• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

The Inside Press

Magazines serving the communities of Northern Westchester

  • Home
  • Cover Stories
  • Features
    • Portraits and Profiles
  • Advertorials
    • Lifestyles with our Sponsors
    • Sponsor News!
  • Wellness
  • Happenings
  • Advertise
    • Advertise in One or All of our Magazines–And/Or Subscribe
    • Advertising Payment Form
  • Contact Us
  • Search

Inside Armonk

You Can Speak Frame in Just Minutes

April 23, 2014 by The Inside Press

judy-framingsSometimes the frame shop experience can be daunting. How can you trust that you’ve chosen the right frame? How do you know it will work on the wall where you plan to hang it?

When I brought my oil painting in to FRAMINGS, in Armonk, I admitted to the owner, Judy Willsey, that I had no skill or confidence whatsoever in choosing a frame. She smiled and told me,”You can do it–I’ll show you how.”

As we stood in the light-filled, corner-sample-packed, front end of the shop, Judy shared her time tested method for analyzing art and picking the right frame. It starts with a few questions. “Ok, first, where is this going to hang?” I tell her it’s for my formal dining room. “So the frame needs to be a little more ‘fancy’ than plain and simple. It’s like clothes. You don’t wear jeans to a black tie affair. Right?” “What’s your style?” was her second question. “Are you traditional, contemporary, eclectic, transitional?” As my eyes run over the 4,000-plus corner samples in the shop, I tell her I’m transitioning from a more traditional style to contemporary.

Judy says, “So, the next part is the most difficult concept. We need to analyze the undertone of the art. If the art has mostly blue undertones, we should be framing it in silver. If it is mostly yellow undertones, we go straight for gold. This way we eliminate half the store in one fell swoop–that makes it easier!” I tell her I think it’s mostly yellow undertone because it’s mostly yellows and greens. “Right!–yellows and greens–that means it will look great in a gold frame or maybe a yellow undertone wood frame.”

The next part was really fun. She tells me to “See if you can define the ‘personality’ of the art. Is it scratchy–is it painted with flat patterns or does it have a lot of brush strokes–is it muted or bright? We need to MATCH the ‘personality’ of the frame to the ‘personality’ of the art.” I’m thinking it has a painterly quality, kind of soft and not too bright. So we head over to the “gold wall” and pull off a few frame samples. “This one is the right color but it’s too traditional, right?” I say. “This one is way way too contemporary and this one has too many lines, right?” The third one has a small ruffled lip with a gently sloping, three-inch wide, mildly distressed, simple gold panel. And the gold is a little muted like the art. I feel like the darkness has lifted and all of the sudden I’m speaking “frame”! I straighten up and blurt out with confidence, “This one is perfect, right?” She tells me, “It’s perfect–absolutely perfect.”

I tell Judy, “Hey, I’m good at this. I should work here.”

Filed Under: Health and Wellness with our Sponsors Tagged With: Inside Armonk

From the Inside Out… a note from the editor

April 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

Beth Besen
Beth Besen

“If you build it, he will come.” These words, made famous in the modern day fairy tale, Field of Dreams, would seem a perfect platform for the launch of our very first issue of Inside Armonk: the Magazine for North Castle and Beyond.

After all, you built it, and here we are! The recent opening of Armonk Square created a physical and cultural town center, becoming a beacon that calls many from near and far.

And, while Armonk has always been one of Westchester’s crown jewels, it now shines bigger and brighter than ever before. We’re thrilled to be part of what’s going on; a resource for information and a forum for community topics and events.

History and popular culture are rife with renaissance stories. Whether referring to the “capital R” Renaissance that brought Europe out of darkness, or the smaller but much-closer-to-home renaissance of the hamlet of Armonk New York, stories of re-birth abound and draw us to them.

Yes, from the smallest of children to the more senior among us, we all love a good “once upon a time.” The familiar cadences and characters soothe us, 
as the expectation of a happily-ever-after gives us much to look forward to with pleasure.

We now invite you to sit back and settle in for our version. Enjoy our look at Armonk’s storied past. Read about your renowned school system, and check out your local library. Take us along as you head to a local café, and share a shot of conversation along with your latte. Working out later today, perhaps with a friend? Discuss our fitness and friendship article and watch as exercise time flies by.

Before we know it, June will be here–Father’s Day looms large for all of us. We bring you a touching ode to dad, and hope it’ll inspire you to think about the man, the men, who’ve made a difference to you!

Also in June? Graduation, of course! Armonk schools rock, and we share some of the reasons why! From pre-school to and through the renowned Byram Hills High School, Armonk helps educate and grow tomorrow’s leaders and thinkers, future renaissance men and women!

Our congratulations and best wishes to this year’s graduating class! Remember, this isn’t just an end, it’s a brand new beginning.

Which brings us full circle. We invite you to celebrate yourselves, and celebrate along with us; you’ve an exciting new downtown and we’ve an exciting new magazine! Let’s make it a shared beginning to a companionable and thriving journey–one of discovery, support, healthy growth and happy ever-afters! Cheers…

P.S. I’d love to hear your stories and ideas: please feel free to write to me at beth@insidearmonk.com

Filed Under: From the Inside Out Tagged With: Inside Armonk

Synergy Between our Towns

April 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

Grace Bennett
Grace Bennett

Ok, I admit it. As a Chappaquan, I’ve been a little envious of your new, cool and swanky Square* anchored by such a great Supermarket and hopping restaurants too. What a boon to the community! However, plenty of folks here wouldn’t change a hair on Chappaqua’s head, and that’s all easy to understand too. The two hamlets possess their own distinct charms–and for years what I’ve appreciated most is more the synergy between the towns, with residents in the “two Castles” happily enjoying and taking advantage of shops and services in both of our vibrant neighborhoods! Indeed, residents in our townships hardly live in a bubble and enjoy learning about opportunities near and far.

On that note, I’d like to say that I’m simply thrilled to be introducing a sister edition of The Inside Press, Inc., to Armonk “and beyond,” and hoping for the same long term relationship with many of the merchants in and around town that I’ve had the honor of enjoying as publisher and editor of Inside Chappaqua (IC).

A little about me…I started out my career as a journalist in daily newspapers and women’s magazines. Like many moms, I eventually searched for a family friendly approach to working while raising my kids. And long story short, the idea for a magazine for my hometown was born. With Chappaqua being home to the Clintons, of course, I’ve had the good fortune of covering their various activities in town…and sometimes very far out of town, too. In the summer of 2012, Hillary Clinton, then Secretary of State, graciously included me as a member of the press corps. to cover one of her missions. 
I flew with her, State Department staff and a group of journalists for 11 days throughout sub-Saharan Africa and Turkey after promising to bring international news home to her neighbors and friends. I can’t imagine hometown journalism getting much more exciting than that, and such unexpected adventures have made me perfectly happy to “work local!”

Inside Armonk (IA) magazine is a free publication, but as with Inside Chappaqua, I have always offered the opportunity for either voluntary subscriptions or gifts to anyone outside the closed circulation (see page eight). The business of print continues to present challenges in an internet age, so I do hope, if perhaps not yet, that you might consider a subscription 
(to IA, IC, or to both!) sometime down the road.

For now, just enjoy this first edition–and most importantly, convey your appreciation to the merchants who have thrown their support behind the magazine. Tell ‘em you saw it in Inside Armonk and continue to shop local! I’m also very proud and appreciative of the talented writers and photographers who rose to the occasion, and of Beth Besen, IA’s executive editor, who worked closely with them.

Before this year’s end, you can anticipate two more editions of IA, a back to school edition mailing toward the end of August and a winter/holiday edition mailing toward the end of November.

So here’s wishing you all a very happy and love filled Mother’s Day and Father’s Day–and joyful graduations, if those are happening. I’ve got two seniors myself at home, a son graduating high school and a daughter graduating college. As for me, I’ve graduated from one pub to two! Empty nest beckons, and I’m ready to use the “extra” time to serve two terrific Castle communities. See ya ‘round town.

Grace Bennett’s hair and makeup courtesy of the Richard Scott Salon and Day Spa in Mount Kisco.

—

*The “action” downtown is hardly limited to the Square itself although it seems “merchant row” benefits from the excitement it generates! ROCKS and its signature jolie b. ray designs and other gorgeous pieces are just around the corner. So is the friendly staff and well stocked Armonk Wine and Spirits. And after 17 years of already serving the community, the Mazzotta brothers, Joe and Mark, opened the all new Amore Kitchen and Pizzeria. “To complement the contemporary appearance of downtown Armonk, and match its overall character,” said Joe, “we completely renovated an existing building that had been there since the 1950s and had seen a lot of restaurants come and go.”

La Mer Gourmet Seafood is a cherished neighborhood market offering delicious, fresh take home (or stop in to eat!) homecooking–now celebrating its 25th year in Armonk. Up Main Street, Eye Designs boasts a dazzling array of designer eyeglasses, shades, accessories and optometry services for the entire family; Beascakes offers mouthwatering baked goods and party cakes galore; Beginnings Bleus bustles with male and female customers drawn to its cool, contemporary styles; and the new Eiluj, with its quality makeup and luxurious bath items, is open for your cosmetic care and more. On Bedford Road, visit the new and fabulous Bewies Holistic Market where Amy Berman is wowing near and far with organic product lines and creative fresh juice drinks for anyone on the go or in need of a restful/healthful stopping point. Dinner not complete without vino? Pick up a bottle of your favorite red or white at Moderne Barn and Spirits next door and you will be good to go too.

Filed Under: Armonk Just Between Us Tagged With: Inside Armonk

A Stroll Around Armonk

April 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

On a Spring walk, Nate, a Cavapoo stops at the Gazebo at Wampus Pond Park in Armonk with his owners Renate and Charlie Golden. Photo by Ronni Diamondstein
On a Spring walk, Nate, a Cavapoo stops at the Gazebo at Wampus Pond Park in Armonk with his owners Renate and Charlie Golden. Photo by Ronni Diamondstein

(As seen in Inside Armonk)

By Maggie Mae with Ronni Diamondstein

I’m a dog–a very special dog. I’m a six-year-old, black-and-white, Toy Parti Poodle.  My name is Maggie Mae, and some of you may know me because I am the Inside Chappaqua Roving Pup Reporter. I was so excited to hear about the new, Inside Armonk magazine and to be able to write about a neighboring town I enjoy visiting. With a nose for news, I will give you the dog’s eye view of Armonk and beyond.

I thought it was important to find out about the Town of North Castle for dogs, so I got in touch with the Town Clerk, Anne Curran. She told me that the town has a leash law for dogs, and the least can’t be longer than eight feet. “The leash law protects dogs as well as people,” says Curran. I agree. I like to run around on my own, but I’ve seen cars suddenly come around corners and whiz by. A leash keeps me from forgetting the rules and dashing into the road where I might get hurt. If other dogs are on leashes I know they’ll be safe.

Registering your dog is important and I wear my dog tag proudly. No dogs are allowed in Town parks unless they are licensed. And it’s a good way for your dog to be identified if you 
get separated. The North Castle Town Hall issues dog licenses, but only to North Castle residents. Your owner can apply for the license in person at Town Hall or by mail using the application that is found on the Town website. The fee is $10 for spayed and neutered dogs and $18 for unspayed and unneutered dogs.

“People like to walk their dogs in our parks and the nature preserve,” says Curran. I know North Castle has nice parks, and sometimes walk in Wampus Brook Park with my owner. My friends Max and Peanut like to walk there, too. Max is an 11–year-old Pug and his sister Peanut is an almost 2-year-old French Bulldog. They know a lot of great places to get exercise in Armonk. “We like to walk at the track at North Castle Community Park on Business Park Drive,” says Max. Milo, a Pug I know, also loves to walk in town. You can often see him walking with his buddies Max and Peanut.

Some of the other places to walk in the town are Betsy Sluder Nature Preserve, Winkler Park, Cat Rocks Park, a designated nature conservancy, and Johnson Tract and Fountains Park which are wooded areas.

The Town of North Castle has some important rules when dogs visit the Town Parks that we must follow. Besides being leashed and licensed, we must be under the visual and voice control of a responsible person at least 18 years old.  Of course, whoever is with the dog in any Town park or recreational facility must pick up after their pet.

Some dogs just like to walk in their own neighborhoods I learned when I reached out to my friend Nate, a two-year-old Cavapoo to get the scoop on the town from his point of view. Nate, a Cavalier King Charles and Poodle crossbreed doesn’t like to go in the car that much so he enjoys walking the loop in his lovely Windmill neighborhood with his 13 year old sister, Lizzy, a Standard Poodle.

It’s so exciting to be a roving reporter in Armonk as well as Chappaqua. Please let me know where you like to take walks. You can contact me at maggiemae10514@gmail.com

Visit Maggie Mae’s blog at www.maggiemaepup.com

Maggie Mae lives in Chappaqua with her adoring owner Ronni Diamondstein, who, when she isn’t walking Maggie is a freelance writer, PR consultant, and award-winning photographer.

Maggie Mae’s Must Do:

ECAD – Denim Heels Boot Tail, Thursday, May 15

starting at 6:30 P.M. at Brynwood Golf & Country Club 
in Armonk, NY.

This annual fun-filled event raises funds for ECAD 
(Educated Canines Assisting with Disabilities,) 
the not-for-profit organization that raises, educates and places Service Dogs with people with disabilities, many of them Veterans.

An evening of dinner, dancing and an inspiring program, ECAD will honor individuals and entities that have shown their support for ECAD’s work and for help given to Veterans of the Armed Services. ECAD clients and their Service Dogs will be in attendance. 
Tickets are $200.00 per person. 
For information call

914-693-0600, ext. 1950. 
For further information visit www.ecad1.org

 

Filed Under: Maggie Mae Pup Reporter Tagged With: Inside Armonk

It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)*

April 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

jazz-playerIn the 1930’s, Armonk was one hip hamlet. Though America was 
in the midst of the Great Depression, Armonk’s merchants were busy. Crowds of tourists drove in their Studebakers, Fords and Cadillacs from New York City and beyond to eat, drink and dance their worries away in this remote corner of the county.

Over a dozen restaurants, bars and dance halls flourished back then. The Armonk police were called at all hours of the night by reveling couples who, on the spur of the moment, decided they wanted to wed and needed the appropriate official to do so. Now the epitome of “family-oriented,” Armonk had, back then, earned the moniker “Sin City.”

Small, but never small-time, Armonk’s largest draw was The Log Cabin. Live bands featuring musicians like Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa and Doris Day regularly performed for up to 1500 patrons at a time. The floors of the Log Cabin creaked and moaned as music poured across neighboring farmland and orchards. Five cents for a hot dog, or ten cents for a hamburger, was all it took to enjoy an entire night of listening and dancing to the best live Big Band music the world had to offer.

With its illustrious past and handsome new infrastructure, Armonk is ripe for an old-fashioned revival. Downtown’s appealing new landscape provides ample gathering places and spaces for people to socialize. The stage is set.

“Swing” may be just the symbol or guiding image we need to pay respect to Armonk’s roots while ushering in a new era. With its driving intensity and abandon, Swing represented freedom and pleasure amidst the financial hardships of the 30’s. It also served
to ease the social tension of the era; men, women, young, old, black, white all danced the Swing. Everyone, figuratively and literally, was on the 
same footing!

Swing brought tolerance, mutual respect, and cooperation. It was grown by individuals who were able to suspend judgment and incorporate new sounds from diverse musical lineages. While the Great Depression was devastating, it also forced people to turn to what economists and others now call “social capital”.

Social capital, as distinguished from money or material goods, is an under-recognized but vital component of a healthy community. It is goodwill, fellowship, empathy and concern for others. It bonds people together. Data have found that communities high in social capital have children with fewer emotional disturbances and an adult population with a lower incidence of heart disease and a greater life expectancy than matched communities rated low on social capital.

In his books, articles and TED talks, contemporary writer and philosopher Alain De Botton reports that one of the losses modern society feels most keenly is the loss of a sense of community: “We imagine that where there once was neighborliness, there is now a ruthless anonymity, characterized by pursuit of contact with others for purely individualistic gains.” As we’ve become increasingly secular, many have switched worship of God to worship of professional success. “What do you do?” is our way of introduction in new social groups; the answer can determine acceptance or marginalization by the community.

It is no surprise, then, that we throw ourselves with a vengeance into our careers. Focusing on work
to the exclusion of almost everything else feels necessary–not only for 
financial security, but to thrive psychologically.

Demonstrating kindness, acceptance, acknowledgement, and appreciation in small ways to those we encounter in our community (and noticing when others do so to us) is what creates social capital. The feeling that one “belongs” in a group, is a valued member in his or her community, fills an essential human need. Small increases in social capital may help us to work a little less feverishly while becoming healthier, more productive and happier…not a bad equation.

Armonk’s revival has begun. The stage is set. A small swing in investment toward social capital and this town will be rocking.

*Music by Duke Ellington, lyrics by Irving Mills

Dr. Rachel Levy-Lombara, an Armonk resident, mom, and licensed Clinical 
Psychologist, uses evidence-based approaches along with a focus on identifying and nurturing a client’s strengths and genius to help people “swing’”from surviving to thriving. She practices in Chappaqua and can be contacted at DrLevyLombara@aol.com.

Filed Under: Et Cetera Tagged With: Inside Armonk, Jazz, Swing

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7

Primary Sidebar

Please Visit

White Plains Hospital
William Raveis – Armonk
William Raveis – Chappaqua
Northwell Hospital
Houlihan Lawrence – Chappaqua
Houlihan Lawrence – Armonk
Houlihan Lawrence – Briarcliff
NYOMIS – Dr. Andrew Horowitz
Westchester Table Tennis Center
Spavia
Compass: Miller Goldenberg Harris Team
Lipari & Mangiameli Dentistry
Raveis: Lisa Koh and Allison Coviello
Bristal Assisted Living
Maid Brigade
Kevin Roberts Painting & Design
Zwilling J. A. Henckels
Meagher & Meagher Attorneys at Law
Compass: Aurora Banaszek
Dr. Briones Medical Weight Loss Center
Whitaker’s Garage Door Store
Houlihan: Kile Boga-Ibric
Chocolate Chalet
Elliman: Pam Akin
Temple Beth El
Breathe Pilates and Yoga
Saltbox Sash
Pinsky Studio

Follow our Social Media

The Inside Press

Our Latest Issues

For a full reading of our current edition, or to obtain a copy or subscription, please contact us.

Inside Pleasantville and Briarcliff Manor Inside Chappaqua and Millwood Inside Armonk

Join Our Mailing List


Search Inside Press

Links

  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Subscription
  • Print Subscription

Publisher’s Note Regarding Our Valued Sponsors

Inside Press is not responsible for and does not necessarily endorse or not endorse any advertisers, products or resources referenced in either sponsor-driven stories or in advertisements appearing in this publication. The Inside Press shall not be liable to any party as a result of any information, services or resources made available through this publication.The Inside Press is published in good faith and cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracies in advertising or sponsor driven stories that appear in this publication. The views of advertisers and contributors are not necessarily those of the publisher’s.

Opinions and information presented in all Inside Press articles, such as in the arena of health and medicine, strictly reflect the experiences, expertise and/or views of those interviewed, and are not necessarily recommended or endorsed by the Inside Press. Please consult your own doctor for diagnosis and/or treatment.

Footer

Support The Inside Press

Advertising

Print Subscription

Digital Subscription

Categories

Archives

Subscribe

Did you know you can subscribe anytime to our print editions?

Voluntary subscriptions are most welcome, if you've moved outside the area, or a subscription is a great present idea for an elderly parent, for a neighbor who is moving or for your graduating high school student or any college student who may enjoy keeping up with hometown stories.

Subscribe Today

Copyright © 2026 The Inside Press, Inc. · Log in