


By Bill Franz



By Bill Franz



By Bill Franz

By Bill Franz
Yesterday my wife helped me hang “Jobs from A to Z” which will be in the 2nd floor gallery at @DaytonMetroLibrary until November 5th.

I started this series because the memory loss of my father-in-law Wally Willaman was making our time together difficult. I hoped that we could avoid discussions of the past by having fun working on a project in the present. It worked. We had a ball.

I told Wally that when we finished our art would be in an exhibition, thinking that would keep him interested in the project. But I knew it was likely that we never would make it to the end. Wally is 101, and I knew the project would take at least six months.

Well six months later we’ve made it all the way to “Z is for Zookeeper” and Wally’s still going strong. And the work will be exhibited twice. Michigan Medicine in Ann Arbor has an active arts in healthcare program. They will display “Jobs from A to Z” from March 11 to May 31, 2024 in a gallery where thousands of people will walk by it each day.

But Ann Arbor is too far for Wally to travel, so Jayne Klose, the library’s Community Engagement Manager, helped us out. She invited us to exhibit at Dayton Metro Library.
Wally and I hope people have as much fun viewing this art as we did making it.
By Bill Franz

By Bill Franz


Sat Aug 5th, Noon – 1:45pm
Adult Sewing Basics – Get to Know Your Sewing Machine
Sun Aug 20th, 11am – 1:15pm
Quilting 101 – Beginner quilting class
By Bill Franz
Visited K & R Pretzel Bakery recently. It’s run by the sister and brother team of Pattie and Jim Glaze. Their parents started the business in 1967.

Their set up is a bit different than the one at Smales Pretzel Bakery because their oven has a conveyer belt. They sold me one that had just dropped off the conveyer belt. It was amazing. They also sell assorted novelty candies, circus peanuts and bottled sodas.

1700 Flesher Ave
Kettering, OH 45420
Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday from 10 to 4.
By Bill Franz

By Bill Franz

Terry Hitt in His downtown studio at @k12galleryandtejas


By Bill Franz

By Bill Franz
Before I met Stephanie Beiser Ceramics I had no idea that Cornell Studio Supply was such a cool place. They have hosted workshops by some of the country’s top ceramic artists.


By Bill Franz

By Bill Franz


By Bill Franz


Check out Bill Franz’s other international market stories:
By Bill Franz
Angelique Nyambanguka came to Dayton from the Congo 7 years ago. She started Umoja East and Central African Market last year at 2601 Stanley Avenue. It’s one of the three international markets in Old North Dayton. The shop is filled with items from Africa.

Angelique showed me around the shop and I ended up buying some tea from Rwanda. As we talked, Angelique apologized that her English was not perfect. When I learned that she speaks four languages I suggested that she shouldn’t feel bad if she fails to speak them all perfectly.
Here she is showing me some shoes from Africa.

By Bill Franz
Old North Dayton has always been home to immigrant groups. In the early 1900’s the area had the Kossuth Colony, built to house immigrants from Hungary. There was a 12 foot fence all around their neighborhood. This was so unusual that it attracted visitors. People took the streetcar to “see for themselves the strange fenced-in settlement of North Dayton.”
Now there are three international markets in Old North Dayton serving different immigrant groups. Monday afternoon I visited all three. My first stop was U. S. International Foods, a small shop at 2106 Old Troy Pike.

The shop has Russian and Turkish items. The sales clerk spoke only Russian, but the packaging helped me understand most of the products, like these Kopobka cookies.

I’ll tell you about another international market tomorrow.