Last Outpost Store

Our readers fell in love fast with Last Outpost, a timeless and stylish shop that opened on Beaconโ€™s Main Street just last August. โ€œA woman came in and said, โ€˜Did you know youโ€™re nominated for a Chronogrammie?โ€™ and I said, โ€˜Wonderful! But how does anyone even know who I am?โ€™โ€ says Chris Cimino, who opened the outdoor apparel and lifestyle shop with his wife, Allison.

It turns out that good taste gets noticed, and our readersโ€™ choice for menโ€™s shop is a cut above the rest with products ranging from sustainably sourced cotton T-shirts to elegant, practical enamelware that transitions from kitchen to campsite and back without a hitch. And even though Last Outpost was forced to close its doors during lockdown, loyal customers stuck around via online sales. โ€œWe started getting the website together soon after we opened, and then it became urgent in March,โ€ says Cimino. โ€œA couple of weeks later we announced [the site] and neighbors and customers stepped up. We started free local delivery and people were sending the most beautiful messages back.โ€

The Ciminos met in New York City (heโ€™s from Carmel, sheโ€™s from St. Louis) and relocated to Beacon, where they found the future home of their shop in an 1886 building in early spring 2019. They spent four months renovatingโ€”dropped ceilings were removed to reveal old-school pressed tin. They added 20-foot long shelves repurposed from a derelict building in Wappingers Falls and made a display rack out of a discarded wooden ladder, and then set about filling the shop with things they loved, classic and novel.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s curated so that when you come in, thereโ€™s a lot to see,โ€ says Cimino, of the photogenic shop. โ€œIโ€™d say 75 to 80 percent of the store is artists, most of whom we know. There are things we make ourselvesโ€”the beard, hair, and skin oil, Allisonโ€™s sterling silver jewelry. Then thereโ€™s Craig, our FedEx guy. He makes the birdhouses. The belts are from a leathersmith I know, and our soaps are made right here in Beacon. The rest is sustainable in some way. People come in and fall in love with a t-shirt and then find out their purchase funds the planting of 10 trees. And there is always flannel. I am a total flannel guy, I live in it, so we stock it year round.โ€

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Anne's been writing a wide variety of Chronogram stories for over two decades. A Hudson Valley native, she takes enormous joy in helping to craft this first draft of the region's cultural history and communicating...

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