image description
Renee Tessier is opening LifeStyler this week in Berkshire Emporium on Main Street.

North Adams Home Shop Offers Unique, Vintage Home Decor

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

Renee Tessier's new shop offers a mix of new, vintage and repurposed home decor items. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Renee Tessier is hoping to turn what started as a hobby into a second successful business venture. 
 
"This is my passion. I love to recreate and repurpose and reuse and I love to make things look beautiful," Tessier said last week as she styled her new space in the Berkshire Emporium. "A lot of people don't see the beauty in something like a dresser or a buffet, or to take a large hutch and make it into two pieces and change things. I love home decorating and decor."
 
Tessier's new store LifeStyler is a mix of repurposed, vintage and new home decor items. She describes the shop as a mix of "home decor, refurbished furniture, and boutique items."
 
She already operates the well-known Renee's Diner, a popular eatery on Massachusetts Avenue for the past dozen years. But she's always loved styling and redecorating.
 
"People would follow me on Facebook or Instagram and look at my house and asked me if I would come decorate their house," she said. "I thought about it for a few years, opening up a space or store, and when Keith [Bona] came to the community and said, 'hey, I have an opening,' I gave him my idea and, as well as a few other people had come to him, he thought this was a good fit for him and for me."
 
Bona, proprietor of Berkshire Emporium on Main Street, has been experimenting with retail incubator spaces for more than year. Several sandwich shops/bakeries have already operated out of the antique shop, including the current Bailey's Bakery, and Bona has expanded the concept to a number of mini storefronts including LifeStyler. 
 
Tessier's storefront is on the Holden Street side but accessed through the Emporium. Her merchandise includes repainted and repurposed furniture, home decor such as baskets and bottles, vases and florals, tchotchkes and tapestries. 
 
Her style is a mix of French provincial, boho and modern farmhouse layered eclectically, and the shop offers inspiration for those hoping to achieve the same effect. 
 
"Not a lot of people know how to layer merchandise, vases, florals, beads," she said. "Not that I'm an expert by any stretch of the means but I do, you know, enjoy doing it. So I think about it a lot and I think that I've executed it well."
 
Tessier said the items are high quality and hand picked and range in price from $5 or $6 to up to $1,000, including furniture that she's repurposed and painted. 
 
"I'm not a box store. I'm not a Walmart or Target. I can't buy stuff at large quantity," she said. "So the stuff you're getting could be low to medium to high price, but it's all quality stuff. I've hand picked it all.
 
"There are some pieces in here that are one of a kind and there's some pieces that are multiples."
 
Tessier's planning a soft opening this week and a grand opening this weekend. The shop's open the same business hours as Berkshire Emporium from 11 to 5 and 11 to 4. 
 
"I'm really excited. It was a lot of work. A lot of hard work and especially, you know, running another business and having a family," Tessier said. "But I think this is something the community really needs in our town. We don't have anything like this. There's no other store like this around here."

Tags: new business,   home & garden,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Berkshire County Homes Celebrating Holiday Cheer

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

There's holiday cheer throughout the Berkshires this winter.

Many homeowners are showing their holiday spirit by decorating their houses. We asked for submissions so those in the community can check out these fanciful lights and decor when they're out.

We asked the homeowners questions on their decorations and why they like to light up their houses.

In Great Barrington, Matt Pevzner has decorated his house with many lights and even has a Facebook page dedicated to making sure others can see the holiday joy.

Located at 93 Brush Hill Road, there's more than 61,000 lights strewn across the yard decorating trees and reindeer and even a polar bear. 

The Pevzner family started decorating in September by testing their hundreds of boxes of lights. He builds all of his own decorations like the star 10-foot star that shines done from 80-feet up, 10 10-foot trees, nine 5-foot trees, and even the sleigh, and more that he also uses a lift to make sure are perfect each year.

"I always decorated but I went big during COVID. I felt that people needed something positive and to bring joy and happiness to everyone," he wrote. "I strive to bring as much joy and happiness as I can during the holidays. I love it when I get a message about how much people enjoy it. I've received cards thanking me how much they enjoyed it and made them smile. That means a lot."

Pevzner starts thinking about next year's display immediately after they take it down after New Year's. He gets his ideas by asking on his Facebook page for people's favorite decorations. The Pevzner family encourages you to take a drive and see their decorations, which are lighted every night from 5 to 10.

In North Adams, the Wilson family decorates their house with fun inflatables and even a big Santa waving to those who pass by.

The Wilsons start decorating before Thanksgiving and started decorating once their daughter was born and have grown their decorations each year as she has grown. They love to decorate as they used to drive around to look at decorations when they were younger and hope to spread the same joy.

"I have always loved driving around looking at Christmas lights and decorations. It's incredible what people can achieve these days with their displays," they wrote.

They are hoping their display carries on the tradition of the Arnold Family Christmas Lights Display that retired in 2022.

The Wilsons' invite you to come and look at their display at 432 Church St. that's lit from 4:30 to 10:30 every night, though if it's really windy, the inflatables might not be up as the weather will be too harsh.

In Pittsfield, Travis and Shannon Dozier decorated their house for the first time this Christmas as they recently purchased their home on Faucett Lane. The two started decorating in November, and hope to bring joy to the community.

"If we put a smile on one child's face driving by, then our mission was accomplished," they said. 

View Full Story

More North Adams Stories