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6,000 and 6,500 people were expected to attend Saturday, which marked the fair 30th anniversary."People know it their one chance to get unique things, (and) the vendors have a very loyal clientele here," she said.Ray Dauzat, 53, a high school math teacher from Marksville who spends his free time building sturdy rocking chairs and porch swings from Louisiana cypress, has been coming to Southdown to sell his wares for more than 12 years."They very good very cooperative," Dauzat said. "They put on a real good show."Like several other vendors interviewed, Dauzat woodworking is a hobby, thought not a small one, since he said he hoped to sell some 30 pieces of handcrafted porch furniture Saturday. As buyers lounged and rocked in his smoothly sanded chairs and swings, Dauzat said he plans to pick up carpentry full time after he retires from teaching this year."I love the actual creating from nothing at all," he said. "I love to see what can come out of it."For other vendors, however, the wares on display constitute the fruits of full time labor."This is all we do," said Rita Smith, who runs The Ole Homestead, a gourmet jelly business, with her husband Rodger out of their house in Gilbert. "We make jelly all week and we sell it on the weekend."crafters set for Unique BoutiqueThis year Unique Boutique hometown sellers are adding a positive dimension to the Heritage Sewickley Foundation 12th annual event, coordinator Terri Tunick said. Saturday at the Edgeworth Club, 511 East Drive.One day after making so many, Korb, who now lives with her husband, Don, in Ligonier on weekends and Pittsburgh during the