Your Favorite Influencers’ Coolest Clothes Can Be Yours — Next Week in Sugar Land

Your Favorite Influencers’ Coolest Clothes Can Be Yours — Next Week in Sugar Land

Fashion influencer Margret Rojas is among the bloggers selling clothing straight from her closet at Sugar Land's YesYoga.

HOW MUCH DO you love your favorite fashion influencers? Enough to buy clothing right out of their closets?


Organizers of a unique shopping opportunity at YesYoga in Sugar Land's Town Square next week certainly hope so. Six local influencers will participate in the Blogger Closet Sale Wednesday Sept. 8 from 6pm-8pm, "offering gently worn clothing, children's clothing and accessories straight from their closets," announces a press release.

Influencers participating include Brittany Fullwood of Hello Honey, Joy Green of Joyfully Green, Keli Rabon, Margret Rojas of Style the Girl, Rebekah Gullo of Fashion and My Fellows. and Roselyn Weaver. Between them they have well over half a million followers on Instagram.

The bloggers will be on hand for the uniquely modern market — the only form of payment accepted with Venmo — and guests can selfie it up with their favorites. Refreshments will be served.

The closet-sale concept is just one of many out-of-the-box ideas at entrepreneur Erin Cummings' boutique yoga studio, which markets itself as "more than just sweat." YesYoga offer a variety of yoga classes, workshop and babysitting during classes.

Style

Both locations of The Pit Room are open today, July 9.

WITH POWER OUTAGES over many portions of the city, Houstonians need alternative places to cool off more than ever before. Below is an updated list of open restaurants where you can eat well and stay a while. Pack up and seek out one of these respites!

Keep Reading Show less
Food

Chris Shepherd, left, is hosting a dinner at Four Seasons next month and, on right, wine from Robert Mondavi Wines that will be served at a dinner in Napa for Southern Smoke Foundation

MANY RESTAURANTS, COFFEE shops, and bars across H-Town are still closed due to power outages from Beryl. Others, who have since opened, are struggling with staff displacements as well as wasted food, property damage and loss of consistent revenue.

Keep Reading Show less
Food