doitinnorth
  • Home
  • about
  • Advertise with Us
    • Advertise with Us -Success
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • doitinnorth
    • art/design
    • eat/drink
    • events/locations
    • evergreen
    • people/passions
    • shop/share
    • style/mode
    • style/mode-og
  • doitinnorth – sunset
  • home
  • home-original
  • join / subscribe
  • join doitinnorth – Landing Page
  • join doitinnorth – New Landing Page
  • Join for curated locations, style, art, people, shop, food and drink
  • login
  • member profile
  • privacy policy
  • shop/share – page 2
  • shop/share gallery
  • sign up success
  • Test
  • art/design
  • artists
  • eat/drink
  • events/locations
  • evergreen
  • featured
  • people/passions
  • shop/share
  • style/mode
Select Page
Lauren Good Day: LGD HOME

Lauren Good Day: LGD HOME

by doitinnorth | Jan 21, 2024 | style/mode

Lauren Good Day
Introducing

LGD HOME

Indigenous Interiors and Curated Home Good Collections

by Native American Artist Designer Lauren Good Day

…

 

Shop the NEW Geometric Rugs in 7 sizes and two color ways, Earth and Stone. Inspired by LGD’s original beadwork designs and MADE IN THE USA!

Geometric Earth Rug (MADE TO ORDER)
Geometric Earth Rug

(MADE TO ORDER)

Geometric Stone Rug (MADE TO ORDER)
Geometric Stone Rug

(MADE TO ORDER)

 

Shop LGD HOME

…

Lauren Good Day

Lauren Good Day “Good Day Woman” is an
Multi- award winning Arikara, Hidatsa, Blackfeet and Plains Cree artist
& sought after fashion designer. She is an enrolled member of the
Three Affiliated Tribes (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara Nation) of the Ft.
Berthold Reservation in North Dakota, USA and also a registered Treaty
Indian with the Sweet Grass Cree First Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada.
She has shown her artwork at the world’s most prestigious Native
American juried art shows such as the Santa Fe Indian Market in Santa Fe
NM, Heard Guild Museum Market in Phoenix AZ, Autry American Indian Arts
Marketplace Los Angeles CA, Eiteljorg Museum Indian Market Indianapolis
IN, Cherokee Indian Market in Tulsa OK, Red Earth Fine Arts Festival in
Oklahoma City OK and the Northern Plains Indian Art Show in Sioux Falls
SD. Her Awards include many First Places in Tribal Arts, Traditional
Arts, Cultural Arts, Diverse Arts, Beadwork, Drawings, Textiles and the
prestigious Best of Tribal Arts award. Lauren’s artwork has been part of
numerous solo and group exhibitions at galleries and museums across the
Country.

Being a sought after artist and designer
her work is in numerous public and private collections throughout the
United States, Canada and the World, including the The National Museum
of American Indian Washington DC and New York City, The Heard Museum,
Phoenix AZ, Buffalo Bill Center of the West, Plains Indian Museum Cody
Wyoming, and Red Cloud Heritage Center Pine Ridge SD. You can find her
work and mentions in publications such as Vogue, InStyle Magazine, New
York Times, Fashion Magazine, Cowboys & Indians Magazine,
Cosmopolitan and numerous national and international publications.

Lauren has passion for promoting and
revitalizing the arts of her people while developing new methods and
incorporating new trendsetting ideas in both the art & designs
communities. She has been creating Native American art since age 6.
Starting out with beadwork and Tribal regalia, she then expanded her
work into mediums such as quillwork, ledger drawings, rawhide parfleche,
and fashion design.

She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in
Indigenous Studies from the Institute of American Indian Arts and
Culture in Santa Fe, NM. Lauren lives on the rolling hills of North
Dakota, her traditional homelands. She continues to be steeped within
the cultural life ways of her people and actively helps with language
and culture revitalization efforts, participates in cultural
celebrations, powwows and her tribal ceremonial doings.  Her role as a
mother and woman of her tribe guide her to continue on the arts of her
people for the generations to come.

…

doitinnorth shop/share gallery

Living Resistance: An Indigenous Vision for Seeking Wholeness Every Day

…

ICYMI

Como Park Zoo & Conservatory Music Under Glass Series – St. Paul, MN

Welcome to the 2024 Polar Plunge for Special Olympics Minnesota

Welcome to the 2024 Polar Plunge for Special Olympics Minnesota

by doitinnorth | Jan 21, 2024 | evergreen, people/passions

Polar Plunge for Special Olympics Minnesota

…

Join the ice-cold tradition that supports the incredible athletes of Special Olympics Minnesota!

…

The Polar Plunge is a series of events where people go to the extreme to support Special Olympics Minnesota with 20+ locations across statewide. Will we see you there?

…

1. REGISTER

Sign up to Plunge at one of our 20+ locations or stay home and take the Virtual Plunge. Recruit friends and family to join your team!

2. FUNDRAISE

Raise the minimum $75 to support Special Olympics Minnesota athletes. Go above and beyond to make a greater impact and earn awesome incentives!

3. PLUNGE!

Jump into freezing cold water and bask in your generous glory!

…

…

Donate

…

doitinnorth shop/share gallery

Abaokai 48 Pieces Gold Award Medals Winner Medals Gold Prizes for Sports, Competitions, Olympic Style

…

ICYMI

Electric Fetus: Puzzlers Will Love This New Item – Minneapolis, MN

2024 Art Shanty Bde Unma – Lake Harriet, Minneapolis, MN

2024 Art Shanty Bde Unma – Lake Harriet, Minneapolis, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 14, 2024 | art/design, evergreen

2024 Art Shanty

…

We’re celebrating our twentieth anniversary season of weird and wonderful winters in 2024!

…

We’re excited to be back on the ice this winter in South Minneapolis! We look forward to welcoming grown adults and kids of all ages to play / learn / grow / laugh / smile / sing / groove / gather with us in the Art Shanty village.

…

ARTISTS + PERFORMERS

Our artists have been announced! Read all about the projects

 Plan your visit(s) with the Performance Schedule

…

ACCESSIBILITY

ASL Interpretation and Audio Description will be available on all festival dates from 11am-2pm. Head to the Welcome Shanty to get connected with your guide.

…

CLASSIC SHANTIES ARE BACK!

Artists had great success with the exterior-only festival in 2022 and 2023, adapting with whimsical creativity and expanding the notion of what a shanty project can be! This year we have invited artists to continue that trend OR go back to classic shanties with interior experiences. We’ve got a mix – so if you’ve been waiting to cozy up inside with us, this is your year! And if you’re still not comfortable with that, we got you!

…

SUPPORT ARTISTS + ARTMAKING!

It takes a village to build a village, and there are many ways to actively participate! We’ll soon be seeking volunteers for the on-ice program – sign up for our newsletter to get announcements. You can also contribute as a member with an annual donation of just $25 or if you’re a local business, offer a cash or in-kind donation!

…

…
Friends! We don’t have to tell you that we are experiencing the warmest winter on record this year, and that other events are canceling, adapting or postponing. Luckily Art Shanty Projects is extraordinarily nimble and flexible — embracing challenges with creativity is at the heart of our mission!
…
Staff members have been working behind the scenes to prepare for many potential scenarios for our program this year.
…
We’re glued to our weather apps (yay subzero temps next week!) and making visits to the lake regularly to observe changing conditions. The lake is re-freezing, and near the Bandshell we have 4” of fresh, clear ice (though the south end of the lake is open water again, ugh). We need a fully frozen lake with 10” of good ice at the site of our village to do the public program.
…
It’s unlikely that it will be cold enough, fast enough, to be on the ice in time for our scheduled January 20th opening.
We are considering several options for our program, including opening on schedule with Plan Beach or postponing one week to be On-Ice if it seems reasonable for ice to build in time (we also have to be pretty confident that it won’t just melt again!)
…
Follow the here about adaptations, timing, and staff considerations! As you wait (like us) for more information to unfold, click around to read about artist projects and start dreaming about your Art Shanty adventure — it will happen!
…
…

Event

2024 Art Shanty

Updated Open: Friday, January 27th – Sunday, February 11th

Weekends, 10am – 4pm

…

Location

Bde Unma / Lake Harriet

…

doitinnorth shop/share gallery

Bde Maka Ska Minnesota – Bde Maka Ska Lake Pullover Hoodie

…

ICYMI

Falling for Flavor: Hormel Foods Recipes From Chef Barry

ICYMI: In Conversation with Marion Parke … Ergonomic high heels that look cool! – Minneapolis, MN

ICYMI: In Conversation with Marion Parke … Ergonomic high heels that look cool! – Minneapolis, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 14, 2024 | style/mode

Photographs by Caitlin Abrams

…

She left her podiatric surgery practice to create a unicorn: comfortable, ergonomic high heels that look cool!

…

MSPMAG: When Marion Parke thinks about her preppy looks from her high school days back in Oklahoma, “I cringe a little bit,” she says. Her look today is more “surgeon on her day off”—her long blond hair cascades over her nautical-striped sweater, and her flared jeans tastefully obscure a pair of wicked black leather kitten-heeled boots of her own namesake label. But she credits her school days playing field hockey with inspiring her to enter the medical profession: “Whenever somebody got hurt,” she says, “the only people who could come out on the field were the coach and then whichever parent was a doctor or a nurse.” So now, yes, Parke is the founder of the Marion Parke women’s footwear collection, but she’s also still a licensed podiatric (“You can just say foot and ankle,” she says) surgeon.

In fact, at lunch with me at the D’Amico café on the ground floor of International Market Square (she seems genuinely stoked that it’s Taco Tuesday), a couple floors down from her label’s headquarters, she recalls another moment of inspiration: sitting in her first-year biomechanics class at the podiatry college she attended outside of Chicago, learning about different foot types.

“And as I was listening to the description of what happens to people with high arches,” she says, “the anatomy of their feet, the problems that they have, I started realizing, Gosh, all those problems really sound similar to the problems that women have when they’re wearing a high heel.”

Years later, she was living in Minnesota, working part time at a podiatric surgery clinic in Edina, very pregnant with her first child, buying up boxes of heels from DSW and slicing them up to find out how they were put together. She eventually found a shoemaker in Italy who helped her navigate the design and manufacture process, and she brought her first line of Marion Parke shoes to market in 2015. She used to run the label out of a converted closet on the floor above Spoon and Stable in the North Loop. Now, Marion Parke’s headquarters are in International Market Square. She no longer operates on feet; instead, she outfits them with $495 buff suede pumps and $795 black glitter kitten-heel boots. First Lady Jill Biden was photographed wearing Marion Parke heels to the coronation of King Charles.

“People ask, ‘When you stopped seeing patients, was that hard?’” Parke says it was, and she says she still misses surgery. “But I think I can help more women in a year with my shoe company than I could over a lifetime of being a doctor.”


Trifecta

Three things about Marion Parke

  1. Marco Durantini was the shoemaker who oversaw Marion Parke’s production in Italy until retiring in 2021. “He actually came out of retirement to work with me.”
  2. Marion Parke is expanding shoe production to Brazil. “Women are saying, ‘If you can make it outside of Italy and make the shoe for less, I’d rather save the money.’”
  3. “If you’re going to wear high heels, you need to stretch your calf muscles every day,” she says.

What’s the point of a high heel?

I’m certainly no expert, but I think if you go way back, men were wearing them to ride horses.

And then didn’t members of the French aristocracy start wearing them to make themselves look taller?

Oh, for sure. In a fashion sense, yeah—there’s always been a confidence element.

Who was your fashion inspiration growing up? Did your mom wear heels?

Well, it’s funny, because it was actually my grandmother who loved to sew dresses for my sister and I—we’re only a year and a half apart, so we dressed alike a lot. But no, I think my mother would say she wasn’t particularly a fashion maven, but I really did admire the moms who were.

Where did you get your ideas about fashion and beauty?

I would say my mother certainly is an admirer of design. She’s an artist.

What kind of an artist?

She has a fine art degree. This is a cool story: My mom left college when she got married; it was that time in the world in the late ’60s. And repeatedly throughout my entire life, she’d always say, “I wish I never did that.” So, she went back to school at the University of Oklahoma eight years ago and earned her BFA.

So, your parents weren’t like, “Become a doctor or else.”

My dad was an attorney, and my grandfather was an attorney—he became a judge on the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. I would say that my parents were an opposites-attract sort of couple—she was whimsical and creative, and he was very organized and regimented. I think there’s an element of that DNA in my brand, too, this idea of science and biomechanics and anatomy meets creativity and artfulness.

The high heel was never intended to be biomechanically safe, was it?

It’s funny to say it that way because this whole idea of “beauty is pain”—I dislike that so much. It doesn’t have to be that way, really.

Well, wear flats then, right?

I’d say we’ve all worn high heels that have actually been pretty comfortable. You wear them for a long time at an event, at a wedding. And we’ve all been in flats or kitten heels that were excruciating. Footwear is interesting in this way. I learned this when I got started—that a well-fitting shoe comes down to millimeters.

But don’t high heels present an actual medical risk?

I would say high heels put the wearer’s foot into a biomechanical position that’s similar to what people with high arches have. So, when you rise up onto your toes, the anatomy of the gastrocsoleus complex­—the complex that includes your calf muscles and your Achilles tendon—tends to supinate. And that’s where we sprain our ankles.

…
marion-parke-2
…

So, you’re more likely to roll your ankle in heels.

Exactly. That’s a common problem that women have when they wear high heels, because you’re overloading the outside of your foot. Part of what the insole that I invented does—it’s twice patented now; it’s really exciting—is it helps discourage that tendency to over-supinate and to be so unstable. The footwear industry—countless brands, small and large—has leaned on the idea that it’s easiest to market cushioning and to make the toe box wider. And that inevitably makes the shoe look heavy—“grandma”—just ugly.

When did you decide that you were going to leave your podiatric surgeon practice to design shoes?

Before we moved here for my husband’s job, I had been treating patients in the Bay Area, and I just was hearing more and more from women, “Gosh, why can’t I wear anything that I want to wear for more than 30 minutes?” And whether it was a female patient, men, women, kids, it seemed my encounters almost always ended with how to shop for shoes based on your foot type: “Here’s what to look for.” And then that sort of evolved into patients saying, “Dr. Parke, you should go on the news and tell people what to do because this is really helpful.” And that evolved into, “You should make shoes.”

Your husband is an ophthalmologist. Wasn’t he initially skeptical of you leaving your medical practice to design shoes?

He was like, “If it was such a great idea, how come someone hasn’t done it yet?” Fair question.

What was your response to that?

I said, “I think that people have tried to do it; I just don’t think they’ve done it on quite this taste level. And I think a lot in the fashion world—in the creative world—it’s about taste.”

What was your design language initially? And what kind of woman were you hoping to dress—cool podiatric surgeons like yourself?

I was frustrated with the way the shoes that I admired fit and felt.

And what shoes did you admire?

At that time, I loved stilettos. I didn’t like prissy, but “ladylike with an edge” is what I like to think that we still design toward. But for me, it was this idea of wanting to communicate what the brand’s point of difference is. My hope was that when women hear our story, they’re going to want to throw all their shoes in their closet away and start over. And for us, it was like, Well, what would they want to start their shoe wardrobe over with? So, we started with the classics: some really great Mary Janes.

How high are the heels on your shoes?

The highest heel that we make is 85 millimeters.

How many inches is that?

3.3. You get the look and feel of a 4-inch, but it’s a lot more comfortable, a lot more wearable. We didn’t do pressure testing; there wasn’t a science-y idea behind that.

Because the scientific consensus is “Don’t wear high heels,” right?

It’s funny, because even the American Podiatric Medical Association says, “Look, we know we’re not going to talk women out of wearing high heels, so let’s educate women on how to wear them in a smart way.”

“My hope was that when women hear our story, they’re going to want to throw all their shoes in their closet away and start over.”

—Marion Parke, Footwear Designer

The first celebrity to publicly wear your shoes was Carrie Brownstein, who sings and plays guitar in  the band Sleater-Kinney and who stars in Portlandia.

The coolest cool girl ever.

And she wore your shoes on Colbert, right?

I still get chills thinking about that.

Did you make that happen?

What was cool about that connection was we did our first photo shoot in New York. It was just a stills shoot—we didn’t have models at the time; we just had the shoes. The photographer is in a band with Carrie Brownstein’s stylist. I think we were chatting on the side and he was like, “So, who do you want to get in your shoes?” And I was like, “Carrie Brownstein is the ultimate cool girl, and if this message can resonate with someone like her, you get the seal of approval from someone who’s cool.” Because for a while, the idea of comfortable shoes, that was not cool. So, if you could get the ultimate cool girl to wear them…

You could make comfort cool.

Yes. So, we had sent her some shoes to consider. Carrie was on her book tour at the time. And, yeah, she goes on Colbert. I get a text from her stylist saying, “Just so you know, Carrie wore your shoes for her Colbert interview,” and I was like, “Oh my God.” And I said to my husband, “I can quit now.” And he was like, “All right, slow down.” And what was cool about Carrie, too, when she was on that book tour, I was following her on Instagram, and she was going from city to city, and I was like, “Oh my God, she’s wearing them again.” And that also was validation to me. I was like, “Well, she must like them.”

She was addicted to them.

She must think they’re comfortable, yes. Her stylist said, “I can’t get her to take them off.”

When did you find out that Jill Biden wore your shoes?

The first time that we saw her wearing them, it was this beautiful photo on Instagram, and she’s walking down the hall outside of the Oval Office. This was almost a year after the election, and she’s wearing this long navy coat, and she’s wearing these bright red pumps that we knew she had but didn’t know if she would ever wear them.

Did you get them to the First Lady, or did she buy them?

That’s classified.

Does Jill Biden hurt you with potential Republican shoe buyers?

I keep saying that over and over again: It’s just such an honor, no matter what your politics are, for a First Lady to be wearing your brand, as a start-up business, and she repeatedly goes for them. And I think the reason Dr. Biden chooses to rewear them—I mean, clearly, they work for her, right? They fit well, they feel good, but also, we’re a female-founded brand based here in the U.S. And they’re shoes that last—we don’t make fast fashion. They’re well made, high quality, and you can wear them over and over again, hopefully for many, many years. It’s funny, because I think we still have customers who don’t know all of the brand DNA and the story; they’re just buying them because they like the look.

You don’t really have a designer signature either—like red bottoms or something.

I think the customer who likes my brand likes discretion. The overt branding, that’s not who we are. We are much more of a quiet luxury. The comfort element is also very discreet. And for me, that’s what I wanted. I need a comfortable shoe, but I don’t want it to scream, “I’m wearing a comfortable shoe.”


 

By Steve Marsh

Steve Marsh is a senior writer at Mpls.St.Paul Magazine.

…

doitinnorth shop/share gallery

Shoes A-Z: The Collection of the Museum at FIT

…

ICYMI

Winery Wonderland at 7 Vines Vineyard – Dellwood, MN

Experience Rochester’s Restaurant Week – Rochester, MN

Experience Rochester’s Restaurant Week – Rochester, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 14, 2024 | eat/drink

Workshop Food Hall & Bar
Restaurant Week is coming…here’s a sneak peek of our grilled shrimp salad!

…

 

Experience Rochester presents Rochester Restaurant Week, a weeklong celebration showcasing Rochester’s dynamic dining scene.

…
Rochester Restaurant Week participating restaurants will feature promotional lunch and dinner menus including two or three course prix fixe meals with special pricing. Dine-in and carryout options are available. There’s variety to please every taste and budget!
…

30+ Participating restaraunts with Special Menus, Special Prices

…

…

 

Event

Rochester Restaurant Week

Monday, January 15th – Sunday, January 21st

…

Rochester Public Transit (RPT) will again be offering free rides to diners on their way to participating restaurants. Download the RPT fare voucher on rochesterrestaurantweek, present the voucher to the driver on any RPT bus route during Rochester Restaurant Week, January 15th – 21st, and no fare will be charged for the trip to and from participating restaurants.

…

doitinnorth shop/share gallery

Rochester, Minnesota: A Visual and Historic Journey

…

ICYMI

Artful Living’s Top 10 Beauty Stories from the Archives

« Older Entries
Next Entries »

 

Recent Posts

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
join/subscribe - copyright © 2019-2025 doitinnorth™ - all rights reserved - privacy policy - advertise with us - contact us

Pin It on Pinterest