Mother-Daughter Duo Opens Vintage Shop Revival Fix in Downtown Yuma
An NAU-bound grad and her mother just opened Revival Fix, a curated vintage boutique in downtown Yuma, betting on foot traffic and sustainable fashion to put a new spin on Main Street.

Marizza Galindo grew up thrifting. Her mother, Raquel Luna, spent years building Luna Home Decor, hunting down pieces that could transform a room. Together, the two have turned those parallel obsessions into Revival Fix, a curated vintage clothing and home-decor shop now open in downtown Yuma.
The mother-daughter team announced the store on KAWC's "What's Up Yuma?" program on April 2, speaking for roughly 25 minutes about why they chose downtown as the location. Their answer was straightforward: foot traffic, cultural events, and the chance to become a fixture alongside the galleries, cafes, and venues like the Yuma Art Center that already draw residents into the historic core. For Raquel, the downtown gamble also builds on existing expertise. She brings the home-decor eye to Revival Fix, hand-picking decorative pieces the same way she curated inventory for Luna Home Decor. Marizza handles the fashion side, selecting vintage apparel and accessories she believes fill a genuine gap in Yuma's retail landscape.
The store's model is deliberately narrow. Revival Fix does not carry high-volume thrift; it carries curated thrift. The owners hand-select every piece for durability and style, clean and restore items before they hit the floor, and offer styling guidance to shoppers who are new to vintage shopping. Raquel's background in home decor gives the shop's non-clothing section the same editorial discipline, whether that means a coffee-table book or a statement vase.
On the radio segment, Galindo and Luna also described plans to bring local designers and makers into the mix through in-store pop-ups and vintage-themed events. Those events are a direct play for the foot-traffic bump that benefits surrounding businesses on art-walk and festival days, and they position Revival Fix as something closer to a creative hub than a conventional secondhand rack.

Marizza's own timeline adds a distinct layer to the story. She studied Business Administration at Arizona Western College and will graduate in May with a bachelor's degree from Northern Arizona University, after which she plans to travel abroad on scholarship. Running Revival Fix while finishing a degree is, in part, what the shop itself demonstrates: the owners describe it as both a retail business and a live example of the sustainable, reuse-based economy they want to promote in Yuma.
The Yuma County Chamber of Commerce has already added Revival Fix to its member directory. Follow the shop on Instagram at @revivalfix for new arrivals and event announcements.
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