Aug 13, 2009
Where lefties are always rightBy Coeli CarrMoney.CNN.com

New York — President Obama and his fellow southpaws have cause for celebration this week: Thursday marks the 18th annual International Left-Handers Day. But for entrepreneur Margaret Majua, founder of Lefty’s San Francisco, every day is an occasion to give thanks for lefties.

Majua spotted an ad two years ago for a strange-looking writing instrument called the Yoropen. Shaped like a grasshopper, the pen was touted as a writing boon for left-handed people because its design allowed lefties to see what they’d just written without smearing it.

“At first I thought it was pretty creepy-looking,” she says. “Then I thought it might just be weird enough to sell.”

Her instinct paid off. The Yoropen is now one of the bestselling items at Lefty’s San Francisco: The Left Hand Store, which Majua opened in March 2008 on San Francisco’s iconic Pier 39, adjacent to Fisherman’s Wharf.

Lefty’s is one of the world’s only brick-and-mortar stores catering to the left-handed. It continues a San Francisco tradition: Thirty-one years ago, Left Hand World pioneered the market, opening on Pier 39 in a tiny 350-square-foot space. The store closed a decade later, but it spawned a solid fan base. The landlord searched for a tenant to continue the store’s theme in the original location, but found no takers — including Majura, a serial retailer who opened her first Pier 39 enterprise, a refrigerator-magnet store, in 1986. Since then, she’s created more than 20 themed specialty stores in tourist destinations such as Las Vegas, Hawaii and Disney World.

Read complete article.




Social Connections


[custom-facebook-feed desclength=20 exclude=author headericon=facebook num=1 account="209914955742886" pagetype="page"]
Gift Shop Plus Spring 2026
Get one year of Gift Shop Plus in both print and digital editions for just $16.

Interested in reading the print edition of Gift Shop Plus?

Subscribe Today »

website development by deyo designs