A new lil curated gift shop β featuring handmade polymer clay earrings, housewares and vintage clothing β is opening in Tucson this month.
SigfΓΊs DesignsΒ will celebrateΒ its grand opening from 1-5 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 18. After its grand opening, the shop will be open from noon to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday.Β The shop is located inΒ Bushido StudioΒ atΒ 3264 N. Country Club Road.
While the shop will highlight SigfΓΊs Designsβ signature polymer clay earrings and houseware items created by founder Lauren Valenzuela, it will also carry items like candles, perfumes and even hair accessories and grooming products β many of which are locally made. There will also be a selection of vintage clothing and bar glassware.
All items in the shop will be curated by Valenzuela.
βIt's really, really hard for me to not be authentic. And I have to have stuff I like, I can't just be like, βOh, let's bring in all these stickers and thingsβ that I wouldn't personally want just because they're trendy or because they'll sell,β she said. βThat's a challenge because I know to be a good business owner, you do have to think about those things βΒ things that are trending and important and that people like. But I also want it to feel like my stamp is on it.β
Currently, Valenzuela is decorating the shop with aΒ papier-mΓ’chΓ© floral installation and big wire flowers that peek out of the walls and roof. The space is also a tattoo studio run by her husband Hector that she describes as βcomfortable and warmβ because the location is a former home.
A new outdoor sign featuring SigfΓΊsβ name is coming soon, but until then, look for an A-frame sign in front of the studio to know youβre in the right place.
βWe're putting them next to each other, which is really funny because we have a lot of crossover business,β she said. βThey get a tattoo and then they possibly buy jewelry, or they come to me and then they get a tattoo.β
As the opening date gets closer, Valenzuela jokes that she has about βsix panic attacks a morning.β
βNow that it's two weeks out, I'm in the like, βOh my gosh, what have I been doing?β mode. So, of course, it's a little bit intense,β she said. βBut now I've been doing all of the admin and behind-the-scenes stuff and painting, doing the installation and hanging everything. So, it's go time and I'm actually excited and having a really good time.β
'The community has rallied so hard and has been so supportive, but to have the support of the community, you have to also support the community back.'
For Valenzuela, who is the daughter of a professional watercolor painter and a musician, art unsurprisingly came naturally. But it wasnβt until six years ago when she founded SigfΓΊs Designs after reconnecting with polymer clay βΒ after watching a YouTube tutorial and creating her own designs for friends and family.
βAt the time, it wasn't the big trend that it is now with a million people making polymer clay earrings. But there were only maybe a small handful of brands in the United States that were doing it. So, I got into it pretty quick and I got really addicted to it,β she said.
Realizing there was a demand for this type of art, Valenzuela decided to sell her designs. After participating in her first local market, Cultivate Tucson, and almost selling out of all the products she brought with her, she went home and created a six-page business plan.
Later that year, she quit her job in the restaurant industry and started to create jewelry and other goods full-time.
βJewelry is a great way to have fun. It's a way to express yourself. That's kind of what the space is going to be. It's going to be an expression of just joy, abundance, struggle, all of it. Art is important. And art makes us happy. Art is just a key aspect of all of our lives, so we should celebrate it.β
Since pursuing SigfΓΊs Designs fully, Valenzuela has participated in numerous markets with lines that wrap around the event, launched an online store and even began accepting wholesale orders. Now her products are featured in small shops across the country and internationally.
βIt was really cool to see it spreading,β Valenzuela said. βPeople were excited about it and it was definitely, kind of, encouragement to really dig in.β
For many, life after the COVID-19 pandemic brought a lot of changes. Valenzuela found herself asking, βWhatβs important? What matters?β
After what she described as a βrough couple of years,β she decided it was time for something new.
That something new was opening a brick-and-mortar.
βI've been trying to switch my focus and just try to function as a business, stay afloat, not give up, of course, but have more impactful moments within the community and get back to our core βwhyβ β it's about people. It's about connection. It's not just about burning out or running a business,β she said, adding: βI got really used to just being by myself. And I think the more you're by yourself, the more you pull away from people and you're comfortable in isolation. And that is not who I am. I believe life is to be experienced with people and it's this beautiful thing. It's not meant to be alone. We're not meant to live like that.β
Once the SigfΓΊs shop officially opens, Valenzuela hopes to host plenty of events from gallery showings and art auctions to workshops.
βWe're just a story of a Tucson couple that both went after it and went for stuff. That was our dream,β she said. βAnd I think that you can succeed at things that you try for. I didnβt picture myself here at this point in my life. I didn't know what I pictured. But you can go after it and go for it.
βAnd I think the community has rallied so hard and has been so supportive, but to have the support of the community, you have to also support the community back. So I feel like it goes both ways.β