
The Desigual Spring-Summer 2025 collection has arrived at Angel, with more coming later this season. The new collection is on sale 30% off, with Desigual from previous seasons on sale up to 50% off. Below are the New Arrivals in stock so far (the prices listed below are before the sale price)..
Desigual is always big on denim because that’s how the company began – with deconstructed denim jeans made into a jacket on the island of Ibiza. But it always has an exotic twist, which this season is embroidery, prints and patches on denim jackets. We also have lots of new dresses and tops for Spring, with swimsuits coming as the weather gets warmer. We do have swimwear in stock, and a few swimsuit from last summer.
Desigual designed by Christian Lacroix for Spring-Summer 2025 is here.
If you’re looking for a Desigual style we don’t have in stock, we might be able to order it in for you – call Angel at 604-681-0947. We ship worldwide.


















































































































































































































Angel also has lots of Desigual boots, running shoes and bags from previous seasons, now on sale 30% off with some 50% off. Here’s a sampling of what we have in stock, with limited sizes. The first two pair, the Retro Red leather running shoes and the xxxx Ballerinas, are from the SS2025 collection.


























Earlier this week, I watched actress Amanda Seyfried play dulcimer and sing Joni Mitchell’s song California on the Jimmy Fallon show and realized she would be perfect to play a young Joni Mitchell, when Joni was living in a cave in Matala on the Greek island of Crete, crafting some of her best-known songs for her masterpiece album, Blue. Someone has got to do the same movie treatment of Joni that Bob Dylan got in A Complete Unknown.
Joni played the dulcimer on four songs on Blue, released in 1971. She has a house outside Vancouver on what is known as the “Sunshine Coast.” Here is a reminiscence of Vancouver musician Rick Scott, a long-time dulcimer player, of meeting Joni Mitchell and the events that led to Joni purchasing a dulcimer from Scott’s friend and then band member JR Stone (from the Joni Mitchell archives):
“In 1971, I was hitchhiking with my wife Sue, my friend JR Stone and my dog Mousse up the Sechelt (Sunshine) Coast of British Columbia. It was tough for three hippies with a dog to catch a ride, but after about half an hour a woman driving a beat up Ford Pinto pulled over. Big and shaggy, Mousse immediately climbed into the front seat and laid his head down in the driver’s lap. JR slid in next to him, Sue and I got in the back and we headed off down the road.
“The woman was patting Mousse’s head and complimenting us on what a nice dog he was. She asked us how far we were going… about 30 kilometers to Pender Harbour. Between her question and our ability to answer, there was a group realization that the driver was Joni Mitchell. Each of us took turns trying to articulate the name of our destination, but all that came out was stammering. When we finally managed to tell her, she said she could take us almost all the way but she had to stop off at Lord Jim’s Lodge to pick up a friend. She said they might go to the pub and if we were still hitchhiking when they came out they would give us a ride the rest of the way. I think we just sat there staring at Joni Mitchell stroking Mousse’s head. I was fantasizing that in the next life I might be lucky enough to come back as a dog.
“When we got to the turnoff she pulled over and as we were getting out she noticed my instrument case and asked what it was. When I told her it was a dulcimer she said, “Way out, can I see it?” The next thing I knew she was examining my dulcimer with great interest. JR Stone is a soft spoken North Carolina mountain man of few words, so I volunteered the information that he had built my instrument. She beamed at him and examined the dulcimer even more closely. After a few minutes she asked if he would build her one. With a great deal of difficulty he finally managed to answer. “Sure.”
“As Joni left us, she renewed her offer to take us further later and asked JR where she could find him. We told her where we would be for the weekend. We couldn’t believe what had happened and didn’t think we’d ever see her again. Nonetheless, we stopped hitchhiking and just stood by the road. An hour later she came back down the road with her friend in the passenger seat and stopped to pick us up. Paying no mind to the passenger, Mousse jumped onto his lap and settled back down with his head on Joni. We all squeezed in the back and she introduced us to Graham (Nash). She drove us to Pender Harbour and the next day came to visit to discuss dulcimer specifications with JR. I was amazed when she took up my dulcimer, tuned all the strings to the same note and proceeded to play, A Case Of You from her BLUE album. It seems ‘less is more’ is a very dulcimer thing.
“Over the next three weeks JR built her an exquisite mountain dulcimer. But it took him another week to deliver it because he was so shy. She was so delighted she paid him a hundred dollars more than his original quote, which I think was $300. Over 20 years later, in 1996, I was reading a Rolling Stone article about Joni and in the accompanying photograph there she was with JR’s dulcimer hanging on the wall behind her. I must admit I felt a twinge of jealousy that JR got in Rolling Stone before I did. JR Stone still lives and builds amazing instruments in Boone, North Carolina. He has built me several four string dulcimers and a 6 string and bass dulcimer as well.”

At the time. Rick Scott and JR Stone were in a three-piece band called Shari, Scott & Stone. When Stone left to return to his home in North Carolina, Joe Mock took his place and the band was called Pied Pumkin String Ensemble, which I saw many times over the years.
Rick was also a good friend of a dear friend of mine, Taki Bluesinger (real name Takao Sekiguchi). Rick and Taki met in Japan and Taki. a photographer, later moved to Vancouver, where he and Rick lived in the New Age Social Club on Powell Street – a whole floor of an apartment building a few blocks east of my current store, in what was once known as Japantown.
For some reason, this song popped into my head: Hooka Tooka by Chubby Checker from 1963. My brother and I would sing this song in the back seat of my dad’s 1956 Chevy, coming back from a family dinner at my aunt’s huge house in New Westminster (my aunt had a gardener, who lived above her garage, who my brother and me always went to visit); we always sang Hookah Dooka, which we thought was the name of the song, which didn’t make much sense, but we loved singing it. The song was one year before Chubby Checker released The Twist, the biggest dance craze of the 1960s.
One day Steven Tyler of Aerosmith walked through the door of my Angel store and announced: “You’re my Angel.” I had no idea who he was. He asked me if I could hand-paint two outfits his wife made that he wanted to wear onstage each night. I was a bit confused, not knowing who this guy was but agreeing to hand-paint his costumes. I told Steven that I had to go in the back room for a minute, where two painters were painting T-shirts. “Has anyone heard of a guy named Steven of Arrowroot?” (Okay, I know, but I had never heard of the band). I asked the painters.. “Is it Steven Tyler of Aerosmith?”replied Justine, our youngest painter, who was dating Dave Gregg, guitarist with the Vancouver punk band DOA. She peeked out the door and looked at the dude standing at yhe counter. “That’s Steven Tyler,” she said. Steven said he had just written a song called Angel. Here is an early studio version of the song, recorded in Vancouver:






































































