With a plate full of stressful workdays, restless children, and the mundane tasks of adult life, most parents settle into the comfort of a safe and predictable day-to-day routine. While there is absolutely nothing wrong with this lifestyle, it unfortunately prevents many adults from daring to pursue dreams which venture far from this comfortable path. Stacy Miller, Wilkes-Barre native and Tunkhannock resident of 16 years, is a woman determined to show that taking the leap may be risky but is always more fulfilling in the end.
Stacy Miller’s journey began at GAR high school in Wilkes-Barre, PA, where she started dating her husband of 19 years. After high school, Stacy pursued higher education at Luzerne County Community College and Misericordia University. She then achieved her doctorate at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. After all of her extensive studies, Stacy is now a forensic nurse practitioner, being just one of around 600 in the country to hold her certification, and teaches nursing courses at Vanderbilt and Scranton University, all while taking care of a full house of four children. Last month, Stacy added a fresh (and large) hunk of meat to her plate: a new wedding dress boutique in Tunkhannock.
Dubbed Lillian Mae Atelier, the boutique is infused with passion and pure glee.
“I was thinking about the happiest moments of my life,” Stacy expresses, “and my children being born and my wedding day are what came to mind.”
After joking about not wanting to endure more years of schooling to become a midwife, Stacy’s eye’s sparkled as she reminisced on the blissfulness of being a bride: planning, dress shopping, actually getting married, and the genuine love present throughout the whole process. It was a no-brainer for Stacy to bottle up all of that wedding joy and unleash it into a storefront; thus, Lillian Mae Atelier was born.
Stacy thought of the idea for the store just a year and a half ago; before she even had her hands on a location though, she was already reaching out to designers, learning about the bridal industry and making connections to hopefully stock their designs someday. She was also busy curating a name for the shop, which she describes as a combination of her two daughters’ names, Lillian and Madelyn (nicknamed “Maddy Mae”). About six months after tossing the idea of Lillian Mae around, Interfaith Friends moved to a new location and their downtown storefront went on the market. While the inside of the store was painted a large assortment of rainbow colors and didn’t quite embody the elegance of a bridal boutique just yet, Stacy had a vision.
With the support of her husband, parents, children, and friends, Stacy’s dream boutique eventually came to fruition, with Stacy herself designing the inside of the shop and her husband completing all of the exterior construction.
“I’m so very blessed because he really goes above and beyond to make my dreams come to life,” Stacy reflects.
Sporting a classy black and white storefront and a white and wooden interior, the dress shop came to be the perfect blend of contemporary boho and chic elegance, creating a warm, welcoming environment for any bride-to-be.
The atmosphere especially compliments the trendy rental and event styling boutique just down the street, Chippy White Table. Along with Monzie’s Floral Design and The Mayflower Florist in town, Tunkhannock is shaping up to be a place where one can source their entire wedding locally! This kind of community spirit is exactly what Stacy is hoping for with Lillian Mae. She desires the dress shop to be a store that other people travel to see, a destination boutique.
“I want other people to love Tunkhannock just as much as I do,” Stacy says.
Even though she is juggling four kids and a full-time job, Stacy Miller found a way to pursue her passion project. Despite the dress shop introducing its own additional hurdles for Stacy, such as navigating social media, she has found that through positive support and determination, anything can be done. When asked to give advice to those who are unsure of taking the leap to start their own business, Stacy encourages, “As long as someone is passionate, there is no failure. Even if the business is not successful, you learn so much through the project about yourself and relationships. Investing in yourself is never a bad thing.”
Written by Ashley Kenia