3 min read

Bon voyage, inabstracto

Two round mirrors on a wall showing reflections of the inabstracto merchandise.

The weekly micro-decorating newsletter * Issue 7 of 13, SS24 *
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Toronto's design community is in mourning this month, because one of the best vintage stores in the city is closing. While it's not a final goodbye – there are plans in the works for a new location– it's still the end of an era. West Queen West won't be the same without Kate and Julie's taste-defining outpost of mid-century furniture and objects.

A store like this is more than a place to buy stuff. It's a museum without the intimidation factor, where you can pick up design knowledge just by looking around and striking up a conversation. The emphasis on Canadian products means that a typical visit becomes a low-key exercise in patriotism.

A view of inabstracto from the sidewalk.

Inabstracto's street presence is essential to its charm. The window displays flanking the front door are home to unusual mixes of art, furniture, and objects that can stop you in your tracks with their daring collisions. At a time when Toronto is becoming a city of identical retail strips in every neighbourhood, encountering inabstracto is like meeting a real live person in a row of faceless mannequins.

One of the inabstracto windows showing an armchair, side table, lamp, vase and painting.

It was inevitable that finds from inabstracto were a regular part of this newsletter. Let's look back. A molded plywood chair, photographed in the shop, appeared in this piece about accepting life's everyday flaws:

Living with imperfection
How to make peace with yourself.

A patio furniture classic was the star of this article about maximizing your summer:

Six reasons to make it a Solair summer
This design classic is meant to be yours.

Some tops by Toronto-based designer Tahir Mahmoud headed up this piece about toys for grown-ups:

The three stages of toy
Which one are you?

And a sleek mid-century vase illustrated this story about how I acquired my very first design object:

How I became a micro-decorator
It started as a game. Then it went further.

Our city is dotted with homes changed by discoveries made at 1160 Queen Street West. In a way, the store is more than a single location, it's a map, like an airline's diagram of flight routes, with objects in place of planes.

My last visit was this past Saturday. And of course I ran into something that seemed to be waiting for me, even though the closing sale had already been going for a while, an ashtray from Norway made to accommodate pipes:

Vase and ashtray on the surface of a teak dresser.

Kate threw in an actual pipe for good measure, a gesture typical of the kind customer interactions that make this place unique.

You still have your own chance, until July 31, to visit this storied venue and find something that's been waiting for you. Get yourself over to the shop, pronto, before it closes its doors. You can peek at the sale items before going in person.

In the meantime, bon voyage inabstracto! Hope to see you again soon at your next destination.

Thank you for reading.