Thank you for participating in BOM20! Winners have been notified. Download BOM20 finalists here. The BOM20 celebration will take place February 26, 2020. Follow @morgantownmag on Facebook to stay up to date. We’re excited to offer something new this year exclusively to Best of Morgantown winners. If you’re a winner interested in snagging some BOM-branded merch, email info@newsouthmedia.com for details….
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Recent stories from Morgantown
Coast(er) to Coast(er)
A collection of the coolest coasters from craft beverage makers all over West Virginia. Bloomery Sweetshine 16357 Charles Town Road Charles Town, 304.725.3036 bloomerysweetshine.com, @bloomeryplantationdistillery on Facebook Short Story Brewing 5904 Fairmont Road Rivesville, 304.933.2165 shortstorybrewing.com, @shortstorybrewing on Facebook Parkersburg Brewing Co. 707 Market Street Parkersburg, 304.916.1502 parkersburgbrewing.com, @parkersburgbrewingco on Facebook North End Tavern & Brewery 3500 Emerson Avenue Parkersburg, 304.428.5854…
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Stick with It
Happy Crafters spins an online business into a bustling hangout for creatives. When shopping at Happy Crafters, a small shop on Morgantown’s Don Knotts Boulevard, it isn’t unusual to meet crafters on pilgrimages from other states. “People come in from eight hours out of town,” says Chelsea Hellen, Happy Crafter’s brand manager. “This is one of their stops when they…
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A Pan Man in West Virginia
Already a revered world music pioneer when profiled in 2009, steel drum innovator Ellie Mannette lived out his creative and productive last quarter-century in West Virginia. Morgantown native Chanler Bailey had an epiphany in the spring of 2002. He had traveled to the second European Steel Band Festival on the Mediterranean coast of France with his mentor, panman Ellie Mannette….
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The Restorationists
Allegheny Restoration and Builders of Morgantown practices deep preservation in West Virginia and on the national stage. Before machines made windows, carpenters did. They shaped horizontal wooden pieces, called rails, to fit perfectly into vertical stiles. They cut rabbets all around where the panes would seat. They fashioned delicate muntins to stand between the panes, and they snugged everything together…
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