River and Wren have set up a virtual marketplace for this Anzac Day weekend, as stallholders scramble to shift their merchandise online in response to the coronavirus quarantine.
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The figurative gates will open up from noon of Saturday on the River and Wren website, and they will be hawking the usual range of handmade, homemade, and homegrown wares from small businesses.
One of them is wood craftsman Daniel Croxon, who had to rapidly teach himself how to make a website for his business Factorem.
"Making a website was at the back of my mind, but the coronavirus has really pushed me to get it up and running," Mr Croxon said.
His business model relied heavily on markets and community events, so he was one of many business owners who had to adapt and adapt fast.
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River and Wren founder Jennie Meklejohn said she wanted to keep the market feeling alive while supporting small business owners.
"Traders still have the goods - it's just getting them from the trader to the customer and River and Wren is the middle person," Mrs Meklejohn said.
"I want people to support small and local business, because to see people out the other end they need to be supported now."
She is part of the We've Got the Goods campaign, which applauds local business owners who have overhauled their business models and adapted quickly to troubling times.
Mrs Meklejohn said she remains optimistic that there is light at the end of the tunnel, saying small businesses needed all the help they could get to reach the other side.