Source: https://heyseorak.com/spots/off-to Last-Updated: 2026-06-16 --- # Off To (오프투) Category: workshop | Type: do, shop | Area: tourist_fishery_market | Price range: budget Address: 1F, 46 Jungang-ro 147beon-gil, Sokcho, Gangwon Phone: 0507-1393-3386 Hours: Mon 11:00–19:00, Tue–Wed Closed, Thu–Sun 11:00–19:00 (Closed every Tuesday and Wednesday.) English menu available: Yes ## Trust and freshness - Verification: interview / 2026-06-16 - Menu freshness: updated 2026-06-16T00:23:08.489+00:00 A tiny souvenir shop and custom T-shirt workshop tucked along the market alley in central Sokcho. Pick your patches — Ulsanbawi cats, Sokcho seafood, Korean lettering — press them onto a tee in 13 seconds, and walk out wearing your own Sokcho souvenir. Pro tip: The owner speaks fluent English and loves recommending local spots. Ask her about Ulsanbawi, Sokcho Eye, or where to find the best dakgangjeong. ## Story ### How it started Before she ever touched a heat press, she spent seven years as a hotel concierge in Seoul, greeting guests in crisp English. Then came the leap: 400 days circling the globe with her now-husband — the Americas, Europe, Asia — sleeping in every kind of lodging imaginable. Back in Korea she pivoted to interior design, earned her industrial engineer license in architectural interiors, and landed a role launching Photogray (one of Korea's life4cuts photo-booth brands), personally designing and overseeing construction of all 50 company-owned stores nationwide over two and a half years. She moved to Sokcho, won two rounds of government startup grants, and turned three run-down minbak guesthouses into profitable listings — pushing one grandmother's income from ₩300,000 a month to multiples of that by redesigning the spaces, coaching the hosts on service, and filling weekday vacancies online. When she spotted a vacant shop on the market alley at a affordable rent, she signed the lease first and figured out what to sell later. ### Philosophy The shop doubles as a personal museum of things she cannot throw away: a lion plush from a Sri Lankan friend she lived with in Sydney ('Don't forget me,' he said, handing it over — the lion is on Sri Lanka's flag), a teddy bear from an American soldier who frequented her hotel and gave it as a farewell gift before leaving Korea for good. She held that bear for nearly ten years. Every object on the shelves carries a backstory she keeps to herself — and when the right buyer appears, she lets it go cheaply, imagining the two strangers connected through one small thing. The T-shirt patches follow the same spirit: no cap on how many you can add, because more is prettier. ### Signature You pick your own patches from bins of Sokcho-themed iron-ons — a cat perched on Ulsanbawi rock, a Manseoktakgangjeong chicken-cat mashup, mulhoe bowls, ojingeo-sundae, the Sokcho Eye ferris wheel, Korean alphabet letters, numbers for today's date. Lay them on a plain tee however you like, and the heat press seals them in 13 seconds. The choosing takes as long as you want — some customers linger for an hour mixing and matching. A family of five once made matching shirts labeled Mommy, Daddy, Halmi, and the kids' names, then wore them around town together. ### Finding the place The shop sits on the alley connecting Sokcho Tourist & Fishery Market to the public parking lot, directly across from Sokcho Mun-eo Gukbap. Walk-ins are the norm — most customers spot the sample tees in the window while passing through the market and step in on impulse. ### Seasonal notes Summer is peak season: groups of friends and couples love matching custom tees for the beach. The owner designed Sokcho-themed templates specifically for visitors who want a wearable souvenir. ### For international visitors Seven years as a hotel concierge plus a year on a working holiday in Sydney mean the owner switches to English without a beat. She invited two French sisters she met at a neighboring shop to her home for samgyeopsal, schooled them on Korean skincare layering (six steps, not one), and tipped them off to PDRN serums at Daiso. Two Australian women from Sydney made custom tees, loved the experience so much they told her to bring the business to Sydney. She uses the T-shirt patches as conversation starters — pointing at the food-cat design and asking 'Have you tried Korean chicken? Ojingeo-sundae?' — turning a souvenir shop into an impromptu Sokcho travel briefing. > 사람들이 더 재미있게 여행했으면 좋겠어요 — 'I just want people to have more fun when they travel.' ## Menu ### Experience (체험) - **Keo-seu-teom Ti-syeo-cheu (Ban-pal)** (커스텀 티셔츠 (반팔)) — ₩20,000 ⭐ Signature Design your own Sokcho souvenir tee. Choose from bins of iron-on patches — Ulsanbawi rock cats, local food icons, Korean letters, numbers — arrange them on a plain tee, and the heat press seals everything in 13 seconds. No limit on patches; the owner encourages loading up. Serving: Walk-in OK. Choosing patches takes 10 minutes to 1 hour depending on your creativity. Sokcho-themed templates available for quick designs.