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House of the week: 78 Wychwood Park

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78 wychwood park78 Wychwood Park was last seen on the market in 2011 asking $2,100,000 for the three bedroom house in the city's Wychwood neighbourhood. The now renovated property has returned with a cosmetic facelift and a higher price tag of $2,995,000. The current owner is Bonnie Brooks, of the Hudson's Bay Company, and her post-renovated abode was previously featured on House and Home Television.

It's now contemporary meets country with new flooring, a refinished staircase and an updated rustic kitchen. The new buyer must love stark white walls, cathedral ceilings and walking up stairs (there's a lot of stairs). There's a walkout to a large backyard oasis and it's conveniently located near Wychwood Barns, the neighbourhood's cultural community hub.

Check out the impressive art collection around the home. There's the moose sculpture in the living room designed by Canadian artist Charles Pachter, amongst other expensive pieces, which sadly aren't included in the asking price. At any rate, the multiple art pieces might be worth more than the house itself.

78 Wychwood ParkSPECS

Address: 78 Wychwood Park
Price: $2,995,000
Lot Size: 121x145
Bedrooms: 2+1
Bathrooms: 4
Parking: 3
Taxes: $14,322
Walk Score: 77

78 wychwoodNOTABLE FEATURES

  • 3,500 square feet
  • 28 foot ceilings
  • Rustic yet modern kitchen
  • Landscaped backyard

78 wychwood torontoGOOD FOR

People who like to entertain. With soaring ceilings and a secluded backyard, this house is great for both intimate gatherings and large drunken New Year's Eve parties. Additionally, its steps away from a dog park, beach volleyball court and the restaurants on St. Clair West. The private tennis court in Wychwood Park is a nice touch, too.

78 Wychwood ParkMOVE ON IF

Gated communities creep you out. Wychwood is a fascinating place, but the former artist colony isn't for everyone. If the X-Files episode Arcadia bugged you out, then stay away from here.

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS

78 wychwood toronto78 Wychwood Park78 Wychwood ParkRead other posts in this series via our House of the Week Pinterest board.

Thanks to Bosley Real Estate for sponsoring our House of the Week.

Writing by Alana Charles


Holiday spirit at City Hall

Christmas Eve events and activities in Toronto

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christmas events torontoChristmas Eve in Toronto means the malls are closing early, so you can either start poking around under the tree or head to TIFF for creepy movies. That's it: two choices.

I'm kidding. However, TIFFis open, and Lolita screens in its Kubrick glory at 1pm. (The slightly more festive Eyes Wide Shut is at 7pm.) MOCCA is showing their soon-to-close Vera Frankel exhibit from 11am-4pm, and the AGO is open 10am-3pm if you want to catch Art Spiegelman. Toronto's rinks are also open for skating. For more events, click on over to our events section.

Have an event you'd like to plug? Submit your own listing to the blogTO Toronto events calendar or contact us directly.

Photo by Paul Flynn via the blogTO Flickr pool.

The story of the Toronto City Hall Christmas tree

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toronto christmas treeEvery Christmas for more than 50 years Toronto has paid for a massive white spruce Christmas tree to be placed outside City Hall, and every year the same family company has been given the task of finding a suitable specimen, trucking it downtown, and putting it safely in place in time for the annual Cavalcade of Lights.

Weller Tree Service, a nearly 100-year-old landscaping company based out of Keswick, Ont., entered the Christmas tree business in the 1950s, supplying decorations for banks, hotels, and government offices. Before the city started focusing winter festivities on City Hall in 1966, Weller put up Toronto's tree in front of the Shell Tower on the Exhibition grounds, Wilfred Weller told the Toronto Star in 1983.

That was the year the city's tree was almost felled by marauding football supporters. Argonauts fans celebrating the team's Grey Cup victory over the B.C. Lions attempted to scale the tree, the Star reported. Luckily, despite the mauling, the branches and electric lights were undamaged. Yonge St. was less fortunate. Revellers smashed windows, looted stores, lit fires, and tore down street signs.

1983 also saw Weller deliver an 11-metre balsam to the Bank of Nova Scotia at King and Bay. Queen's Park got an Austrian pine, and the Westin Hotel two: an 8-metre balsam for inside and a 14-metre one for outside.

The Wellers don't actually grow the trees themselves. Instead, the company, now run by Wilfred's sons, scout private properties throughout the year and buy up attractive looking evergreens. This year's tree was sourced from the Bancroft area.

Once felled, the tree is trimmed to size and carefully wrapped so it can be safely transported on a flatbed truck. On arrival at Nathan Phillips Square, it takes a team of about eight people three to four hours to position the tree on its stand where it must remain, undecorated, for three to four days while the leaves and branches settle.

It then takes a full two weeks to wrap the 18-metre white spruce in roughly 3,810 metres of LED lights and hang some 700 ornaments. A cherry picker and other gear is used to assist with the decorating.

At the end of the festive season the city's Christmas tree will be carefully stripped of its ornaments, shredded, and composted along with the other 100,000 dead evergreens collected by city garbage trucks.

Somewhere north of the city another white spruce awaits the same fate in 2015.

Chris Bateman is a staff writer at blogTO. Follow him on Twitter at @chrisbateman.

Image: Jamie Hedworth/blogTO Flickr pool.

Dark Horse has a new location on Queen East

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dark horse queen east torontoOne of Toronto's longest-running cafe chains has replaced its original Riverside coffee shop with a brand-new location a few blocks east. Though the new space is expansive and gleaming, plenty of the flourishes that made them a Toronto favourite - large communal tables, that same delicious espresso - remain intact.

Read my profile of Dark Horse Espresso (Queen East) in the cafes section.

The top 10 ways to stay fit this winter in Toronto

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winter fitness torontoThe top ways to stay fit this winter will (hopefully) encourage you to step away from the Netflix and get your body moving. Whether it's a brand-new gym to test out or a new spin on a favourite outdoor winter sport, these activities will help you get through the winter without putting on the extra turkey-and-stuffing-pounds.

Here are my picks for the top ways to stay fit this winter in Toronto.

Hop on (a) board
When the water has frozen over and there's no surfing or any other kind of water-based activity to be had, you can still mimic the waves on your board at Surfset, located on Yonge just north of Eglinton. With a board that's balanced on three stability balls, you'll have to use all your muscles to keep yourself from tumbling over.

Go for a spin
While some Torontonians scoff at the thought of putting away their bikes come snow, others wouldn't dare take a spin on the icy roads. That doesn't mean you have to get out of cycling shape in the winter though - with plenty of spinning options around the city, you can keep fit for when it's time to make the rubber meet the road once again.

Hit the sand
If you miss heading to the beach to play volleyball in the summer, then trying some indoor beach volleyball this winter may be just what you need. With several of Toronto's indoor volleyball facilities holding actual sand, you can still pretend that it's warm out (and it gives you a soft landing for when you feel like leaping for the ball).

Get competitive
If you're looking for an unconventional competitive sport to try out this winter, then roller derby may be just what you need. Toronto Roller Derby, which operates out of Downsview Park, boasts the largest flat-track derby league in Canada. And while the teams are all-female, the men in your life are free to come watch and see how badass you can really be.

Head to boot camp
Just because it's winter doesn't mean you can't still work towards your fitness goals. With a number of year-round boot camps still operating around the city, you can pick one that's best for you, whether you're working towards a specific goal, or just looking for an effective way to stay fit year-round.

Sweat it out
When you're outside in the epically cold Canadian winter, does anything sound better than being in a toasty, relaxing environment? A great way to stay fit (and warm) is to try out some hot yoga - guaranteed to help you sweat out all that holiday eating. If you want to try somewhere new, Yoga Tree at Bay and Dundas and Union Yoga offer hot yoga classes.

Take a hike
Get out of the slushy downtown core this winter, strap on some snowshoes and head to one of Toronto's wonderful trails. In the summer, these paths are great for getting out and getting exercise and when the snow falls you can still make the trek - just bundle up warm!

Lace up your skates
If you're already slippin' and slidin' away on the icy sidewalks, might as well throw on some skates and head to one of the city's rinks. A new one is heading for Regent Park, slated to open early in the New Year, but other popular options like Nathan Philips Square are great for gliding off the calories. If you're looking for something a little more private, gather up a group of friends and rent your own rink.

Climb a wall
While you may not be able to scale any ice walls in Toronto, sometimes it's nice to get out of the city to explore the great outdoors. Just a short drive away, Ancaster not only offers up some great scenery, but also ice climbing (like rock climbing...but on ice...you get the picture). Using picks and special shoes, you'll have to use your whole body strength to climb, which makes for a total body workout.

Go dashing through the snow
The avid runners out there may not blink an eye at the thought of an outdoor run in the winter, but for the rest of us, it just seems like cruel and unusual punishment. If you're lacking running motivation in the winter, sign up for some of the city's running events in the upcoming months to hold you accountable to your cold-weather training.

toyota corollaDid I miss any? Leave your favourite winter fitness ideas in the comments.

Writing by Chynna Wilson. Photo by Alex Indigo via the blogTO Flickr pool.

The top 5 acts at the Drake Hotel's Boxing Week bash

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what's in the box toronto 2014What's in the Box kicks off this Friday in Toronto on, fittingly, Boxing Day. Once you've overcome the holiday food/booze hangover, head down to the Drake Hotel for their annual boxing week mini music-fest, running over five evenings starting from December 26-30. Each line up will feature at least five bands every night, and cover for each is only 5 bucks.

Whether you're looking for indie rock or a dance party, here are my picks for What's in the Box 2014.

New Hands (Friday, December 26)
On the first night of WITB, my true love sent to me... five great bands. Smack in the middle of the pack, at 9pm, try to take in New Hands, a five piece electronic group claiming both Hamilton, Ontario and Leeds, UK as home. Before them you can hear SEX TAPE, Omhouse, and then catch River Tiber and BADLQQK afterwards.

The Meligrove Band (Saturday, December 27)
Evening number two has an eclectic combination of acts. Don't miss indie rock quartet The Meligrove Band at 10pm - they've been a group for almost two decades with a few member changes along the way. They also have an awesome video game made for mobile. If you aren't too busy playing it take some time to absorb the other bands including Lay These Knight, Seas and International Zombies of Love.

Jokers of the Scene (Sunday, December 28)
The turn up will be real on the hump day of this festival. An evening co-presented by label Neighborhood Watch and Galapagos FM features a lineup that promises to impress. Get there for the first set at 9pm to catch Jokers of the Scene, a techno duo that has been embraced by almost every walk of life in the electronic music scene. Once they're through, stick around for Bruce Trail, Galcher Lustwek, Egyptrixx, and Chicago's DJ Spinn.

Ain't No Love (Monday, December 29)
The fourth night, presented by Red Bull Sound Select, has been curated to highlight four corners of hip hop music. At 11pm check Toronto's own Ain't No Love, who will be releasing a new EP in February, which will include their new track Summa. The evening will get warmed up by DJ Nardo aka Maylee Todd and also include live sets from Dillan Ponders, grime rapper Tre Mission and Montreal-based rap collective The Posterz. You can RSVP for this night to make it $3 instead of $5.

Pet Sun (Tuesday, December 30)
WITB's last evening is presented by local label Sleepless Records (home of July Talk). Stick around until the last set of not only the night, but the entire festival, for some stoner garage madness care of Pet Sun. Before them you can hear some other talent from what is presumably a sort of Sleepless Records farm team, including STACEY, Jaunt, Sunshine & the Blue Moon, and Programm.

Photo of Ain't No Love by Dylan Leeder

New sandwich shop does Mexican-style porchetta

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sullys sandwich kitchen torontoThere's a new lunch takeout spot to add into the rotation for Riverdalers. With six painstakingly well-crafted sammies on the menu that include an all-day breakfast sandwich, a shrimp po'boy and a veggie-friendly option, the Mexicanized, carnitas-style porchetta is a real standout.

Read my profile of Sully's Sandwich Kitchen in the restaurants section.


A brief history of reggae in Toronto

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reggae torontoThe history of reggae in Toronto, one of the strongest cities in the world for this genre and its offshoots, can't merely be a rundown of notable bands -- it's bound up in an infrastructure of musicians, venues, promoters and record stores. It's also about the tension of artists trying to succeed in both Canada and in the reggae universe with Jamaica as its axis.

Most of all, unsurprisingly, it's tied to Jamaican people in Canada. Jamaicans came to Toronto in large numbers in the 50s and 60s, and since then have somewhat determined the tenor of Toronto's black community while spreading their music to a multicultural fan base in Toronto, all the while maintaining possession of it.

Caribbean immigrants' arrival in Toronto goes back well over 100 years but really started to pick up speed in the late 1950s when racist immigration policies were relaxed largely to permit immigration of commonwealth-resident nurses and household helpers. The Sheiks, arriving in the mid-60s, were the first Jamaican band to make a name for themselves here. They were well versed in American soul music and got gigs within Toronto's thriving R&B scene at clubs like the Zanzibar and the Coq D'or.

The R&B scene had no appetite for contemporary Jamaican sounds like rock steady, so outside of those establishments, places like the W.I.F. and Caribbean Club, Club Jamaica and Club Trinidad were places to hear Jamaican music with fellow expats and curious locals from all walks of life (canned goods magnate Mr. Goudas spends considerable time in his autobiography talking about his experiences DJing Jamaican music at his 813 Club).

This era is surveyed magnificently in the first compilation of the six-volume Jamaica To Toronto series. One of the first major industry figures for reggae was the Sheiks' manager Karl Mullings, who soon became a key advocate for Caribana, founded in 1967.

In the late 60s, a key figure in Toronto history arrived: Jackie Mittoo. Mittoo was the pianist of the legendary Skatalites ska band and had gone on to become the house bandleader for Jamaica's foundationally important Studio One label, penning some of reggae's most enduring instrumentals. In Canada, Mittoo set out to explore the Canadian music industry by seizing new opportunities like the establishment of new Canadian content rules. He released the album Wishbone in 1971 which was a curious brew of soul-pop, adaptations of some of his Studio One material and his quirky, rough-hewn vocals.

Another early LP from a talented Jamaican musician, Wayne McGhie and the Sounds Of Joy made a brief appearance around this time, only to achieve much greater acclaim decades later with its reissue in the Jamaica to Toronto series. Other early reggae artists of note in Toronto were The Webber Sisters, Leroy Brown, Glen Ricketts, and Stranger Cole, who ran a record shop in Kensington Market.

As the R&B scene started to fade away, a local musical identity asserted itself. By 1974, Summer Sounds recording studio was founded in Malton by Jerry Brown and boasted a sound comparable to the spacy, effects-laden records Lee Scratch Perry was releasing in Jamaica.

Shops abounded too: through the 70s and early 80s Eglinton West of the Allen Expressway featured record shops affiliated with prominent Jamaican record producers Duke Reid, Joe Gibbs and Prince Jammy (near the recently christened "Reggae Lane"). As with all record stores, these were vital places to socialize with other musicians and check out the latest sounds.

Cultural critic Dalton Higgins reminisced, "My father would come home from work every Friday and go buy 45s at Monica's. I would mimic those energies in Grade 7 and 8, hanging out at the record store with my friends. And there were always elders and community leaders around."

These shops also distributed local labels like Micron and Half Moon. Even Stompin' Tom Connors' Boot label released some reggae titles as part of a broader mandate to promote "folk music" from around the world.

By the mid-70s, Ishan People became the first homegrown band to gain renown as having a Canadian reggae sound. They recorded with Blood Sweat and Tears' singer David Clayton Thomas and backed Bruce Cockburn's huge hit "Wondering Where The Lions Are." Earth Roots and Water and Chalawa also had distinct sounds.

Ishan People Horseshoe TavernKlive Walker, author of the essential reggae history Dubwise articulated the position of reggae from Canada within the larger Jamaican diaspora: "when diasporic reggae surfaced it had to contend with the international profile of Jamaican reggae, the reggae adventures of mainstream rock, pop, and rhythm and blues and the artists and the reggae musicians of Caribbean heritage who imitated Jamaican reggae.

Diasporic reggae justified its existence and produced its own major artists partly because it spoke to the everyday experiences, struggles, hopes and aspirations of young people of Caribbean heritage in cities like London (UK), Toronto or New York."

A very different offshoot was brewing in the outer regions of Metro Toronto: the city's first sound systems. Jonbronski, co-founder of CIUT's hip hop touchstone The Master Plan Show, recalls: "Toronto, late 70s, early 80s sound crews had a very L.A. sound with heavy dose of reggae. Maceo, Killowatt, Sunshine, and City Crew (Buffalo NY) carried the swing, while more local crews got B-listed billing at parties. A lot of funk and funk instrumentals were played. No real rappers per se, but heads that know how to get the party right just by talking."

A mix of American funk and a good dose of reggae remains a defining characteristic of Black music from Toronto over the decades. Throw in some London vibes and some pan-Caribbean flavour and that's most of what G98.7FM plays today which sets it apart from American Urban radio such as Buffalo's WBLK. This is how you "get the party right" in Toronto.

Though community newspapers like Share and Contrast had existed for years, it was difficult for reggae to break into the Canadian music and media industries. Leading stations like CHUM wanted nothing to do with homegrown reggae, even during Bob Marley's most commercially successful years as he filled Maple Leaf Gardens.

Fortunately, a big shift occurred as CKLN launched in 1982 (featuring David Kingston, partner to definitive dancehall photographer/author Beth Lesser) and CFNY's Spirit of Radio era featured Deadly Hedley Jones' programming. On the print front, with NOW Magazine launching in 1983, all of the sudden there was new visibility to the burgeoning reggae-new wave culture clashes of Queen St. West at clubs like the Bamboo, the Rivoli and after-hours House of David.

Hybrid bands like V (a forerunner to the Parachute Club) interfaced with 20th Century Rebels and Truths and Rights to create a truly downtown Toronto sound. Leroy Sibbles, another Studio One luminary, became was the biggest star of this era and recorded for both Boot and Attic Records.

Leroy SibblesDub poet Clifton Joseph recalls: "There was a scene going on Queen St. We were playing at those clubs, performing at different cultural events with a lot of different artists and Queen St. became in some ways our home. There was a whole sweltering rise of culture at the time. Queen St. became this place where there was a lot of cross pollination."

The 80s are still considered to be a high-water mark in reggae's local and national visibility with groups like the Sattalites and Messenjah (from Kitchener, featuring involvement from veterans of 70s multicultural funk band Crack Of Dawn) and performers like Glen Ricketts, R Zee Jackson, and Chester Miller. However, Toronto's most distinctive contribution to reggae perhaps ever was its strength in dub poetry, where instrumental reggae is the bedrock for socially conscious poetry.

Lillian Allen, Clifton Joseph, and their Dub Poets Collective were at the vanguard of a worldwide movement, hosting festivals and releasing challenging but hard-driving music. Allen's Conditions Critical and Revolutionary Tea Party won Juno awards. While reggae in the UK hooked up with punk for rock against racism, these artists (particularly Allen, Adri Zhina Mandiela and Afua Cooper) advanced issues pertaining to feminism and black Canadian history as well.

Their international notoriety was indicative of a larger concept of Diasporic Music, to borrow the term of journalist/broadcaster Norman Otis Richmond, in which the distinctive rhythms of Jamaicans within Canada were finding audiences in the island's diaspora around the world and were in turn being influenced and appreciative of African, American, and Caribbean forms.

Reggae Toronto has an incredible Facebook archive of club listings from that time which evidence the variety of venues that booked reggae in the early 80s and the overall eclectism of bookings in general. On the promoter front, Lance Ingleton and Jones and Jones created diverse Afrocentric concerts which had kinship with the emerging commercial category of world music, as ">this ticket stub's "upcoming shows" from Ingleton is evidence.

The 90s saw the rise of dancehall with artists like Carla Marshall, Nana Mclean, and Devon Martin's hip hop crossover ("Mr. Metro" getting MuchMusic play) featuring digital rhythms. Toronto dancehall's most infamous exponent was Snow, who went #1 on the Billboard charts with his nonsensical but well intentioned "Informer." Kardinal Offishall represented a far better hip-hop/dancehall sound. Hip hop was in ascendance culturally if not exactly on an industry level and had the effect of pushing reggae out of its preeminent spot as the music of black Toronto.

Nevertheless, reggae remained in the news both in print and on the air. Reggae-friendly alternative print media now included the Toronto counterpart to Vibe magazine, Word, plus Eye Weekly and Exclaim covering reggae semi-regularly.

Phil Vassell, co-founder of Word, commented on the magazine's music mandate, "It had to reflect reggae along with hip hop, R&B/soul, jazz, Soca, African, and Latin music. All these were music of black origin. Reggae's deep roots in Canada, especially here in Toronto made it a must in terms of our editorial coverage."

On the radio dial, new arrivals CHRY and especially CIUT, which broadcast live reggae from a Kensington after-hours rehearsal space for six hours every Saturday night, provided greater opportunity for airplay than greater before. Carried forward from the soundsystem era was a certain amount of kinship between "golden age" hip hop DJs and their reggae equivalents. Even Punjabi via UK bhangra found an unusually strong reception in Toronto with its ragga tendencies.

Moreover, reggae's reach was extending through other styles of music locally and internationally. Toronto had always appreciated dub, the spacier, instrumental variant to reggae. Starting in the early 90s, dub and the new kind of double-speed breakbeat music with dub basslines from the UK started to make its mark.

The city became renowned as a major center for Jungle cum Drum and Bass. DJ Chocolate, one of Toronto's busiest reggae selectors and radio personalities of the past 15 years, recalls "The Resinators made some pretty darn good ragga jungle with my favorite ragga jungle MC, Caddy Cad. The intersection was more obvious in terms of DJs who played both kinds of music, like Marcus Visionary and Medicine Muffin."

Toronto, while no Montreal in this regard, absorbed and amplified second and third waves of ska with bands like Skaface and The Skanksters. Truths and Rights' Adrian Miller may well better be known as a ska singer than a roots reggae singer. However, the biggest exponents of reggae crossover were rock based: Raggadeath's train wreck of hard rock and deejay Michie Mee and Big Sugar's whisky soaked slide guitar meets estimable reggae rhythm sound made waves from coast to coast thanks to MuchMusic support.

Reggae bands during this era included Fujahtive, Revelation, Sunforce, Tabarruk, and One (fronted by Chris Taylor, now head of Last Gang) played a gradually diminishing circuit downtown including the El Mocambo, the Jerk Pit and the Bamboo. Many of these bands were multicultural, not solely Jamaican, which indicated the ever growing reach of the music through Toronto.

By the beginning of the last decade, reggae was simultaneously more international than ever and falling further from visibility within the Canadian music industry. Veterans like Willi Williams could hook up with the likes of German producers Rhythm & Sound and create stunning tech-dub records file-transferred all around the reggae world and play to packed houses in Europe and Japan, but remain unknown in downtown Toronto.

When downtown Toronto's live music scene and label-scape was revitalized by the DIY spirit of indie-rock, the by-default historical DIYness of reggae in Toronto simply didn't figure into this new generation (aside from Broken Social Scene's dub excursions). It wasn't as though the indie-rock generation wasn't familiar or hostile towards reggae on an international or historical level, but whatever cultural integration spawned by reggae downtown in the 80s was no longer in evidence.

And yet reggae thrived on its own terms, whether through live events in banquet halls or the Jamaican Canadian Centre uptown or downtown at Holy Joe's or Thymeless (located in the former Toronto HQ of Marcus Garvey's United Negro Improvement Association) where the SuperheavyReggae crew, Patrick Roots, and DJ Chocolate and K Zar played in classic Jamaican sound system style often with a hypeman, or in the case of SuperheavyReggae, a hornsman, playing over their rhythms.

Undoubtedly the most significant hope for reggae music on a mass market scale of the first years of the aughts was the launch of FLOW 93.5FM, Toronto's first black-owned radio station, though it failed to live up to expectations of delivering a 'world urban contemporary' format. Sway Magazine, a part of the Torstar empire, launched a few years later amid similarly high hopes but ceased publication in 2012 due to low advertising revenue.

On a smaller scale, JuLion King's Canadian Reggae World and Reggae Xclusive magazine delivered exactly as promised and both attempted to address under-representation of Toronto reggae on the web and in the Canadian music industry.

Bands, however, became rarer commodities. Dubmatix, who'd grown up counting the Jamaica to Toronto generation as family friends, remains the most successful international Toronto reggae/dub artist with his live sets which introduced a range of Toronto vocalists from Jay Douglas to Kulcha Ites to Ammoye into high tech roots productions to countless European dub festivals.

The Mountain Edge band backed up seemingly every Jamaican vocalist visiting Toronto over the past 10 years and Friendlyness and the Human Rights often opening up said shows. Singers, however, abounded: Donna Makeda, Blessed, Tasha T, LJX, and Lenn Hammond all received major acclaim in the Canadian Reggae Music Awards during the decade.

Over the last few years the most prominent news in reggae has been the demise of CKLN and founding of G98.7FM, on which Spex of King Turbo mixes and Delroy G's Saturday show is the very definition of "big people music" for reggae fans of a certain age. The station's constant endorsements of Sugar Daddy's in Mississauga and Luxy in Vaughan are two of many suburban options for reggae.

Other broadcasting personalities you want to hear are Carrie (daughter of Karl) Mullings on CHRY, the Morning Ride crew on CIUT and Ron Nelson's Reggaemania shows online. Downtown, sound crews like Pressure Drop, Big Toes and Dub Connection (with its home-built system) are not Jamaican, but continue to interface with Jamaican culture (such as the upcoming Dub Connection/Pressure Drop/Tippertone Boxing Day jam).

Mullings comments that, at the Orbit Room, Lula Lounge, or the Boxing Loft, "the downtown scene presents more opportunity to see a live reggae performance - you can still enjoy an after-hours party, where the suburbs are more focused on dances and artists performances on tracks."

Reggae is arguably stronger than ever on the festival front with the Irie Festival, Rastafest, Jamaica Day, Harbourfront's Island Soul, and Jambana, plus, "the clash scene has never been healthier," says Chocolate. Moreover, for years Toronto reggae and dancehall heads are well represented in every internet forum around so it`s not as though the city`s reggae history has remained isolated.

The future of reggae in Toronto is not full of optimism but neither is it threatened. Jamaican culture is a huge, even normative, part of Toronto ("true dat" you might say as you argue what truly are the best patties in the city). Two-time Juno winner Exco Levi provides hope for the future.

Adept at both roots and dancehall, he, unlike almost the vast majority of other Jamaican-Canadian artists over the decades, has enjoyed considerable success in the mother country, breaking down a historical barrier. It must be noted that Last Gang has released reggae/dancehall discs (O'Luge & Terry Lynn with K-OS and Tre Mission being reggae allies), the highest-profile label to do so in more than 25 years.

Reggae's lack of huge sales in Canada means that at least one can't say that reggae in Toronto has been co-opted and whitewashed. Reggae accepts contributions of people from many walks of life, and for those people Jamaica`s culture and history is the centre of their art. Toronto's reggae history may not be as commercially and internationally renowned as its cousins around the world but there is no writing a history of Toronto music over the past 40 years without it.

And then there's Magic who came out of nowhere to score a #1 single this year.

Guest post written by David Dacks

Bamboo picture from Reggae Toronto

The top 25 restaurants open Christmas Day in Toronto

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Christmas Day Restaurants Toronto Christmas Day dining options in Toronto aren't nearly as limited as you might think. There's a little something for everyone no matter if you're looking to partake in a festive feast or are among the population who are just happy for the stat holiday. Everybody has to eat, and the city is flush with options.

Here are my picks for the top 25 restaurants open on Christmas Day in Toronto.

See also:The top 10 restaurants open Christmas Day in Markham and Scarborough

The Lakeview
The 24 hour diner on Dundas West will be serving up deep fried turkey for $17 including stuffing, roasted butternut squash, garlic mashed potatoes, with gravy and cranberry sauce. One dollar from each dinner sold will go to FoodShare Toronto.

7 West
Christmas dinner eve and day 19.95 Turkey stuffing mash potatoes veggie. Starts at 4pm.

Thompson Diner
Regularly open around the clock, the diner at the Thompson Hotel is open on Xmas but will close a little early at 11pm.

Fran's
Both the College Street and Victoria Street locations are reliably open on Christmas and serving up a turkey dinner complete with all the fixins and dessert for $24.95.

Cafe Boulud
Open from noon to 9:30pm, expect to find The Four Seasons' restaurant serving a three course menu for $95 featuring options like roasted turkey or venison.

Destingo
From 3pm to midnight, this Italian restaurant on Queen West is offering a $32 prix fixe menu featuring butternut squash soup or salad to start, followed by roast turkey or butternut squash ravioli, and apple strudel for dessert.

TOCA
The restaurant at the Ritz Carlton Hotel will be offering a festive three-course dinner complete with roasted turkey and a holiday sweets table.

Bosk
Starting at 5pm, a three-course Christmas Day prix fixe can be enjoyed for $85 per person, or opt for a five course chef's tasting menu for $95 with menu selections ranging from foie gras torchon to butter poached lobster.

One Restaurant
Mark McEwan's Yorkville restaurant is open regular hours throughout the holiday season, with a special Turkey dinner on offer on Christmas Day.

Hapa Izakaya
The Japanese pub on College Street will be open from 4pm on Christmas Day with a complimentary dinner served after 10pm (while quantities last) and drink specials on all night.

Kingyo Izakaya
Spice things up on Xmas with dishes like namesake, Kingyo Style Death Chicken Wings at this izakaya in Cabbagetown where it will be business as usual on Christmas Day.

Guu SakaBar
The lively Japanese restaurant on Bloor isn't taking a break over the Christmas, but is closed on New Year's Day.

Taste of China
While it certainly won't be the only place open on Spadina, Taste of China just happens to be my fave. Best of all, they'll be open from 11:30am until 4am - so if you return to the city hungry (hey, it can happen if your family serves turkey dinner in the middle of the afternoon), you'll know exactly where to bee-line late night.

Pho Pasteur
As always, this Vietnamese noodle house on Dundas will be open 24 hours.

Riz
This certified gluten-free Asian restaurant on Bayview will keep the woks hot from 2pm to 11pm on Christmas Day.

Caplansky's
The delicatessen on College Street will be open from 10am to 8pm, offering the regular menu of Jewish comfort foods and deli staples.

Ben & Izzy's
This Jewish deli on Bathurst will be open for business from 11am to 9pm and serving up their regular menu featuring smoked meat sandwiches and babke French toast.

United Bakery Dairy
The regular menu of eggs, omelettes, sandwiches and fish dinners will available at this Jewish restaurant in North York between 10am and 8pm.

Dr. Laffa
Get your falafel fix at this Kosher take-out counter that isn't observing the holiday anyway. Regular hours in affect from 11am to 10pm.

Leslieville Pumps
Per usual, the store will be open 24 hours, but best of all, the kitchen will be open from 9am to 8:30pm on Xmas.

Insomnia
If you find yourself back in the city in the evening of Christmas Day, head out to this cafe in the Annex which opens for service at 8pm.

Golden Griddle
Open 365 days a year, 24 hours a day... this brunch chain is a sure thing even on Christmas Day. Even the newly opened Denny's will be closed.

Manic Coffee
You'll find the odd Tim Horton's and a Starbucks open here and there, but this indie coffee shop on College at Bathurst will be open from 10am to 3pm for those looking for a decent espresso.

De Mello Palhetta
Also open on Xmas from 8am 'til 6pm, get your caffeine fix at this coffee roaster at Yonge and Eglinton.

Formocha
The bubble tea shop on Eglinton Ave. West will keep Xmas hours between noon and 10pm should you find yourself feeling a little thirsty.

What did I miss? Share the coffee shops and restaurants that you find open on Christmas Day in the comments section.

Photo by Jesse Milns

The Best Veggie Burger in Toronto

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Veggie Burger TorontoThe best veggie burgers in Toronto aren't of a single variety. You'll find meat-free patties composed of everything from soy to tempeh, black beans to cheese-stuffed mushrooms. While the ingredients may vary, one thing is clear: these burgers aren't just the domain of vegetarian specialists. You'll find them proliferating on menus at fast food counters, public houses, and even a smokehouse.

Here are the best veggie burgers in Toronto.

See also:

The Best Vegetarian Restaurants in Toronto

Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays

Christmas events in Toronto

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christmas day events torontoMerry Christmas! Events in Toronto today see Ronnie's open its doors in Kensington Market from 2pm onward, which is sort of like living a Cheers Christmas special. Round will also host their regular Archi-textures dance party with a holliday tropical session.

At the Bloor, Cinema Eye will present their top Audience Choice Nominees for the Best Non-Fiction Feature Films until January 5th: tonight's screening is Jodorowsky's Dune (9:15pm). Or, if commercials are your thing, the 2014 Cannes Lions Awards: The World's Best Commercials is also screening at the Bloor (4:30pm). Then at TIFF, the hills are alive - Sing-a-Long-a Sound of Music is back. For more events, click on over to our events section.

See also: What's open and closed Christmas Day in Toronto 2014

Have an event you'd like to plug? Submit your own listing to the blogTO Toronto events calendar or contact us directly.

The top 5 Christmas movies shot in Toronto

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toronto santa clauseEveryone knows Toronto is a popular place to film (if not actually set) movies, but not many know that the city has provided the backdrop to several festive flicks. Maybe it's of the generic North American streetscape, maybe it's the promise of snow, or perhaps it's the tax incentives, whatever the reason, Toronto has starred in everything from fluffy Disney movies to cult slasher films.

Here are the top 5 Christmas movies shot in Toronto.

Black Christmas (1974)
This festive bloodbath is set in a sorority house that's being terrorized by a psychopathic phone caller. Dubbed "the moaner," the killer slashes his way through the occupants of the home, thoroughly ruining Christmas in the process. The sorority house exterior is 6 Clarendon Cres. near Avenue and St. Clair and several other scenes used the University of Toronto campus as a backdrop. The cruddy 2006 remake was shot partially in Vancouver.

A Christmas Story (1983)
Early 80s Toronto does a decent job of playing 1940s Indiana in A Christmas Story, a story about the festive adventures of Ralphie Parker, a young boy who wants nothing more than the gift of a Red Ryder BB gun. One of the movie's most famous scenes, in which Little Ralphie drops an f-bomb, was filmed on the Cherry St. bridge in the Port Lands. Parts of Queen St., Eastern Ave., and Gerrard St. also appear.

One Magic Christmas (1985)
A little piece of Disney seasonal fluff, One Magic Christmas tells the story of cynical mother of two, Ginny Grainger, who is taught the real meaning of Christmas by an unconventional angel. Most of the movie's exteriors were filmed in or around Collingwood, Meaford, and Owen Sound, but parts of Scarborough also make an appearance.

The Santa Clause (1994)
The home where Tim Allen accidentally kills Santa Claus (and tees up the central plot of this yuletide classic) is located in Oakville, but as Torontoist writer David Fleischer writes, a Denny's in Scarborough, John Ross Robertson and Blythwood public schools, Hillcrest Park, Canada Permanent Building on Bay Street, and Runnymede Chronic Care Hospital make cameos. The movie's reindeer were sourced from Toronto Zoo.

Santa Who? (2000)
Uh oh, Santa's got amnesia, and on Christmas Eve, too! This TV movie, which was partially filmed in Toronto, stars Leslie Nielsen who, as St. Nick, gets a job in a mall after falling from his sleigh and hitting his head. When Santa's real identity is revealed everyone remembers the true meaning of Christmas. It's a miracle!

Chris Bateman is a staff writer at blogTO. Follow him on Twitter at @chrisbateman.

After five years on Queen, how does BarChef stack up?

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barchefIt's been five years since this cocktail bar caused a stir on Queen West with opulent, oddball drinks - including a Manhattan served under a dome of smoke. Though the showstopping cocktails and conceptual snacks are still on the menu, they've expanded their range to include simpler (but no less well-crafted) drinks.

Read my profile of BarChef in the bars section.


The top 10 breakout bands from Toronto in 2014

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breakout bands torontoThe breakout bands and artists we tracked in Toronto in 2014 didn't all have beer sponsorships, but each impressed us by breaking new grounds through that delicate combination of dedication and talent. These bands are at different stages in their career - some touring the world, some playing every other solid bill you see in Toronto, but each had a year with accomplishments lined up around the block.

We were impressed by the continued success of Majid Jordan, Odonis Odonis, Trust, Diana, Tre Mission, Tasha the Amazon, PartyNextDoor, PUP, Fresh Snow, Cold Specks, and Boi-1da, among many, and watched the rise of acts like of Graze, Petra Glynt, Pick A Piper, Birds of Bellwoods, Ain't No Love, Doom Squad, Airplane Boys, and Zoo Owl. If the artist you've been watching with maternal eyes isn't here, keep your moaning to a minimum for now: our bands to watch list is on its way.

Here are our picks for the top 10 breakout bands and artists from Toronto in 2014.

Alvvays
2014 was the Year of Alvvays. Their long-awaited Chad VanGaalen-produced debut album yielded impossibly catchy singles "Marry Me, Archie" and "Adult Diversion," but the band also toured non-stop supporting with Yuck, Fucked Up, and Real Estate. They played Yonge-Dundas Square at NXNE, and not one but two sold-out shows at the Horseshoe in fall. Come 2015, Alvvays will be touring with the Decemberists and warming up the ever-prestigious Massey Hall in Toronto. If they want it, Alvvays could make 2015 their year as well. WL

The oOohh Baby Gimme Mores
The OBGM's saw their profile rise significantly in 2014 with the support of a beer-brand marketing machine (who needs a record label these days?). U.S. tour dates ensued including the Afropunk Festival in Brooklyn, and the Made In America Festival in Philadelphia where Consequence of Sound named them one of fest's top 10. Triumphant hometown dates saw them tear apart The Horseshoe, The Rivoli, Adelaide Hall and Tattoo. Their self-titled album released in September was a solid debut that proved their worth beyond the hype. PK

Bile Sister
Julia Reich's band lo-fi scuzz pop band Bile Sister has on the tip of the tongues of promoters and record labels across the board in Toronto since the release of Faucet on Healing Power Records. Overblown (UK) named them one of 10 must-know Toronto bands, and Reich curated the new Offerings Magazine compilation and helped bring NYC punk Chandra to Toronto. The band played Southern Ontario constantly, appearing on stellar bills left and right. Catch them at Silver Dollar's Class of 2015 in January.

Greys
Since 2011, Greys have released three stellar EP's of noisey post-hardcore. But the release of 2014's full-length, If Anything earned flattering reviews from international press and hometown tastemakers alike (we're still sorry for misspelling Shehzaad Jiwani's name). Their SXSW set caught mainstream attention from Rolling Stone and the L.A. Times, and tours through the U.S. and Europe cemented them as one of Toronto's new noise-punk flag-bearers. PK

Lido Pimienta
Whether she was playing fancy billings at Summerworks and the Music Gallery, performing with Tanya Tagaq at Lula Lounge, or throwing down at dance parties at Double Double Land, Lido Pimienta established herself as a key (and rare) original voice (she's not afraid to to sing "K K K Kanada" on stage) in Toronto's music landscape this year. The Colombian-born artist's politically-charged dance pop is as empowering as it is fresh and danceable, and 2014 was the year the city caught on to her magic.

Weaves
2014 has been a pretty busy year for Weaves; what with celebrated performances at SXSW and CMW, a spot on CP24 Breakfast, and most importantly, the release of their self-titled debut EP on the oh-so-hip Buzz Records. Singer Jasmyn Burke's Billie Holliday-on-acid vocals coupled with Morgan Waters' skronking, Beefheart-esque guitar is squealing candy to our ears (and Rolling Stone's), and tracks like "Motorcycle" and "Buttercup" are just as suitable soundtracking the winter blues as they are in the summer sun. CG

July Talk
Still-new radio station Indie88 quickly earned the nickname JulyTalk88, but it's the fact that the nu-blues band released their own beer, "July Talk Conversation" via the Mill Street Brewery, that made them a true 2014 Toronto wonder band. Peak Toronto or not, fans adored the band's raucous live performances, from TURF to beer halls to The Phoenix. 2014 will see them launching a huge international tour from the US to Europe.

Teenanger
When they aren't soundtracking the antics of a beefcake Jersey Shore crew, Teenanger make hook-laden, three-chord punk rock led by singer Chris Swimings' Human-Fly vocals; basically bratty music about adult problems. Their new, fourth record, E P L P, could be considered either at a runtime of just under 25 minutes, but in both cases, we're left wanting more and wondering why it took so long for this to grab our attention.

Jason Doell
It isn't often that a figure in contemporary chamber music, or toy piano maker, makes a list like this, but beyond Doell's ties to punk ethos and indie bands like The Vulcan Dub Squad, the scene-straddling winner of the Emerging Composer Award and new associate composer of the Canadian Music Centre will be at Feast in the East one night and a composer's workshop the next. This fall he marched a group of noisy kids through the AGO as part of First Thursday, and it seemed like not a week went by without some Doell function, release, or award win.

Jennifer Castle
While her name is in no way new to Toronto's music scene - she's released three albums prior, appeared on Constantines and Fucked Up recordings to name a few, and played in several outfits - this was an emergent year for folk singer-songwriter Jennifer Castle. Her 2014 album Pink City, featuring appearances by Owen Pallett, led Pitchfork to compare her to Neko Case and Joni Mitchell, while NPR found her a natural fit and the in-flux Q brought her onto CBC's airwaves this month.

Who did we miss? Let us know which bands and artists from Toronto impressed you most this year.

Contributions by Po Karim, Colin Gillespie, Wini Lo. Photo of July Talk by Matt Forsythe.

Note: While Colin Gillespie is a member of Greys, he did not contribute to their appearance on this list.

Boxing Day Weekend events in Toronto 2014

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Boxing Day weekend events TorontoBoxing Day weekend events in Toronto will give you a reason to something other than shop after the unbridled consumerism of the past few days. Can't resist deal hunting? Well, at least there's something to do after the malls close and you've played around with all the new toys you bought at a fraction below regular retail.

Here are my picks for the top events happening in Toronto December 26-28, 2014.

What's in the Box (Boxing Day Week, The Drake)
This annual party series at the Drake gives a warm home to those who haven't flown east or west to gorge themselves on homestyle cooking. The lineup for this year's multi day fest includes Egyptrixx, Pet Sun, Bruce Trail, Ain't No Love, The Meligrove Band, Stacey, and way more. Expect dancing and way less drama than Auntie Anne's. Check out our preview here.

FILM

Restored! (December 25 - January 1, TIFF Bell Lightbox)
TIFF are launching a new regular series, called "Restored!", devoted to beautiful facelifts via new restorations. They're featuring a wide variety of films, including a restored version of 1920's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (a hugely influential silent classic), or the gorgeous cinematography in a whole series of James Dean restorations: East of Eden, Giant, and, duh, Rebel Without a Cause. AH

The Apple (December 28, Clinton's)
What better way to spend a sleepy holiday Sunday than with Bad Movie Night's screening of sci-fi musical The Apple. "What the Genesis story really needs is disco" -someone, somewhere, at some point. Movie's at 8pm.

FOOD

King Catering Caribbean Holiday Pop-Up Taster (December 27, Ballet)
Looking for tropical vibes? If you didn't get cruise tickets under the tree, again, at least we have seasonings. Get to Ballet on Ossington for music and five courses of Caribbean fare: Callaloo Soup, Tropical Bruschetta, Braised Jerk Pork Ravioli, Deep Fried Breadfruit with Spicy Trini Meatball, and Coconut Sorrel Mousse. The dinner starts at 7:30pm.

Psychic Brunch (December 28, Flying Beaver)
The last Sunday in November brings us Psychic Brunch, where meals are paired with spiritual consultations in Cabbagetown, but you already knew that because you have the gift - or you read our review.

ART

art shows torontoArt Spiegelman Retrospective (December 20, 2014 - March 15, 2015, AGO)
Pulitzer winner and one of the Time's 100 Most Influential People, the Maus cartoonist's work is a thrill to see in person. The brilliant AGO exhibit is on until March 15, and includes original drawings and rarely seen works from Spiegelman's career. Read our review here.

PARTY & MUSIC

Solaris Winter Music Fest (December 26, Direct Energy Centre)
On Boxing Day, EDM fans can get a head start on NYE and dance off their sins with Skrillex, Kaskade, Boys Noize, Adventure Club, Tchami, and 3LAU and more. This is one of those all ages dance parties City Hall isn't fond of, so enjoy the glowsticks while you can, little elves.

Cover me Impressed (December 27, Lee's Palace)
Bring a non perishable food item (or more - or $5) to Lee's to hear cover songs performed live by some corner pegs of TO's indie crew including July Talk, Steven Stanley, Spencer Burton, Brendan Canning, Catl, Taylor Knox, Ferraro, Whitney Rose, with host Sam Cash.

THEATRE

Holidazed and Confused (November 17 - January 1, Second City)
Holidays are a weird and awkward time of year. Whether it's spending time with family members you don't see for eleven months or battling strangers for the perfect piece of consumerism, the clever Second City troupe hopes to capture and examine holiday rituals in this revue about the trials and tribulations of the holiday season.

With contributions by Alexander Huls

Photo by Visualbass Photography via Solaris Festival on Faceook.

The Best Chinese Restaurants in Toronto

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chinese restaurants torontoThe best Chinese restaurants in Toronto will always carry the term "arguably" with them, which in most cases will just end up in full-on bickering. In a city chock-full of excellent Chinese restaurants, not just in terms of quality but also in terms of variety, it is almost impossible to have a definitive list of what constitutes the "best". That's not going to stop us from trying though, so put your pitchforks (or pitch-chopsticks, har har) down, relax, and check out these must-visit restaurants.

Here are the best Chinese restaurants in Toronto.

See also:

The top 10 Chinese restaurants in Scarborough
The top 10 cheap Chinese restaurants in Markham and Richmond Hill
The Best Late Night Chinese In Toronto
The Best Dumplings In Toronto
The Best Dim Sum in Toronto
The Best Chinese Restaurants in Mississauga

Writing by Darren "DKLo" Susilo. He hangs out on the twitter and his own mansion.

Boxing Day sales in Toronto 2014

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boxing day sales torontoBoxing Day sales in Toronto feature all the usual suspects - mainly, big-box electronics stores inevitably selling you the thing you bent over backwards to buy for little Jimmy at half-off. Chain retailers are opening up early to accomodate shoppers, but if you're looking for something a little more specialized (or localized), a lot of smaller shops are getting in on the act.

Here are my picks for the top Boxing Day sales in Toronto in 2014.

Target
If you're in the market for a TV, head down to Target, where they've got 48-inch models for as low as $299.99; they've also got notable deals on tablets (a Samsung Galaxy tab is $278, marked down from $379) and kitchen appliances.

Future Shop
Nobody does Boxing Day like Future Shop (and its parallel-universe twin, Best Buy). Among the deals: Polk Audio bookshelf speakers for $199 ($230 off) and Nikon D7100 camera bundles for $1199 ($305 off), though you'll find a sale in every section.

Best Buy
Among the Boxing Day steals at the electronic chain's locations: A Canon Rebel T5 DSLR bundle for $499.99 (that's $300 off), 13.3" i5 MacBook Airs for $999.99 ($200 off) and Xbox/Kinect bundles for $349.99 ($150 off).

Sporting Life
The sporting goods chain is doing a bunch of 7-9am doorcrasher deals, including 50% off down and insulated coats, running shoes, skis and snowboards.

Dutil
Here's a novel one: Bring the oldest nickel you can find to the Queen St. denim shop on Boxing Day, and you can win a free or half-off pair of jeans. (If you don't have a coin collection hanging around, just go and snag up to 93% off a pair of your own.)

Chosen Vintage
At this spooky-chic vintage boutique on West Queen West, all clothing (minus consignment and tie-dyed silks) will be 30% off.

Kind Exchange
On Boxing Day, snag half-off all inventory at all of the resale clothing chain's locations - plus, their 611 Queen St. West store is doing a "fill a bag sale for $20" sale.

Holt Renfrew
Feeling fancy? Get up to 60% off fall styles at the department store's Bloor and Yorkdale locations.

Parloque
The West Queen West boutique, a purveyor of independent lines from around the world, is doing markdowns of up to 60% off.

Working Title
The Boxing Day sale at this art-focus men's boutique is already on, with markdowns of up to 50% on their website and in store.

Sydney's
On Queen St., Sydney's is already offering deals of up to 75% off on designer clothing.

Off The Cuff
Near Yonge and Eglinton, grab some gently-used designer menswear for between 50% and 75% off.

Aritzia
Looking for some new yoga pants or silk blouses? Aritzia stores are doing between $20 and $50 off on Boxing Day.

TNT
The store's Hazelton Lanes, Bayview Village and Eglinton locations will all be offering designer threads for up to 70% off.

H&M
Brave enough to queue up early for the sales? H&M will be handing out scratch cards for up to $300 off for early risers. (Everyone else can get deals for as low as $5.)

Gotstyle
Men's and women's clothing are up to 70% off at their Distillery and Bathurst boutiques.

The Narwhal
Shop designer finds (think Acne, Helmut Lang and Rachel Comey) from 30 to 70% off at this Rosedale boutique.

Did I miss any? Leave your picks for Boxing Day sales in the comments.

Photo by Chris VP in the blogTO Flickr Pool.

What's open and closed Boxing Day in Toronto 2014

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boxing day torontoWhat's open and closed Boxing Day in Toronto 2014:

For Boxing Day Sales in Toronto see our roundup here.

GENERAL

Closed

  • Government offices and banks
  • Libraries
  • No mail delivery

TRANSIT

  • The TTC will operate on holiday service schedule with a start time of 6am.

FOOD

Open
Most major chains and grocers will be open on Boxing Day, though many will operate reduced hours.

DRINK

Open

Closed

  • Beer stores and LCBO stores will be closed, though some LCBO agency stores may choose to open
  • Amsterdam Brewhouse at 245 Queens Quay West

MALLS
Malls are open and operating extended hours.

Open

ATTRACTIONS

Open

Did I miss anything? Add it to the comments below.

Photo by ChrisV in the blogTO flickr pool.

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