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Celebrate Winter - A Torchlight Parade at Crystal Mountain
Celebrate Winter - A Torchlight Parade at Crystal Mountain | Show Photo

Frankfort

Surfing in Lake Michigan from the Frankfort breakwater
Surfing in Lake Michigan from the Frankfort breakwater
The 2009 renovation of The Garden, Frankfort's 1923 art deco theater -- with first-run, Indy and foreign cinema, plus an annual film festival in October -- is one more spark that's igniting the downtown revival of this historic port city. Frankfort is the gateway to the Sleeping Dunes National Lakeshore, famed for its two vintage lighthouses, sport fishing and mineral springs on Betsie Bay, on which the town sits. New restaurants and boutiques now mingle with classic storefronts, and the dynamic Crystal Lake Art Center's upcoming move to the former U.S. Coast Guard Station on Betsie Bay promises excellent year-round visual and performing-arts programming.

North X Northwest: Every day is for celebrating small businesses

Local businesses are the lifeblood of a community. Be it the gas station down the road, the mom-and-pop's diner or the painter who advertises via bulletin boards, local entrepreneurs not only work here, they often live here as well. What's even better is that dollars spent at our local businesses stay local, says managing editor Sam Eggleston.

Corbin Design makes career out of telling clients where to go

The old Five Man Electrical Band song states that there are "signs, signs, everywhere there's signs." Mark VanderKlipp and the company Corbin Design are sure glad there are, because without them people would be lost everywhere. This is the company behind the scenes making sure that you and everyone else know exactly where they are and where they are headed.

North X Northwest: Region is a foodie paradise

Welcome to North x Northwest, a new column by managing editor Sam Eggleston which will be featured in each new edition of Northwest Michigan Second Wave. From food to wine to communities, businesses and people, he will discuss a myriad of topics. This week, he notes just how much of a foodie destination this region has become.

A look back at 2011, and ahead to 2012

This time of year, everyone starts to look back at the months that have come and gone and the accomplishments that they, and those around them, have achieved. Here at Northwest Michigan Second Wave, we do the same--we'll be taking a hiatus from publishing over the holidays with a return Jan. 17. We hope that makes you begin to look forward at what Northwest Michigan and our publication will offer in 2012.

The Talent Dividend: How more college grads can add to a Michigan city's bottom line

What's the best thing a city can do to achieve more economic success? Increase its number of college graduates. Read how the Talent Dividend calculates just how much college degrees add to a city's bottom line--think billions--and cities right here in Michigan are some of 57 competing for the $1 million dollar prize to boost college attainment.

The gift of love: Paperworks Studio puts heart into each hand-crafted card

Picking out cards to send for the holidays is never easy. But Paperworks Studios, in Traverse City, makes selecting your cards much easier, because there's no other place you'll be able to get cards that are made with the love and affection of Paperworks' employees. Second Wave's Kim North Shine is feeling it.

What's Working in Cities: Placemaking

We're taking a closer look at people and organizations in cities across the country that are transforming neighborhoods and driving change in urban areas. The second in our series about good urban ideas focuses on how the best city spaces are built from the ground up rather than planned from the top down.

M-22 is more than a highway, it's a state of mind for entrepreneurial brothers

Matt and Keegan Myers don't think of M-22 as a mere highway that twists, turns and winds through Leelanau County--instead, they view it as a frame of mind. Second Wave's Heather Durocher sat down and talked with the brothers about their M-22 business, triathlon and more.

Alliance helps bring back locally-produced beer hops--something everyone can drink to

Something is growing in Northern Michigan that hasn't been seen in the fields since about the time the Civil War was taking place--hops. No, not the kind that bunnies do, but rather the kind that brewers do. Hops are an integral part of the beer-making process, and now they are being grown, processed and purchased right here in Northwest Michigan.

Family-owned farms go live thanks to Northwest Michigan webmaster

Traverse City's Jena Van Wagner is the executive director of Michigan Family Farms. Those who have joined her online community have focused on promoting those farms and getting the word out about great, local food that is grown and can be bought right in your town. Victoria Mullen reports.
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