The lighting was low, indirect. The perfectly arranged displays were backlit, so all I saw when I stepped into the old-fashioned storefront was ornaments — hundreds and hundreds of them, gleaming and sparkling in cascades of colors.
White segued to silver, gold to red. Ornate blown-glass Santas rubbed elbows with glitter-cheeked snowmen; exotic birds with feathery plumes perched next to intricately painted winter scenes; wax angels kept watch over regiments of nutcrackers.
I hadn't come to Stillwater to get a holiday boost. I'd come to the scenic river town on a late fall day-trip with my friend Sandy to have lunch, do some shopping and maybe stop at the speakeasy, if we could find it.
But about halfway through our shop-by-shop tour of the boutiques along Main Street, we walked into what townspeople call "the Christmas store." Suddenly, I felt like a 7-year-old on Christmas Eve, filled with wonder, awe and an unabashed joy for Christmas.
That's the effect the Käthe Wohlfahrt store has.
I have to admit the feeling took me by surprise. I'm not exactly a Scrooge, but I'm definitely not Christmas-crazy.
Every December my husband and I dutifully hang a Boy Scout wreath on the front door, put up a Charlie Brown tree, get out our shoe boxes of ornaments and hang a few favorites from the spindly branches.
But walking into Käthe Wohlfahrt — an almost museum-like shrine to Christmas — made me hungry for the holidays.