor.

Festivities begin each day at 10 a.m. and conclude at 5 p.m. on Friday and Sunday and at 6 p.m. on Saturday. Admission costs are—$10 per adult, $9 for seniors and $4 for children 6 to 16. Weekend passes cost an additional $3.

For a $1 per person discount coupon, click here.

Parking is free on site on each day or at adjacent Kraft Foods (Saturday and Sunday parking only) located on Broadway just north of Lyndhurst, and at other nearby parking areas on Route 119 with frequent free shuttle-bus service.

A similar spring-time show is held annually at Lyndhurst. The next one will take place May 3-5, 2013.

Artrider Productions, P.O. Box 28, Woodstock, New York 12498, 845-331-7900.

Lyndhurst, 635 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, NY 10591. 914 631-4481. www.lyndhurst.org.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
W Kelly May 20, 2013 at 09:51 am
Don't believe a word of HVHC mission statement they tossed out the Meth Clinic since it carriesRead More negativity to the new and improved hospital.
Danny May 18, 2013 at 12:20 pm
It is dangerous and a menace to our already horrible traffic on 6. Thank God none of those kids gotRead More hit running in between cars looking for change. Traffic was backed up all through Mohegan...Poor choice of a way to raise monies for a good cause.
Teleman May 23, 2013 at 12:08 pm
The evidence was more than likely destroyed by the intense fire-not the mayor. I think you areRead More incorrect saying that the building was raised before investigators arrived. Move on!
shakemdown May 22, 2013 at 11:55 pm
yeah, but let the mayor tell it, that never happened, ( the excavator tearing down the buildingRead More before the investigators even got to the scene) just like all the other lies that they have told.
Teleman May 22, 2013 at 12:03 pm
Yes- probably the most important part of the investigation is what caused the fire- that will beRead More hard to determine of course because of the destruction of the evidence
Paul Purpora spoke about renewable resources with PKMS students who visited the Green Machine
joshua tanner May 20, 2013 at 07:00 pm
I never heard so much baloney. Don't let them brainwash you kids. Solar and wind are frauds. ARead More windmill just threw off a blade that weighs tons. They break all the time and wind energy is the most dangerous and not efficient. Oh and global weather patterns are natural and not man-made "OCOTILLO WIND TURBINE THROWS OFF MULTI-TON BLADE, PROMPTING WORLD-WIDE SHUT DOWN OF SIMILAR TURBINES AMID GROWING SAFETY CONCERNS" http://www.eastcountymagazine.org/node/13251
Ilir Zherka, a lifelong advocate of human rights and the executive director for the National Conference on Citizenship, was the morning keynote speaker at the 11th annual Not-For-Profit Summit.
sayitsnotsojack May 20, 2013 at 04:36 pm
With all these non profits not paying taxes they have certainly made a lot of us who pay the billsRead More for them non profit also.
Look Who's Talking May 23, 2013 at 03:00 pm
Can someone call the Planning Department and find out if Frank's sign outside of his office followsRead More The City's sign ordinance?
Concerned Parent May 21, 2013 at 09:08 am
@w Kelly.....Ahhhhhhhhh maybe the cops are not educated about addiction?? Why not ask the neighborsRead More of the soon-to-be closed HVHC Methadone Clinic -- the veterinarian, residents in hear-by homes, the stores and restaurants in the shopping center, etc. -- have they experienced any "problems" with the clients going to the clinic ?? Personally, I believe the "cops" should be focusing on the known areas to buy drugs -- it does not take a rocket scientist to see the dealers. What happened to the bike patrols used by the police dept ??? As said by another, thank goodness we live in the U.S. for freedom of speech. I
W Kelly May 21, 2013 at 06:06 am
Residential is right, Dogwood, Sprout Brook, Highland Park all the neighbors off of Highland Ave ,Read More Dunbar Heights yes those are all in very close proximity to Meth Clinic. Tell me why all the cops /troopers say a very bad thing for the community?
sayitsnotsojack May 19, 2013 at 11:37 am
The long suffering tax payer should look at it as them paying for their extravagant health care andRead More pension plans. As for lending a hand they have had our hand outs for way too long.
Teleman May 19, 2013 at 05:09 pm
We've got the Constitution on our side. Although it is being eroded, we still have quite a largeRead More number of the population who still believes in it- 46,455 gun background checks per day since bama got in office- ( yes, we already do background checks for the majority of gun purchases)
Teleman May 19, 2013 at 04:57 pm
Let's face it- we can find niche studies to suit any position we take- but the justice departmentRead More study I am citing is a large piece that goes from 1993-2010- before, during and after the 1994 assault weapons ban -and it spans a pretty large time frame in which to draw these conslusions. This is a very comprehensive look at gun crime in the US- and it shows massive decline despite rising ownership. Deny all you want, because to continue your agenda, it's your only choice.
Abby Normal May 19, 2013 at 11:27 am
Tele, I keep hearing the mantra from the right saying more guns equal less crime. The truth howeverRead More flies in the face of this propaganda. A recent study actually shows that the highest homicide rates are in the states with the fewest gun controls. States like Louisiana, South Carolina, Mississippi and Alaska just to name a few. Sure, there are fewer homicides in Alaska than in New York, but adjusted for population, the per-ca-pita homicide rate is significantly lower in New York.
Victoria Hochman May 10, 2013 at 06:59 pm
thanks
Victoria Hochman May 10, 2013 at 06:51 pm
Thanks Liz, We appreciate your support and I will pass your kind comments on to our staff. I'm sureRead More it will mean a lot to them.
joshua tanner May 10, 2013 at 06:07 pm
Nice photo