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Eileen Fisher's Vice President of Design Julie Rubiner feels the sustainable and community-minded brand is a good fit in her hometown of Great Barrington.
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Store manager Laura Berg cuts the ribbon Thursday on the new Eileen Fisher clothing store on Main Street.
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Clothing Brand Eileen Fisher Opens in Great Barrington

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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The Great Barrington store is the second in the country to offer a 'Renew' section with refurbished Eileen Fisher clothing. 
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — With the snip of ribbon, Main Street's newest clothing store opened on Thursday.
 
Eileen Fisher established her eponymous brand 40 years ago with an eye on easy, timeless, and sustainable clothing for women. The brand now has more than 50 storefronts and is carried in more than 300 department stores. 
 
The Great Barrington store is the sixth opened in Massachusetts. 
 
"Speaking for all of us at Eileen Fisher, we are really excited to be a part of this community," marketing strategist Jaimie Lafrano said at the ribbon cutting.
 
Lafrano said Eileen Fisher doesn't want to just be a clothing store but a place for the community and to learn from the community.
 
"It's really meant to be also a place where we want to build community, hold workshops here and do things not just selling. We want to be part of this community and learn from each other, so we're calling it 'Lab.' It's only the second one in the whole country," she said.
 
The store features a "Renew" section, where garments that have been returned for store credit and are ready to be sold again, part of the company's zero-waste initiative.
 
"These are garments that have been worn by people, and they're brought back. They get credit for it, and then we refurbish them, we clean them, and they're from previous collections of ours, and they're very efficiently priced," Lafrano said. 
 
"So it's really a place for everyone to shop at different price points and for us to learn from our consumers that come in here because they say, 'Oh, I remember this. Are we ever going to bring this back on the line?'"
 
Lafrano said a line made of recycled fabrics will be released in the fall. The garments will be brought in, taken apart and remade into new clothes.
 
The garments are largely made from organic cottons and linens, with some jersey, silks, crepes, wools and velvets. Sizes run from extra small to 3X.
 
Vice President of Design Julie Rubiner, who works closely with Fisher, said they have joked about opening a store in Great Barrington as that's where Rubiner lives.
 
"I'm just delighted that my two worlds have come together. I can kind of be with the customer more and see how the product is in real life, I'm usually behind the scenes and not at the customer facing," Rubiner said.
 
She has been with Eileen Fisher for 17 years and also owns Rubiner's Cheesemongers with her husband. She said she is excited to be able to have another store that matches with Great Barrington.
 
"I'm just excited for our town to have another new, really thoughtful store that kind of fits into the culture and vibe of this area. I think it's just going to be a fun new addition we always, as a merchant already, I just love when new stores open and bring new energy into this awesome town that I live in," she said.
 
The store is located at 316 Main St. and is open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday noon to 5 p.m.

Tags: new business,   clothing,   

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Berkshire Communities Commemorate the 'Noble Train of Artillery'

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The nation's 250th anniversary starts on Saturday with the commemoration of Col. Henry Knox's train of artillery into Massachusetts. 
 
In December 1775, at the direction of General George Washington, 25-year-old Knox led an expedition to retrieve captured British cannons from Fort Ticonderoga in New York. 
 
Over the next 10 weeks, through deep snow, frozen rivers, and rugged mountains, Knox and his teamsters transported more than 60 tons of artillery across more than 50 towns and two states to the American siege lines outside Boston. 
 
The artillery's arrival in late January enabled Washington to fortify Dorchester Heights and threaten occupied Boston, forcing the British to withdraw — the first significant victory of Washington's Continental Army.
 
Knox Trail 250 relives the story with a modern procession of ceremonies, re-enactments, and community commemorations along the original route, honoring the people, towns, and spirit that made it possible. There are 56 trail markers commemorating the "noble train of artillery" route to Boston.
 
The collaboration of communities, historical societies, Berkshires250 and MA250 includes events in the Berkshire towns of Alford, Great Barrington, Monterey, and Stockbridge.  
 
Saturday begins with the crossing of the "Noble Train" from Hillsdale, N.Y., into Alford at Route 71 at 10 a.m. and a wreath-laying ceremony at the Henry Knox Marker. Re-enactors and state and local officials from both states will be attending. The Hillsdale firehouse will host the re-enactors for an educational program at 11:30 a.m. There is limited parking at the marker, and the public is strongly encouraged to attend one of the later programs
 
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