According to a 1985 issue of the store's Whole Earth Access Mail Order Catalog, (named after, but not the same as The Whole Earth Catalog which it also sold):
Our Berkeley store opened in 1969, inspired by but independent of The Whole Earth Catalog. It began by carrying books, a few woodstoves, a few power tools, and back-to-the-land equipment. Access to a wide variety of products was available at very low prices through special ordering from distributors' catalogs. Gradually the store began stocking the items most commonly ordered, and we now carry a wide range of top-quality products for basic living, still at very low prices. Our newest section is electronics and communications, which includes cameras, video, audio, and computers.[1]
Larry Farb commented in 1986 to the Los Angeles Times that, "we've grown up with our customers [...] the person who bought wood stoves in the '70s is buying cappuccino makers today." [3]
Notes
^ abWhole Earth Access Mail Order Catalog: Access to quality products for good living at the lowest possible prices.Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press, 1985: Inside front cover.
^ ab Victor F. Zonana. "One of the Fastest-Growing Chains in U.S.: Whole Earth Access Stores are Bargain Basement for Yuppies." Los Angeles Times, May 19, 1986: E2
Whole Earth Access Mail Order Catalog: Access to quality products for good living at the lowest possible prices.Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press, 1985.
Binkley, Sam. Getting Loose: Lifestyle Consumption in the 1970s. Durham: Duke University Press, 2007.
Zonana, Victor F. "One of the Fastest-Growing Chains in U.S.: Whole Earth Access Stores are Bargain Basement for Yuppies." Los Angeles Times, May 19, 1986: E1-2.