I posted this on my Photos From Fort Wayne thread yesterday, but they really belong here. These are some photos i made of the last days of Fort Wayne's last camera store.
Sunny Schick Camera Shop closed its doors  forever at  the end of July, 2017. For 90 years, the store was a fixture  in  downtown Fort Wayne, Indiana. When Sunny Schick closed, it was the  last  remaining camera store in Indiana's second largest city.
 
The store was founded in the 1920s by  Martin "Sunny" Schick, a local  professional photographer. The store  changed ownership several times in  its long history, but the owners  always kept the iconic name in honor  of the store's founder.
 
During my lifetime, Sunny Schick was  known for having a giant camera  sign on the side of the building that  faced the small parking lot. From  the time I was a kid until several  years after I graduated from  college, the sign depicted a Nikon F3,  which was a 1980's era  professional 35mm camera. When the F3 sign got  too faded, it was  replaced by a Canon Digital Rebel. That was later  replaced by the Nikon  D2x that was there when the store closed.
 
I began shopping at Sunny Schick when I  was just a kid. Back then, the  store was owned by an old man named Dana  Christie. He bought the store  in 1980, and after he retired in 2002 he  passed the store to his son,  Bill. Bill's wife worked at Sunny Schick  for several years, and their  son, Andrew worked there for the last few  years that Sunny Schick was  open. Bill closed the store so that he could  retire. Local camera  stores all over the country are closing due to  competition from online  stores, and Bill felt that the store wouldn't be  viable for a new  owner.
 
The store's closing was a sad event for  me, and for my fellow  photographers in Fort Wayne. Sunny Schick was  more than just a store,  it was a gathering place and a center of our  little creative community.  The store's owners were photographers, too.  The Christies always  treated me like a friend, not just a customer.
 
The cramped little building on the  corner of Washington Boulevard and  Ewing Street in downtown Fort Wayne  had a special warmth and charm that  modern retail stores can never  equal. It was originally a small house  that was expanded a couple of  times in the front. The view of the store  from the side makes it look  like three buildings stuck together.
 
Sunny Schick's closing sale began on  June 22 and continued until the  store had finally sold nearly  everything, including many of the  fixtures, at the end of July. I  visited the store several times as the  prices dropped and the  merchandise melted away. I made the final  photographs of the place as  the lights went out on the last day, when  90 years of history came to an  end.
The sale began at 10% off, eventually dropping to 90% off on the last  day. Most of the good stuff sold on the very first day. 7-24-17
Andrew Christie, the owner's son who worked as a salesman at the store  for the last few years it was open, stands behind the counter. 6-26-17
6-26-17
6-26-17
The last day. 7-29-17
The last day, 7-29-17. All that's left is some misc. accessories and a lot of old instruction manuals.
The end. The doors are locked, the customers gone, the lights turned off for the last time. 7-29-17