A Peek Into Someday

by | Jul 25, 2019 | DESIGN & ILLUSTRATION

Not just an abstract concept, Someday is an actual store in downtown Richmond, one with a focus on sustainability and local community.

Located in the heart of the Richmond Arts District, Someday is a sustainable shop with a homegrown aesthetic. Owner Audie McDougall tries to fill her store with goods that tell a story, and the resulting goods tell her story in particular. Using inspiration from her parents and her own style and sustainability goals, she has created a unique shopping experience; vintage goods, high-quality sustainable items, and vivacious plants all meet inside Someday. 

“I do my best to find products that aren’t available at least in the immediate area or even really in the city,” McDougall said. “I try to not only find interesting stuff, but also to find stuff that is gonna be new and different for customers that shop locally.” 

McDougall finds products to sell from sustainable, eco-friendly small-scale makers. She has found a lot of her favorite makers on Instagram. “The internet makes the world really small,” McDougall said. “Some of the folks I’ve been following [on Instagram] since before I even had this in motion.” She sells pottery from a ceramicist in New York, locally-made goat milk soap from the Freckled Farm, and more.

In addition to internet finds, McDougall stocks items that were used in her house when she was young. She grew up using Bürstenhaus Redecker products at home, and now she has a stock of their brooms, sponges, and dusters available in her store. 

In addition to newly-made products, McDougall does a lot of vintage hunting, and stocks her store with hand-selected vintage pieces. Before the store opened McDougall and her husband went searching for vintage pieces at estate sales and even traveled to Pennsylvania and New York looking for the perfect items for her store. 

The other big thing that McDougall sells is plants. Her dad got some plants for the shop when it was first opening, and they have really taken off. “Plants have been such a surprise hit,” McDougall said. “Folks love plants, and it’s been really fun collecting different varieties and learning about them.” The plants have done particularly well with local customers because it saves them a trip to farther-away big box stores like Lowe’s. 

While McDougall may be new to selling plants, she is no stranger to retail. She started off in high school working at Nordstrom. “I really connected with their approach to customer service,” McDougall said. Since then she has worked for Anthropologie in New York, Philadelphia, and Richmond. For the five years before she opened Someday, McDougall was running retail at Ledbury. 

Working at Ledbury is what influenced her decision to open her shop in the Arts District. She was able to witness people coming into the neighborhood to shop, and see the success of other shops such as Verdalina. “Moving here and seeing the response from the neighborhood has been amazing,” McDougall said. “Not just the other store owners, but the people who actually live, shop, and work in this neighborhood have been so supportive and so positive; it has really blown me away.” 

She has also been able to prioritize selling products that encourage a zero- or low-waste lifestyle. “I think it’s just part of being a conscious consumer these days,” McDougall said. “We’ve got to be looking for products that are sustainable and eco-friendly.”

McDougall hopes that by providing environmentally conscious products, she can help set herself and her customers up to be successful in creating less waste. While she recognizes the difficulty of achieving a perfect zero-waste lifestyle, she continues “trying to do little things each day.” 

Now that she has her own store, McDougall has been able to further enjoy her favorite thing about retail. “One of the things I’ve really liked throughout my retail career is meeting folks,” McDougall said. “And now being able to connect with a group of customers who is really in line with my worldview.” 

Someday is located in the Richmond Arts District at 22 E. Broad St, and can be found on Facebook and Instagram @shop.someday.

Emma North

Emma North

Emma is a senior Print/Online Journalism major at VCU. She is interning with RVA Hospitality and writing blog posts for them this summer. In her free time she likes to spend time at the river and eat good food.




more in art

Review | ‘As You Like It’ is Just How I Like It

If you’ve been reading these reviews for a while, you’ll notice I love me some context. Especially surrounding William Shakespeare’s plays. One of my favorite things about the existence of Richmond Shakespeare is that they’ve forced me to go back to the English Lit...

IllumiNATION Tells America’s Story on a Monumental Scale

Editor’s Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with the Virginia Museum of History & Culture on coverage related to America’s 250th anniversary, including Richmond SailFest and IllumiNation. It's hard to impress people with just a building. Yet standing in front of the...

Blöthar: “GWAR Didn’t Change. The World Freakin Changed.”

Richmond metal band GWAR says the Secret Service contacted the group following a recent performance at the Vans Warped Tour in Washington, D.C., that featured the mock execution of a Donald Trump effigy. Video of the performance, which showed band members...

Review | ‘Come From Away’ is the Best We’ve Ever Been

Do you remember the rollerblading guy with the American flag kit on September 12th? We will never forget the 11th for the horrors, but do you remember the 12th? The 13th? If you do, I don’t even have to say which year. If you don’t, let me tell you a little bit about...

Before Richmond Was an Arts City, There Was Best Products

Imagine pulling into a suburban shopping center to buy a toaster and finding a department store that appeared to be falling apart with corners breaking away, walls peeling open like a giant cardboard box, or facades seemingly collapsing under their own weight. For...

Review | ‘I Love You Because’ Is Pure Joy 🏳️‍🌈

It could be said that Shakespeare invented the rom-com. It could also be said that Jane Austen improved it a couple of centuries later. Between the two of them, meet-cutes, notices of love or rejection arriving at exactly the wrong time, and breathless affirmations of...

Stay Hungry pt. 1 | Band on the Road

Editor's Note: Writer's Block is a space for Virginia writers to share personal essays, fiction, memoir, and works that fall somewhere in between. In Stay Hungry, Richmond local Eric Kalata looks back on a cross-country tour and the restless optimism of...

Local, Latino and A New Richmond Cosmos

Tucked into the alley behind 2512 West Main Street, a fever dream of the cosmos has taken shape across a brick wall. The mural is the collaborative work of four Latino artists working in and around Richmond: Visibly Hidden, Monolith, Mars, and Sol. A distant Earth...