Ben’s (41) favourite online vintage stores
By Ben Chamberlain (above, centre).
When it comes to shopping for vintage, it’s hard to beat the in-person experience. The place, the smell, the hunt, that surprise item that grabs your attention - all this builds into the charm and enigma of vintage.
For most people, their favourite vintage shop is the one they know. A good vintage shop builds a community, which then ties into a larger group of enthusiasts. You only have to go to Mr Vintage Fayre or Classic Car-boot Sale, Inspiration or Rose Bowl to get a sense that it’s all connected.
But on that slog of a commute, or a night where sleep just doesn’t seem to come, the glowing device in your hand can also present good options. The problem is the number of places, across eBay, websites and Instagram, all varying wildly in both type and price.
Here’s a list of my favourites, broken down into regions and by platform. Each has a quick summary of the types of clothes on offer, and the price. The latter two are inevitably connected - you might be after a rare collectible or just something good value - but this breakdown hopefully helps you sort through it all.
Note to reader: This list is personal and not meant to be comprehensive. Please do add your own favourites in the comments, and let other readers know too.
United Kingdom
Stock: Preppy streetwear twist on heritage vintage style, worn denim, sweats and layering
Price: £ to ££
A personal favourite. Ted, the owner, has always done a great job of mixing true vintage, ‘vintage reproductions’ and streetwear. Well priced, with a good mixture of items ranging from 40s military and workwear to 90s sportswear and streetwear. Check Instagram and the web-store for new items, though this is not frequently updated.
Stock: Older vintage and a fair selection of bigger sizes generally
Price: ££ to £££
A shop very dear to my heart, as is the owner Ben. Now based in Burnham-on-Crouch, his web-shop is updated regularly and always keeps prices fair for the item and age. Specialising in ‘true vintage’ (so older) his core stock will be between 1930-1970 with a lean towards classic Americana. If the stock interests you, I highly recommend heading down to the shop. There will always be something you can’t walk away from.
Stock: A mix of European and basic Americana vintage
Price: £ to ££
I haven’t had the pleasure of visiting Butterworths in Totnes, but have always admired the selection of items. There is a thoughtfulness to the socials and website presentation that makes it easy to shop, and brings out the uniqueness of each garment. Keep an eye on their Instagram, as some of the rarer and more specialised items get debuted there and tend to sell quickly.
Stock: Japanese quality vintage, classic Americana
Price: ££ to £££
Moving from Hong Kong in 2023, Larry and Dorothy brought with them 20 years of collecting vintage with a focus on classic Americana, and have set up the closest thing to a Tokyo vintage store in London. Besides the recognisable and highly collectible pieces (think Levi’s), they showcase lesser-known labels too, bringing undiscovered brands and their details to a wider audience. Prices vary, but are fair for the items they carry, which to have in one place online is becoming a rarity.
Stock: 40s-70s with a focus on 70s, American-made denim, streetwear and made in Italy
Price: £
A new store I only stumbled across researching this article and pleased I did. Nic has built a good website that only opened last year; easy to navigate with a good mix of items, it might not be all top tier but you’ll easily find something you like at a fair price. Some good sportswear pieces, perfect for summer layering, 60s-80s suede jackets, American-made denim and western wear, with varied tees and other assorted goodies.
Stock: European Vintage and military
Price: ££ to £££
Blighty, as you might expect from the name, specialises in British wartime military and civilian clothing. Jamie has a great eye for the more off-beat and interesting items the British military produced, with a more homegrown approach to manufacturing and design, over-engineering everything. The website is a must for details and design, and always the possibility of finding something you have never seen before; browse the website with an open mind, something will jump out at you.
Stock: Olive drab fatigues and camo
Price: £ to ££
For all things military, and especially olive drab, Omega is a great place to go. If you’re looking for a jungle jacket and HBT [herringbone twill], this would be the place, with one of the best online selections I’ve seen. The prices are a fair for the items, and if you are thinking of buying a repro piece, come here first. Not a lot of rare big-ticket items. The selection of camo is if good, and especially tiger-stripe if you are a small size.
Stock: Accessible vintage at a good price
Price: £
Giurz Bazaar is a small operation that has some big pieces pass through. The website is full of scuffed preppy items, with a nice selection of vintage sweatshirts, classic old Ralph and a mix of military and relaxed tailoring. There is also a nice selection of small items which are fun and unique, like the selection of vintage pin badges, rugs and ashtrays.
Stock: Vintage print tees
Price: ££
Dog London essentially does one thing, T-shirts, but it does it well. There are nice niche prints to choose from - who wouldn’t want a Butthole Surfers T-shirt to finish off that 90s airport-style fit… Mainly music related, there are a lot of tees here you can spend time trawling through.
Stock: Vintage tees and oddities
Price: ££ to £££
Curated by Matt Sloane, Jerks specialises in vintage tees. The offering is varied, a balance of niche and kitsch music and movies, with some fun prints as well as iconic ones, where the sub and counter-culture vibe of the time is embodied in a t-shirt. The ‘objects’ section is weird and wonderful, full of things you don’t need but instantly want, or maybe do need after enough thought - like the Prozac Post-it Notes or the Branded American Pie Lube-Glue Set.
Stock: Artisanal, bohemian style, good fades and fair prices
Price : £
Is and does exactly what the name suggests. Bare-bones, no frills, but a one-stop-shop for good vintage French workwear. If you are after a chore jacket, I would suggest looking here before anywhere else. The basic blue French chore is plentiful and well priced, alongside some fantastic rarer moleskin examples, all with excellent wear and fading.
Stock: Classic British Tailoring with a lean into a country Gent aesthetic.
Price: Fair to Mid
Savvy Row is a comprehensive website when looking for all things suiting; meticulously categorised and listed making them a great resource when hunting for a second hand whistle. Focusing on classic British tailoring, you can shop filtering by decade, style and size from Savile Row to Dunn & Co. The devils in the detail the offering and can all come down to the subtleties of cut, cloth and style, which, can be a little dated.
Stock: One-off collectibles and uniquely worn items
Price: £££
The Vintage Showroom is what many aspire to be: a complete, comprehensive and considered resource for designers, vintage enthusiasts and collectors. Although the offering online is quite sparse, it deserves a mention for being one of the best at curating not just vintage but incredibly unique pieces that inspire. They are now offering specific items from the archive for sale for the first time, so worth keeping an eye on if you have deep pockets and a taste for absolute top-tier collectibles.
Stock: Fun small items and household goods
Price: £
Though not strictly a vintage shop, the Sagebrush Rodeo vintage section is worth a look. Full of one-off small items, the collection has a perfectly narrow western aesthetic: you know what you’re gonna get, and you’re not disappointed. If you have the westernwear boxes ticked: boots, double denim, stetson etc, but still have an itch that isn’t scratched, maybe these little lifestyle items will hit the spot. The selection of Americana-tchotchkes is unique, fun and hard not to just buy one for the coffee table.
Europe
Stock: Knick-knacks, homewares and jewellery
Price: £ to £££
Ckx Studio in Amsterdam is a gem: the selection of homewares and jewellery is quite special and very tasteful. Leaning towards all things indigo and Americana, the selection of faded denim is very good, though sizes can run on the small side. In between the accessories and denim there are some really quite special items, which do come at a premium, but not unfairly so.
Website updates are limited to around four drops a year, but there are regular story sales on instagram, so that’s a good place to follow and keep up to date with.
Stock: Simple faded denim, 90’s Americana aesthetic and workwear
Price: ££
Founded in 1982 by David Asseraf but now helmed by his sons Nathaniel and Noam, Broadway & Sons has made a name for itself not only for selling classic vintage, but also becoming a modern ‘taste maker’ on the vintage scene. The online store is full of accessible and wearable items, with the odd showstopper. If you are after some nicely worn jeans from the 80s and 90s, this is certainly worth a look, and the rest of the items for sale tend to have a nice lived-in patina. Pricing is fair for the more accessible vintage, but rarer items run a premium.
Stock: Good staples
Price: £
Tijd Capsule, started by Niels Schuit in 2023, offers a wide range of vintage clothing, ranging from selvedge denim and workwear to more modern items, with a few repro pieces thrown in as well. Niels tends to offer more specialised pieces through the bricks and mortar business before listing online, so always worth checking Instagram for items of special interest.
Stock: A tightly curated selection
Price: £ to ££
Thought not strictly a vintage shop, the vintage selection here curated by Doug has some interesting offerings of a good pedigree. There isn’t a lot to choose from, but what there is, is always worth a look.
Stock: Worn European workwear, vintage designer high-fashion
Price: ££ to £££
Ukrainian-based The Pure Garb is a mix of everything: vintage, designer, streetwear and sportswear. It’s not about a time period or date, it’s just about the items themselves. The style is bohemian and fashion forward, and I’m here for it. Prices are a little on the premium end, but there are some great pieces all in one place, which you can tell has taken time to source.
United States and Canada
Stock: Older vintage at a good price. A small but quality selection of tees, denim and military.
Price: £
Bryce has been selling vintage clothing online as Little Chum since 2021, with a focus on the military, particularly rare and obscure contracts, rounded out with other solid American pieces. Very reasonable price point, with weekly drops every Friday.
Stock: Very select vintage, mostly for designers
Price: £££
Pared back, with no info, Bastler’s website is nicely put together and meticulously edited. The selection is well-worn items, utterly unique in their wear and patina. Holed, moth eaten, paint spattered and repaired and repaired again, the items aspire to the role of art and not simply old clothing.
Stock: Authentic dirtbag Americana, often collectible
Price: ££
A real dyed-in-the-wool American vintage shop. Dylan learned the business working with his Dad at flea markets buying and selling knick-knacks and curios, before focusing on premium vintage. So there’s exactly what you’d want from an American seller: beaten-up tees, heavily faded denim and sun-bleached sweatshirts. A look on their Instagram reveals rarer pieces that will keep collectors excited for the next drop. (Note: the website is on a bit of a hiatus currently, with new monthly drops apparently coming back soon)
Stock: American vintage, both older and newer
Price: ££
Brian of Wooden Sleepers (pictured above) is probably familiar to most readers (though if he isn’t check Simon’s interview here). His approach to vintage changed the market, unapologetically mixing true vintage with second hand Ralph and 90s LL Bean, making vintage a little easier to access, less elitist and creating a heritage style as eclectic as it is easy to wear.
Stock: Vintage designer, an easy soft style
Price: £££
Front General is one of the most developed and comprehensive vintage stores online. The collection mixes older vintage with contemporary designers like Issey Miyake and Ralph Lauren. This feels and shops like a modern business, being able to search brands and shop a collection as you would a modern retailer. Though there isn’t a huge amount of ‘true’ vintage, what has been curated is well put together and unafraid of bold colours.
Stock: That niche military item you never knew you wanted
Price: ££ to £££
This website is not for the faint-hearted. But if you’re into military collectibles, it is a trove of info and items - once you remember how to navigate early 2000 html. Going way past a vintage shop, this is an archive for all things military, from issued invasion booklets to original woven squadron patches.
Stock: Top-end denim and leather
Price: £££
Owned by Zip Stevenson, Denim Doctors is the culmination of 30 years of vintage collecting and selling. Known for his knowledge of all things denim, and most recently co-purchasing the infamous pair of 1880s Levis for $76,000, Zip is an international force on the vintage scene. Online is saturated with top-end items, with prices at a premium, but there aren’t many places that would have this collection all in one place.
Stock: Archival American, British and Canadian militaria and outdoor clothing
Price: £££
Alexander Saunders, self-admittedly started Saunders Militaria to fund and disguise an “overwhelming addiction to vintage Antarctic parkas”. Collecting since childhood, when he found a 1st pattern USN deck jacket with a hand-painted naval motif, his fascination with surplus culminated in this well-photographed and presented site, with reference images where possible; it really does feel like a museum and a passion project in the best possible way.
Stock: High-end military items
Price: £ to £££
Richard’s first foray into vintage started with collecting band tees in the early 2000s, sourcing items on eBay for a few bucks here and there. But it was the N-1 deck jacket (like many) that piqued his interest in militaria: “I just thought the stencils and fades were mind blowing”. Specialising in British and American military items, Majors Tailor has a good selection of top-end pieces, most often in a really good condition. The collection revolves around the world of ‘The Major’, using this character as an inspiration for the buying and presentation.
Stock: Sun-kissed vintage, fades and a 70s Americana aesthetic
Price: £
Based in New Orleans, Low Timers has a collection of beautifully lived-in, sun-faded items that just ooze a classic, laid-back Americana style. Started in 2017, Ham & Kelsey have a home-grown approach, repairing, screen printing and drawing on the up-cycled part of the offering. The unabashed use of colour is refreshing and the curation led by football jerseys, sportswear and vintage graphic tees is fun and playful.
Stock: Vintage jewellery
Price: ££ to £££
Mark and Lorraine have one of the best collections of vintage jewellery there is, and for anyone who’s been lucky enough to visited them at the Rose Bowl, you feel like Scrooge McDuck diving into the piles of rings and silver on offer - it’s an experience. The website clearly pulls out and individualises the unique pieces, allowing you to really see the items for sale in detail. A good mix of native American and vintage silver.
eBay and Etsy
Stock: Older military and sports wear
Price: £ to ££, depending on the bidder
Blackbone has a website, but there’s not a lot on there; it’s the intermittent eBay drops I know them for. A good general mix of vintage, with some amazing true vintage, there will always be denim, military and leather in the mix as well as a selection of things like hiking smocks and sportswear. It’s a bit of a mixed bag in each drop: often good, sometimes mid, occasionally exceptional. All in the bid, with a zero starting price, so get the bidding fingers ready to push through that last-second snipe.
Stock: A quality mix of vintage and designer
Price: £ to £££, depending on the item
A brother duo who started selling in 2021, Alex and Oli have a shop in Hastings and opened the London, Hackney outpost in February last year. The collection is a real mix of items from European workwear to Italian designers and Y2K streetwear fodder. In the Hackney shop, nothing is out of place or incongruous; the eBay shop doesn’t quite showcase this, but a quick scroll through their Instagram shows their keen eye. With the two shops and a large catalogue, if you don’t see it, it’s always worth asking.
Stock: Bargains
Price: £
Finn of True Grit started trading and selling personal items, learning at an early age that with patience you can acquire luxury at a fraction of the price. His collection is a good mix of true vintage and sportswear through to modern streetwear, with a knack for sourcing unique and one-off pieces. You won’t always find heavy hitters, but what you will find is very fairly priced, good quality items.
Stock: Well-priced denim and the occasion steal
Price: £
Holdwest is a great go-to for accessible and varied vintage, particularly denim. Founded in 2013 by Russell Bates, there is a good volume of chore jackets, hunting jackets and plaid shirts, alongside more recent, good-value denim. It’s worth having a real root through the collection.
Stock: A mix, nicely worn American-made denim and tees
Price: £
A good eBay seller to keep an eye on, Sam currently has a very good selection of graphic tees - mostly band tees, though there are some other fun graphics as well. There are some rare examples on offer, but going for the price you’d expect an original, mint Nirvana Smiley Face Tee to sell for. Drops come quite regularly and tend to mix denim, leather jackets and a smattering of things like Burberry, so worth adding to your saved sellers.
Stock: Vintage suiting and sportswear
Price: £ to ££
Philadelphia’s largest vintage store and a personal favourite of mine. David Lochner has a fantastic eye and a collection to match. I have followed Briar for a long time and always find something I haven't seen before design-wise, or some one-off modified military item.
With a heavy lean into the golden age of Americana and specifically suiting, the Etsy shop offers an array of vintage workwear, sportswear and militaria interspersed with an occasional grail item, but the Instagram is a veritable mine of vintage collectibles and rarities.
Stock: Dead-stock from the 60s-80s
Price: £
Raertown is essentially a vintage dry goods store operating online. It’s not often you get vintage, starched and tagged like this for the prices. It’s most evident with the footwear, of which there is a lot and of a decent standard: if you are looking for some dead-stock cowboy boots, this would be the place to look. Also if you like your denim crisp, start here for some good off-brand 60s and 70s denim (not all of which are flared!) and small goods like silk ties and baseball caps are also abundant.
Stock: Classics American style, Made-in-American goods and good mix
Price: Fair
Apart from having one of my favourite seller names, A Button Fly Kind of Guy also has an excellent selection vintage at all times. There is always a lot of Americana, Ivy League, Western and workwear, and American brands like LL Bean, Brooks Brothers and smattering of old Ralph. There is also a good selection of footwear, which can be a risk, but it’s possible to find a bargain with some collectible sneakers and the occasional shell cordovan for a song.
Instagram only
Rag Parade / Jojo’s General Store
Stock: An exceptional collection of true vintage and classic streetwear
Price: £££
As inimitable as the owner, Rag Parade is an incredible shop. From turn of the century workwear to turn of the millennium terrace wear, it has all passed through Jojo’s hands at one time or another (pictured above). The eclectic mix of vintage and designer will always surprise you, and on the Instagram you will always find something you have never seen before and obsess about. Contact via Instagram, but be quick on the draw as items sell fast.
Stock: Outdoor wear and sportswear
Price: £
Based in Porthcawl, Wales, Weekdayz is a vintage dealer’s vintage dealer. With no website, you have to follow closely on Instagram for a selection of wax jackets and especially Ventile, plus lots of British items from the likes of Grenfell, Blacks of Greenock and Bob Church. If you like vintage down jackets, football shirts and Adidas, with some good Americana thrown in, this is the place to be. If you see something you like, send a DM and ask the price.
Stock: The best of the best, enjoying the archive even if you don’t buy
Price: £ to £££
A real favourite of mine, the CBTco Instagram is one hit after another. Cody has been buying and selling vintage since 2012 and the vintage military, sport and workwear items are rare, exceptional and interesting. Preferring the personal approach when it comes to selling, he just uses Instagram and if you see something you like, move swiftly and be happy to pay a firm price for the items on show - you likely won’t see another.



































It would be helpful if the summaries identified the town or city where these stores are situated
Sure, we can add that, though bear in mind many are only online.
The fact it’s only a guide to online shops was why we didn’t include them
Perhaps saying where they are based would inform whether overseas shipping is involved. Apologies if I missed they are all uk based – as I haven’t been through every one yet.
No, they’re actually divided into regions already
Hi Ben, An amazing selection. I never knew. One store I’d like to mention that doesn’t unfortunately have an online presence is DMZ in Eastbourne. I stumbled across it when we went down for a few days by the sea last December. Amazing for vintage Ivy and US military and very reasonably priced. .
Hey, thanks I’m glad you like it. The focus of this article was much more on online Vintage stores that have a good selection so there are a few that haven’t been included for that reason.
Having said that DMZ is new to me, and I’m sure the comment section will be full of stores I haven’t heard of which is very exciting!
Hi Ben,
Technical question. How old or any other considerations qualify something as ‘vintage’ or is it mainly a subjective judgement.
Thanks again for the list.
I’ll throw my hat into the ring and hope Ben can confirm or deny as well, but vintage typically means 25 years old in most cases (cars, watches, clothes), however being a vintage shop doesn’t typically preclude them from also carrying “neo-vintage” and otherwise pre-owned inventory of all kinds and ages.
Most buyers just curate based on “vibes”, and the best shops in my experience have stuff from all relevant periods, but for a specific customer or demographic in mind that they are purchasing for and selling to. Someone might specialize in vintage levi’s denimbut if they’re smart they’ll have an assortment of army jackets that range from 1950-1990 as well, and they might combine that with early to mid 2000s soccer jerseys. Good vintage shops are like wading through someone’s closet, which has been accumulated over decades, whose style you respect and whose taste you trust, because unlike a thrift-store they’re sourcing based on stricter standards of quality, and higher specificity of what they carry.
Potentially more answer than you asked for, would love for Ben to confirm!
It used to be a bit more finite, anything post 1970 wouldn’t be classed as “true vintage”, though, with lot of the golden era items not being as available anymore, it’s certainly opened up to be more subjective.
When the 1980s interest in Americana vintage began it was only 40 years away from the 1940s – we now find ourselves the same distance from 1980s, and you can see the influence of 80s fashion and design clearly on today’s style in a similarly nostalgic way.
I turn 40 this year, and I don’t feel vintage (yet) – though, some might disagree with that, so, I suppose it is subjective.
For me; if it is an item of quality, made well and aged well – both style and design wise the age of the item isn’t as important anymore, just if I like it.
Yes I think when people start hunting for specific years of things, for any reason other than noteworthy quality or style changes in the item itself, it starts to be less for style and more for collecting, like stamps or coins. Setting some hard limit of only buying things made before X date, is both hard, and limiting.
I would make the argument that maybe for younger people (I am mid 20s) the view on what is vintage might be skewed like many temporally relative things. I would say early 90’s stuff classifies as vintage, and something like a Nokia phone already feels vintage, just not in the same way an old 60s Porsche or a mid century Rolex does. However the baggy basketball shorts of the early oughts that go down below the knees feel vintage in the same way an 80s Armani suit that flows effortlessly does.
Tartan Vintage and Hunter Vintage in Florence, along with Crowley Vintage in NYC, are must-includes!
They’re not online – this is just a list of online stores
Well, this is excellent. And I now have two jackets, a t shirt and three hats arriving soon. Expensive.
What a cracking resource. Thanks for this!
Levison’s on Cheshire Street in London (off Brick Lane) is great, but this is an online guide and they don’t sell that way. I mention it merely out of interest.
Among EU stores, I would suggest Vangelis (https://vangelisclothing.com/) and Pete & Harry (https://peteandharry.com/), both are Sweden-based.
Hi simon,
would it be worse to wear otc socks with chinos and denim, or mid calf socks with dressy trousers?
Maybe mid-calf with dressy trousers, but it’s probably personal.
Is it a question of not being able to afford both?
Hi simon,
its more so about wanting to stick to one sock length for my wardrobe, I dont want to have the same in different lengths. im curious about your rationale for prefering otc socks for chinos and jeans, would that not feel a bit awkward, or do you not associate long socks with formality?
I do, but it’s more that it was a hard choice! I wouldn’t really do either – short socks with tailoring or OTC with casual. But if I was forced to choose, I might do it that way round, as short socks with tailoring would make me feel more awkward.
I think it’s worth having at least one or two long socks Stewie, in something easy like charcoal. Then the rest can be short perhaps
Could you suggest some more vintage shops in Amsterdam ? I am going tomorrow a small trip and would like to visit some.
Hello Georgios – Concrete Matter is a definitely worth a visit when you are there.
Perhaps Combray would be a worthy addition to this list? Simon has written about them in the past!
Pukimo Raivio
Pukimo Raivio has a long pedigree. The owner and author Ville Raivio began writing a blog called “Keikari” (Dandy) already in 2008 and it quickly became one of Finland’s most recognised platforms for men who enjoyed classic style and clothing. Later in 2015 Ville published the fruits of his sartorial research as a book “Klassikko” (A/The Classic) with his remarkably witty flair.
Pukimo Raivio is born from the same passion and it is the only Finnish online store specialising in used, classic clothing for men.
Ville has an impeccable eye for detail and he is constantly working to find out more about even obscure artisans and manufacturers of menswear.
Quality never goes out of style and any gentleman who is passionate about the cut, fabrics, textures and sartorial techniques will do well to have a look at the selection in https://www.pukimoraivio.fi/en
Thanks Joona, though could we have some more personal comments on this? It sounds like an advert
Haha. Now that you mention it, it really does. I must admit I’m a fan of textures and design so I prefer second hand shops where I can actually touch and feel the clothes. Ville does not have a proper show room, but when you arrange an appointment, you’ll be able to browse the goods and try them on at his mothers garage 🙂 it’s not often that I find something in my size, but there are occasionally really unique pieces that maybe altered for a nice fit. I had a trusted tailor in my previous home town, who would always do alterations and help me out.
Thanks Joona
Sorry to be a bother, but Blackbone Vintage is based out of Thailand, not Taiwan.
No worries Alex, thanks for the correction
To cover as well Northern Europe, there’s also a shop to be mentioned in Helsinki: Pukimo Raivio. It sells used men’s wear from different quality brands. https://www.pukimoraivio.fi/en
Hi Simon, Have you ever done anything on places to which one can sell vintage menswear? None of these sites offer advice to people looking to sell their old items, which I’m sure must be the case for many readers. Whether they are online or physical stores, it would be interesting to know which vintage outlets buy classic menswear, and how exactly they work, ie do you submit a list, or will they come and assess your items?
Interesting point Paul. To be honest, I’ve done it a little and I find most vintage stores don’t want to source from normal people unless they have very rare pieces. The problem is normal people aren’t usually willing to sell cheaply enough for the shop to make a good margin. It’s why quite a lot of people use Marrkt – but also why their commission in large
Can’t believe nobody mentioned Salvage and Sawdust in Brighton. They’ve literally just pivoted in the last week or so from an Etsy store to their own proper website, so maybe a little sparse right now but always a nice blend of Ivy, denim, military and western etc. (Also they now have a bigger physical store in the Lanes though I’ve not been myself, not being local)
Absolutely Simon, though I think you answered it already. At the time this was being put together I think S&S was going through a lot of change for the positive. New shopfront and the new website there wasn’t as much available online when I was checking the Etsy.
Nonetheless, they are an excellent at what they do, and look forward to seeing how the website develops, it’s already looking good!