DULUTH — Sandy Cloutier has sold thousands of cards for the celebrating, the grieving and the grateful.
Now she needs one of her own: "Sorry to hear your store is closing."
Allison's Hallmark, part of Duluth's skywalk since the system opened more than 41 years ago, is shutting its doors.
Traffic through the skywalk isn't what it used to be. Shopping habits have shifted. Sales have fallen to unsustainable levels. And at 75, Cloutier is ready to spend more time with her two grandsons in Arizona.
"I thought I could do this forever," she said. "But it doesn't work that way."
It's not over yet. She'll be giving a long Minnesota goodbye and has no firm closing date in mind. After telling her rep she was closing the store, Cloutier turned around and ordered some more cards and candy. Her customers will come looking for them, she reasoned.
"In the past couple years I've felt it was my duty to be here. I needed to be here for those people who needed to run in on their lunch hour, grab a card," she said. "I put the closing signs up. I haven't been able to go beyond that."
It was her brother, Bud Stark, who first opened the store. He originally had a Baskin-Robbins in mind, but when a contractor building the Holiday Center suggested a Hallmark, it stuck. For decades.