Chicago Sun-Times

MORE THAN MUSIC

Shopping and food complement the bands at 25th anniversar­y Lollapaloo­za

- BY TALIA BEECHICK Staff Reporter Email: tbeechick@suntimes.com

In between listening to Lollapaloo­za’s more than 170 musical acts, festivalgo­ers can chow down at Chow Town and shop till they drop at the Art Market.

In its 25th year, the music festival typically draws 100,000 visitors per day to Chicago’s Grant Park, where eight stages will be blasting rock, electronic, folk music and more throughout its four days. But music is not the only draw.

Head to the center of the park, near Buckingham Fountain, to the Art Market, a plethora of tents featuring local vendors like Futurgarb, a clothing and accessory company, and Souldier, which makes accessorie­s out of recycled goods. The fest also welcomes national vendors like North Carolina jewelry designer Black Black Moon and Rhode Island jewelry giant Alex and Ani, which is selling (both at the fest site and online) a special Lollapaloo­za charm for its popular bangle bracelets.

Danny Vetter, 26, and girlfriend Kristin Eberts, 26, have spent more than a year working for Teysha, a Texas-based company that sells boots and accessorie­s handmade in Guatemala and other areas throughout the Americas.

“We met the owner, Travis Breihan, on a public bus in Panama,” Eberts said. “We had this mutual love of indigenous art, people and cultures.”

“We work with Guatemalan artisans and textile workers to support and tap into these vibrant and colorful communitie­s,” Vetter added, noting that “Teysha” means “ally” in the Native American Caddo language. While this is Teysha’s first year exhibiting at Lollapaloo­za, the company has appeared at other music festivals this year, including Tennessee’s Bonaroo, Texas’ Euphoria and the New Orleans Jazz Fest.

Chicago’s threading and henna salon Thread Away, however, knows what to expect this weekend after debuting its temporary henna designs at Lollapaloo­za last year.

“It was crazy,” said henna artist Harjit Randhawa, who learned how to apply henna in India and has worked at Thread Away for five years. “There was a line all the way out the tent. We had to work very fast.”

Thread Away offers varying sized henna designs in the standard shade of brown, which lasts 10 days, or white, which lasts one day, and can add jewels to the designs as well. But to survive the weekend’s heat and long hours, visitors will need to stay fed and hydrated.

The festival’s Chow Town, stretching down South Columbus Drive, features local vendors ranging from Billy Goat Tavern to Kamehachi to Robinson’s No. 1 Ribs.

“It’s fun, hard and exhausting,” said Michael Scavo, 20, who has worked at Billy Goat Tavern’s Lollapaloo­za tent for the past four years. “From 2 to 9 p.m. we are slammed with a huge crowd. A lot of drunk people, yelling people, five people handing you credit cards at once … it goes by fast. You got to keep control.”

New this year are the festival’s Bodegas — onestop shops for quick snacks like granola bars and fruit as well as “survival goods” such as bandages, ponchos and sunscreen sprinkled throughout the park.

NOTE: Lollapaloo­za continues 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Grant Park (337 E. Randolph). General admission tickets are sold out; VIP tickets (beginning at $650 per day) are available at lollapaloo­za.com.

 ??  ?? Lollapaloo­za is expected to draw more than 400,000 people over its four-day run.
Lollapaloo­za is expected to draw more than 400,000 people over its four-day run.
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 ?? PHOTOS BY TALIA BEECHICK/SUN-TIMES ?? ABOVE: Kristin Eberts and Danny Vetter work at Teysha, a custom, sustainabl­e boot and accessory company based in Austin, Texas. LEFT: Henna tattoos, like this one sported by Madison Muradyan, are among the offerings at the Thread Away booth.
PHOTOS BY TALIA BEECHICK/SUN-TIMES ABOVE: Kristin Eberts and Danny Vetter work at Teysha, a custom, sustainabl­e boot and accessory company based in Austin, Texas. LEFT: Henna tattoos, like this one sported by Madison Muradyan, are among the offerings at the Thread Away booth.

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