Project

Prairie Vintage Revival Website

Prairie Vintage Revival lived entirely on Facebook. I built Juanita a website from scratch — with a custom events and vendor-application system — so the market finally had a home that anyone could find, social media or not.

Year2026
ServicesWeb
Client
Prairie Vintage Revival
https://prairievintagerevival.caInteractive Demo
Testimonial

Lyndon took my few words of explanation and turned them into exactly what I wanted and needed. Don't wait 5 years like I did.

Juanita DueckOwner · Prairie Vintage Revival

Project Info

Before this build, Prairie Vintage Revival didn’t have a website. Everything — event dates, vendor details, updates — was communicated through Facebook alone. That left a real gap: anyone not on social media had no way in, and anyone searching Google for the market came up empty.

So we built the site from scratch to give Juanita a proper web presence — a place for blogs, event information, vendor applications, and more. The centerpiece is a custom events system that displays upcoming markets, paired with a vendor application flow: vendors apply to be part of a market, and once Juanita approves them, they’re displayed automatically on that event’s page. It turns a manual, social-media-bound process into something the site handles on its own.

The design was just as intentional as the functionality. I went for a rustic, vintage feel so the site reads as a genuine extension of the market itself — every choice made to match the brand rather than fight it. The result is a market that’s findable on Google, accessible to people who aren’t on Facebook, and easier to run behind the scenes.

The Problem

Prairie Vintage Revival had no website at all. Every piece of information lived on Facebook, which shut out anyone not on social media and gave Google searchers no reliable way to find the market. There was also no real system for handling vendor applications or presenting upcoming markets — it was all manual.

My Approach

Prairie Vintage Revival had no website at all. Every piece of information lived on Facebook, which shut out anyone not on social media and gave Google searchers no reliable way to find the market. There was also no real system for handling vendor applications or presenting upcoming markets — it was all manual.

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