* At Oak Street Gallery are, from left, gallery owner Karl Young, Lilla Kieiwan of Occasions, Robert Davies of RUN Ragged and Roslynne Lumsden of Shop Around The Corner. Picture by Mandy Jones.
Llangollen has been given a big pre-Christmas boost with the opening of six new businesses.
Among the newly-arrived retailers is former weapons
expert Robert Davies who worked on the fight scenes in blockbuster films like
Gladiator and Braveheart.
While high streets in other parts of the UK are
struggling, Llangollen is bucking the national trend with its combination of
attractions and a vibrant and varied independent retail sector.
Between them the five new shops and an art gallery
have created more than 20 new jobs.
The news has delighted the organisers of
Denbighshire County Council’s #LoveLiveLocal campaign which is
encouraging people to do their Christmas shopping locally.
Even the quieter areas of the town like Oak Street
now have their own communities of local independents – the Oak Street Gallery
and Shop Around The Corner have opened in recent months to join greengrocer Dee
Valley Produce with its array of fruit and veg and Gwalia Ceramics.
In nearby Castle Street ex-film man Robert Davies
has launched his new shop, RUN Ragged – it stands for Retro, Used and New.
His stock ranges from 1920’s trousers to 1980s
cufflinks with brand new top hats thrown in and he also gives space to a local
leatherworker and an artisan maker of carved walking sticks.
Robert said: “Llangollen is lucky in not having
major out-of-town retailers so it has plenty of small independents and there is
a lot going on here, lots of things to do and all in easy walking distance.
“Because there are so many independents it’s not
the same as other high streets where you see the same big names everywhere.
“I used to be in Wrexham and I have been pleasantly
surprised at the difference. There are lots of people who visit who were
brought here as children and now they bring their parents back and their own
children as well and there’s something here for all of them.”
Karl Young opened the Oak Street Gallery this
summer and he said: “I’d never done this before although I had done pop-ups but
it’s been a lot of fun.
“We exhibit a number of artists and this month we
are exclusively local, all from within ten miles of Llangollen.
“I’m an oil and landscape painter myself but we
have other painters, a couple of wood-turners with beautiful hand-turned bowls,
prints and hand-made cards.
“Coming here takes you a bit off the beaten track,
it’s about exploring the town and finding something you like and I hope that
entertains you even if you don’t buy anything but if you do you know it’s
unique.”
Just up the street is Shop Around The Corner with
its array of jewellery, locally-made items and gifts, an off-shoot of the
hugely popular Shop In The Clouds at the top of the Horseshoe Pass and owner
Roslynne Lumsden said: “We’ve been up there for over 30 years and I used to
have a shop selling doll’s house furniture in Llangollen and I’ve always
regretted not having it any more.
“This came up for lease and I just thought we had a
great town around us and here we are up and running and once people know we’re
here they find us easily – Oak Street is doing so well now that we have more
people than cars down here.”
Elsewhere in Castle Street there have been more
openings, with Occasions offering hand-made chocolates as well as soya wax
candles, artisan bath soaps and lotions and Welsh cards, and Sweet Daisy with
its sticky cakes and puddings.
As part of the Christmas #LoveLiveLocal campaign,
Denbighshire County Council will be posting a video to highlight what the
county has to offer and the campaign will encourage people to support local
independent businesses by using the hashtag on Twitter and Facebook to share
good experiences they’ve had as well as promote products and services locally
they have ‘loved’.
The campaign is aimed at persuading people in
Denbighshire to shop local this Christmas to give the county’s high street
traders a boost in the run up to the festive season.
They reckon that if a third of the county’s 30,000
households spend half their Christmas cash with their local retailers instead
of buying online or travelling to the bigger shopping centres it could boost
the county’s economy by 2.5 million.
Llangollen is a template for how small towns can
operate successfully and retain bustling high streets with such varied offers
as SAS Outdoors which provides activities from foraging to river bugs and gorge
walking as well as restaurants, cafes, delicatessens and pubs.
Retail guru Helen Hodgkinson, from Dyserth, a
former fashion retailer and college lecturer who has worked closely with
businesses in Denbighshire points to where the town is getting things right.
She said: “There’s a great offer here in Llangollen,
lots of unusual, quirky, specialist independent shops offering great products
and people do want to buy something that’s a bit different, something with a
story behind it, but you can’t just expect them to turn up, you’ve got to get
them interested.”