“No glitter?” Louis Smith asked incredulously.

The letter-writing get-together was just one of dozens of gatherings held at Rock Paper Scissors every month, ranging from writing workshops to a sewing lab and jewelry-making for teens.

“When we first came to Rock Paper Scissors looking for a space, they said of course,” Alisheva said. “Obviously, we don’t have a lot of money. It’s not something that brings in a lot of revenue, but that didn’t matter to them."

She added: "It was such a relief when we finally landed here, so now we’re not sure where we’re going to end up."

That's a sentiment shared with the quirky, creative space's regulars.

“Gentrification is real," said Alexandra Rigaud, an assistant with the collective's youth program. "We are getting pushed out, and we did start First Friday ... Now we are paying for it.”

It’s becoming a common story all over the Bay Area. The artists who, in recent times, made a neighborhood "hip" are being driven out, in part due to their own success.

“The neighborhood has changed a lot," said Kristi Holohan, the collective's youth, community and interim gallery director. "We are basically like sandwiched in between two bars, there are some really high-end galleries."

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf said the plight of Rock Paper Scissors raises a much bigger question as the city continues to boom.

“It's not just the housing affordability that is a potential crisis for us," she said. "The threat of displacement of our small businesses, of our cultural institutions, of our nonprofits -- those are also community stabilization issues that absolutely need to be solved.”

Schaaf said the city’s “solutions are more limited” because state law prevents rent stabilization for commercial space. The mayor said she's creating a new Artist Affordable Housing and Workspace Task Force, but that’s yet to be staffed.

Anyka Barber, who founded Betti Ono gallery in downtown Oakland, said the city needs to do more.

“In order for it to continue to be a world-class city and build on the strengths that it has, especially around culture and arts, we really have to have the investment match the brand recognition," she said.

Barber is a lead organizer of the Oakland Creative Neighborhoods Coalition -- a newly formed group that’s calling for the re-establishment of Oakland’s Arts Commission, which had its funding and staff eliminated more than five years ago.

“There’s a lot of talk about the economic development side of arts experiences or cultural experiences, based on people visiting, what kinds of funds or revenues that brings back to the city," Barber said. "Currently, it looks like maybe 1.3 percent of the total city budget is funding or investing in community development or cultural programs. That does not reflect equity.”

The coalition's demands were left out of the recently adopted 2016-17 city budget.

Rock Paper Scissors, meanwhile, has until the end of the month to find a new space or close up shop and try to raise more money. The collective is seeking volunteers to help pack up and move to a yet-to-be-determined location.