COMMENTARY: A
DISCUSSION ON HOT TRENDS
Most of this issue is devoted to hot trends key elements they
have in common, why they fade, and how (and how not) to evaluate
their current status. Scrapbooking and yarn are just the latest
trends, and they won't be the last. Your ability to judge the
current and future potential of a trend is probably the most
essential characteristic for your success.
Have I got it right? What am I missing? Let me know. Call
309-925-5593 or email mike@clnonline.com.
NEW COLUMNS THIS ISSUE
Category
Reports. The Wal-Mart news (positive and
negative) never stops.
Tech Topics. Simple, sage advice on building your business
with an email newsletter, by the industry's savviest web marketing
pro, Lynn Carlisle of Carlisle Communications.
"Vinny Da Vendor". Simple, sound advice on how
to generate the most publicity from your trade show experience.
Kindra Foster shows you how.
Kate's
Collage. How to write a press release with an model
to use as an example.
Scene &
Heard. Highlights from the TNNA/INRG
Columbus show and a final wrap-up of the Society of Decorative
Painters convention in Tampa.
Note. If you surf to a column and it's an "old"
column, click the "Refresh" or "Reload" button
of your browser.
TAKE THE CLN POLL: THE
FIRST HALF OF 2005
So how is the year thus far? A pleasant surprise? Disappointing?
Vendors and retailers alike cast your anonymous vote by clicking
on Industry Polls in the right-hand column or click HERE.
CLN
POLL: HEALTH INSURANCE
AND YOU
The industry is worried about health insurance. A whopping 80%
think the United States is in a genuine health care crisis, and 20%
think the problem is approaching the crisis level. No one voted that
health care was not a crisis.
As a result, 82% support the bill in Congress that would allow
members of trade associations to purchase health insurance for
themselves and their employees through trade groups such as CHA,
TNNA, and HSA. No one voted against the bill and the
rest were unsure.
The one surprising result: 71% of respondents do offer some form
of health insurance to employees. almost a fourth, 24%, do not offer
insurance, and 5% have stopped offering insurance as an employee
benefit. It's a different story for part-time employees. Only 5%
offer insurance; 90% do not, and 5% had to stop offering it because
of cost.
Meanwhile, as General Motors announced it was cutting its
workforce by 25,000 in the next few years, GM execs said employee
health insurance added $1,500 to the price of each car. And a recent
report on National Public Radio said a family who buys health
insurance pays an additional $1,500 to pay for pass-along costs of
the uninsured. So if a family buys its own insurance and buys a GM
car, that's $3,000 less to spend on leisure time activities such as
crafts.
ROSE ART SOLD
Rose Art Industries was sold to Mega Bloks for $315
million in cash and stock, including approximately $35 million in
debt, Playthings reported. Mega Bloks is the second largest
toy block company in the world; it has 1,000+ employees and sells in
100+ countries. Its stock, which has fallen 16% in the past year
through June 14, according to Bloomberg News, is traded over the
counter under the symbol MBLKF.
Rose Art has long been #2 to Binney & Smith in crayon
sales and produces a variety of kids' craft products. In recent
years it developed an extensive scrapbook line under the Kodak label
and a paint-by-numbers line of Thomas Kinkade paintings. The Kodak
line is in Toys R Us and other chains not normally considered
"craft" stores.
Rose Art was founded in 1923 and owned by Lawrence and Jeffrey
Rosen it had sales of $285 million US in the year ended March 31 and
recorded an operating profit of $43 million. In addition to becoming
major shareholders, Lawrence Rosen, Rose Arts President/CEO, will
be Sr. VP/Chief Marketing Officer and be nominated to Mega Bloks
board. Jeffrey Rosen will have the same title, Exec. VP, at Mega
Bloks.
SPECIAL REPORT, I: QUALITIES
OF A HOT TREND
One of the keys to long-term success in this industry is the
ability to spot emerging trends and product categories, capitalize
on them, and then adjust as they level off or decline. What follows
is a list of qualities to consider when evaluating a trend, and how
to judge the state of a trend.
The industry has seen numerous trends decoupage, macrame,
dollmaking, cross-stitch, plastic canvas, decorative painting,
wearable art, scrapbooking, beads (4-5 times), and yarn. They don't
all have the same characteristics listed below, but any potential
trend needs many of them to be successful.
The lists below are not definitive, but rather are to stimulate
thought and discussion. If you agree or disagree with any of the
above, or think CLN omitted an important quality, email CLN
at mike@clnonline.com.
We'll print your comments in our next issue. (Note: these
qualities are not listed in order of importance.)
1. A social outlet. Knitting circles, quilting bees, and
scrap parties even jewelry and painting classes provide a
sense of community in this increasingly isolated world. A social
component inspires consumers to continue their craft.
2. Heirlooms. A consumer will spend far more time/money on
an heirloom such as a quilt or an acid-free scrapbook than she would
on a cute knick-knack.
3. $$$. Making something rather than buying a readymade
should save money. HGTV is filled with programs showing viewers how
to recreate expensive decor by doing "crafty" things
themselves. For example, the flood of inexpensive imported clothes
and painted items have hurt apparel sewing and decorative painting.
4. Room for improvement. Painters keep painting because
they think their next painting will be better. If a crafter
completely masters a craft, much of the challenge is gone often
fads do not evolve into trends because of this.
5. It "looks" easy. Consumers know they can glue
a photo in a scrapbook, but they may be intimidated when they see
complicated album pages, or a highly detailed cross-stitch or
painting project. Many people learned as early as grade school that
they can't paint, so they never try again, despite the fact that
decorative painting techniques allow anyone to paint successfully.
6. It attracts consumers who normally do not craft, paint,
knit, etc. An industry sales chart over the past three decades would
show a series of sharp increases alternating with a plateau or small
decline. The increases are the trends attracting newcomers into our
stores.
7. It fits the fashion trends. Bead sales always rise when
embellishment is in fashion. Fabric painting began to wane when a
plain, spare look became popular.
8. One-of-a-kind vs. a copy. Decorative painters and cross
stitchers often pride themselves on how well they copied the
original, whereas jewelry-makers and altered-book crafters like it
in part because they can create one-of-a-kind items.
9. Stars. Decorative painting and cross stitch are filled
with "star" designers whose followers buy everything the
stars publish. Because of "stars," some consumers become
collectors. Numerous consumers collected all of the Precious Moments
charts without necessarily making all of the projects.
10. Health. The repetition involved in knitting and cross
stitch provide a zen-like relaxation. A study sponsored by the Home
Sewing Assn. indicated sewing could reduce blood pressure. One
well known painter told CLN when she started painting she
stopped eating so much and lost 100 pounds.
11. It's portable. Knitters can take their projects
anywhere.
12. Quick & Easy. Ironing a transfer onto a
sweatshirt, for example. If it's not quick and easy, then the result
probably better be an heirloom.
13. Margins. There is enough profit to motivate retailers
and vendors to continue pushing a category via displays, classes,
new product development, teaching programs, and advertising. Plastic
canvas declined when price wars cut the margins so drastically that
vendors and retailers couldn't make any money therefore they
concentrated on other categories.
14. Satisfaction. What Howard Hoffman said is still true:
"The crafter does 10% of the work but gets 100% of the
credit." There is no substitute for the I-did-it-myself
feeling.
15. Evolution. Cardmaking is an outgrowth of scrapbooking.
Other forms of needlework may benefit from the knit/crochet trend.
Stencil sales will rise with the home dec trend.
16. Function. Does the completed project serve a helpful
purpose? Soap- and candle-making do that, for example. So does
sewing curtains and pillows.
17. Ease of entry. If it is relatively inexpensive to
bring a product to market (e.g., a line of scrapbook paper) or open
a store, consumers see a wider array of projects/designs, thus
increasing the chances they will discover something they want to
make. More stores means more visibility for the category, too. And
more independent stores means more teaching.
18. Appealing designs. Consumers buy our products for what
they can create with them. "I do not sell shoes," the
Italian manufacturer said. "I sell beautiful feet."
19. Create beauty. Years ago an old pioneer woman was
interviewed about her quilts. She described an incredibly harsh
life, including the terrible isolation of farming on the desolate
U.S. plains. About her quilts, she said, "I quilted as fast as
I could to keep my family warm, and as beautiful as I could to keep
my heart from breaking."
SPECIAL REPORT, II. WHAT MAKES
A CATEGORY FADE
1. Trends fade. No matter how intense and extensive they
may be at the time, they eventually decline. Fashion-oriented
categories such as wearable art and jewelrymaking are particularly
susceptible.
2. Society changes. Consumers, usually younger ones, go
through periods where they want to make unique, one-of-a-kind
projects rather than a copy of a chart or a pattern. That affects
duplicating categories such as cross stitch and decorative painting
and more individualistic categories such as jewelrymaking and
scrapbooking.
3. Challenge is gone. Are you as good at a category as
you're ever going to be? Then you may feel motivated to move on to
something more challenging.
4. The function is gone. How many macrame plant hangers
does one house need? When the enthusiast has filled every inch of
her home and those of her friends and relatives, what does she do
next? Scrapbooking should never decline the way macrame did as long
as consumers continue to take billions of photos every year; they
have to do something with them.
5. Forget the beginner. To keep the enthusiasts involved,
the industry provides more involved, complicated, and challenging
projects. But enthusiasts eventually move away, die, or get bored.
Meanwhile the image of the category for potential novices appears to
be too involved, time-consuming, and challenging.
6. The retail market is diluted. Everyone starts selling
the category until the pie is divided into so many pieces that many
retailers and vendors no longer find it profitable.
7. Word of mouth. Because the pie isn't large enough for
all of the vendors and retailers, some go out of business. Word of
the closures spreads. People talk about the category slipping,
declining. Vendors and publishers begin hedging their bets, devoting
some of their product-development and publishing energies to other
categories. The result is fewer new ideas to entice the customer.
8. The missionaries drop away. Every hot trend inspires
some enthusiasts to open stores. They are great teachers and give
incredible customer service, but because they're more interested in
sharing their love of the category with the world, and less
interested in markup, margin, and the business elements that make a
true merchant successful, most of their stores eventually fail. They
take some smaller vendors with them. The result? The consumers see
and hear less about the category.
9. Technology. The copier machine drastically hurt sales
of cross-stitch charts. The Internet allows for massive copyright
violations, which hurt sales of vendors and storeowners alike.
E-commerce allows consumers to bypass brick-and-mortar stores.
Digital scrapbooking allows consumers to create scrapbooks and share
them with friends and relatives around the world without
spending a dime on traditional scrapbook supplies.
10. The demand for new. When it's too strong, the industry
is flooded with too many products for the retailers and consumers to
absorb. A publisher makes much more profit reprinting a book (or a
scrapbook paper) but now the consumer wants a first edition of
something new. Meanwhile, the retailer orders a new line, sells half
of it, then is pressured to buy another new line.
SPECIAL REPORT III: HOW TO JUDGE A CATEGORY
1. Are new magazines springing up? Or is the amount of
advertising in the current magazines declining?
2. Is the trade show space devoted to the category growing
or shrinking?
3. Is there an increase in complaining/finger-pointing by
the category's retailers and vendors? That's a sign the pie isn't
big enough.
4. What is the state of the consumer shows?
5. Are fashion/society trends changing or still supporting
the category?
6. Are publishers such as Design Originals and Hot
Off the Press publishing books in the category? Their track
records indicate DO's Suzanne McNeil and HOTP's Paulette Jarvey are
excellent early trend spotters.
7. Are key vendors getting involved? A few small companies
can't push the category into the consciousness of the consumer.
SPECIAL REPORT IV: HOW NOT
TO JUDGE A CATEGORY
1. Word of mouth can be misleading. Companies or stores
might brag about increased sales, but that could simply mean they're
getting a larger piece of a contracting pie. Vendor or retailer
complaints of lost sales could be due to mismanagement, not
declining consumer interest.
2. Size of industry studies can be misleading for
retailers. Overall growth does not necessarily mean growth in a
particular region.
3. When non-industry stores sell the category, like they
are today with scrapbooking, it becomes more difficult to determine
the overall interest of consumers. Some industry stores may suffer,
but that might only indicate that Target, Big Lots, Costco, etc.,
are siphoning off sales.
ALEENE'S INFLUENCE CONTINUES
Aleene Jackson is one of the true pioneers of the industry, and
while she has retired from the industry, her influence continues
with her children. Aleene now owns/operates La Toscana Resort, a
resort/spa in Desert Hot Springs, CA (www.latoscanaresorts.com).
Her daughter, Heidi Borchers, will guest regularly on WBOB Radio
Talk Show as a craft expert. The show is being readied for
syndication and can be heard on the Internet at www.wbob.com.
Heidi and her daughter, Starr Hall, have operated A Creative
Spark, a brick-and mortar and e-commerce store (www.acreativespark.com)
and are working on a tv series, a new adhesive line, a book series,
and other products under the A Creative Spark label.
Another daughter, Tiffany Windsor, was the host of the Aleene's
Creative Living series on TNN and has launched Creative
Mavens creativity retreats that will be held at Aleene's
resort. The site, www.creativemavens.com,
will be activated soon. Another daughter, Candace Liccione, is
sponsoring women's wellness retreats at the resort.
Aleene's contributions to the industry are far too numerous to be
included here. Aleene's Tacky Glue, now produced by Duncan,
has been one of the industry's strongest brands for decades. She was
demonstrating craft projects to Art Linkletter on his tv series in
Los Angeles when L.A. had only a hundred tv sets in the city. Her Aleene's
Creative Living was the first wildly successful television
series on a cable network and her Craft Caravan (traveling consumer
shows), which she organized with another industry pioneer, Hazel
Pearson, helped put the industry on the map 40-some years ago.
A SCRAPBOOK VENDOR CALLS IT
QUITS, PT. I
I am a small scrapbook manufacturer who started my company at my
dining room table. I grew and grew, but now I am being squeezed out
due to several factors. You are so right on in your observations
about the scrapbook industry!
I did very well for several years, but I held onto my niche too
long, and by the time I realized it, there was just so much product
out there and the local stores were just jumping on to all the new
items you know the song and dance. Since my revenues decreased,
it was hard for me to develop the product lines that were necessary
to compete.
When I started I was VERY receptive to the advice given to me by
the independents. Everyone knew each other back then. Many stores
asked me not to sell to chains, at consumer shows, or from my
website, and not to sell out/join with larger companies. I even had
one store owner tell me that if the chains carried my product then
she would not.
When I started losing support/sales from the stores, I started
selling to consumers from my site, since the consumer could choose
from the entire product line; when I started checking into consumer
shows, I noticed it was mostly manufacturers who were selling, and
I've noticed many local stores carrying the same products as the
chains do!
I have let independents know that I don't sell to chains and I
have even created a special program for stores to help educate the
consumer and get her to try the product. Nothing.
It's taken me awhile, but I have come to the realization that I
can no longer remain profitable and will have to close my business.
Name Withheld
A SCRAPBOOK VENDOR CALLS IT
QUITS, PT. II
The note above raises all sorts of questions about loyalty and
business management. What are the lessons here:
1. Should the vendor have not been so loyal to
independents?
2. Should retailers pay less attention to customers
who are always pushing the stores to add the newest/latest
so they can continue to order from their loyal vendors?
3. Should the vendor have poured more profits into new
products?
4. What should the vendor do now?
Email your answers on or off the record to CLN at mike@clnonline.com.
RANDOM NOTES, RANDOM THOUGHTS
1. I just returned from Milwaukee where I attended the Bead
& Button consumer show. Fifteen thousand avid consumers,
350+ classes, and thousands (millions?) of dollars changing hands.
Much more on all this in the next issue of CLN.
2. According to a regulatory filing, Toys R Us Chair/CEO
John Eyler will receive $65 million when the sale to Kohlberg Kravis
Roberts, Bain Capital Partners, and Vornado Realty Trust goes
through, Playthings reported. Since Eyler took over, TRU's
stock barely budged and the company continued to lose ground to Wal-Mart
to the point where the company had to be sold. Yes, that's $65 million
for his efforts. TRU stockholders will vote on the company's
acquisition this Thursday, just days after TRU reported it lost $41
million this past quarter.
3. TNNA's campaign, Stitch to WIN Against Breast
Cancer, has garnered enormous publicity, including being
highlighted on NBC's Starting Over, supported publicly by the
office of governor of Nevada, and featured in fund-raising events in
Los Angeles and Las Vegas. It's a great cause and is creating an
impact similar to the early Knit-Out events in New York sponsored by
the Craft Yarn Council of America.
It's also a classic example of why retailers, if they have to
choose, should attend trade association events rather than
"cash-and-carry" hotel shows because the profits
benefit the industry through programs like this, rather than in the
sponsor's pocket.
MISCELLANEOUS NEWS
SHOWS. Pre-registration for the CHA Summer Show
July 15-17 is up a whopping 20%, 30 education classes are sold out
and most of the 10 show hotels are sold out. Pre-registration
continues through this Wednesday and discounts on hotel rooms are in
effect through July 1. Visit www.chasummershow.com,
call 740-452-4541, or email chasummershow@offinger.com.
(Note: To see the exhibitor list, which includes links to the
exhibitors' websites, visit www.e-offinger.net/cha/exhlist2005.cfm.)
PAINTING. Holly Winter, 14, won the 2005 16th
Congressional District Art Competition with her oil painting,
reported the Lancaster (PA) Intelligencer Journal. What makes
the story unique is a) Holly started painting when she took
an oil painting class at A.C. Moore; b) Holly is home
schooled; c) Holly is dyslexic and paints upside down.
"(Dyslexia) can affect all things," Holly told the Journal.
"Its easier for me to paint when its upside-down."
ACQUISITION, I. Xyron acquired Granite Peak Inc.,
specifically the Wishblade Personal Media Cutter and all
elements of the Wishblade design library. The Wishblade
Personal Media Cutter is a cutting tool that, when connected to
a computer, allows consumers to type in what they want to cut and,
with the click of a mouse, does the cutting work for them. Xyron
President Chuck Ensign said, "Going forward, with [Wishblade
founders Jen Aamodt and Jane Kober] in key roles, we intend to
expand this product platform into an exciting range of digital
cutting tools that solve problems and overcome challenges faced by
the creative professional as well." To learn more about Wishblade
products, visit www.wishblade.com.
ACQUISITION, II. Interweave Press was sold to Aspire
Media. Interweave offices remain in Loveland, CO, and founder
Ligon stays as Creative Director and Marilyn Murphy as President.
Aspire is a new company, led by CEO Clay Hall, designed to acquire
consumer enthusiast media businesses with the backing of private
investment firms Frontenac Co. and Catalyst Investors. "Our
first priority will be to invest in and build on the success of
Interweave Press by continuing to grow and expand the business
organically, as well as through the acquisition and development of
additional media properties," Hall said.
INTERNET. Hancock, Michaels, Jo-Ann's, and Wal-Mart
made Internet Retailer's annual Top 400 Retail Web Sites list.
Visit www.internetretailer.com/top400/top400list.htm.
CONDOLENCES. Our very best wishes to the family of Betsy
Friendmann, a Product Manager for Prym Dritz, who died of
cancer recently. Betsy had worked in the industry for more than 30
years. Memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society, 154
Milestone Way, Greenville, SC 29415.
BANKRUPTCY. Frank's Nursery & Crafts won court
approval of its plan to emerge as a real estate development company.
The company will launch the business with 42 parcels of land that
are former Frank's stores, the Detroit News reported.
Unsecured creditors will be paid in full, with interest. The
70-year-old company started as a 24-hour fruit stand and grew to
become the largest craft chain and the largest garden chain
in the U.S. with approximately 300 stores.
RECALL. Michaels is voluntarily recalling children's metal
folding chairs distributed by Summit Marketing. There may be a
failure of the safety lock on the folding chair, allowing it to
collapse or fold unexpectedly. Michaels has not received reports of
injuries, but Summit Marketing has received seven reports of the
chairs collapsing. Customers should call Summit Marketing at
866-270-6275 or visit www.summitproductsaol.com
to receive a repair kit.
PEOPLE. Big Lots named Steven Fishman as
Chair/CEO/President. Retail Merchandiser said Fishman was
"responsible for the strategic repositioning of Frank's
Nursery & Crafts...." ... Sandylion hired Steven
Schiff as sales manager for its home dec division. Sandylion plans
to launch a collection of peel-and-stick wall decorations featuring
some of the company's most popular licenses.
LICENSING Reminders of Faith signed a licensing agreement
with The Time Factory: The Calendar Company for a 2007
calendar using ROF products. The calendar will feature pages with
scripture verses and ROF designs and space to insert photos. The
calendar will be 12 x 12 and will be produced on acid free paper.
Once used, the calendar pages can then be placed in an existing
scrapbook. ROF was highlighted in the May/June issue of Outreach
magazine.
TV. Craft TV Studios, Series 100, debuts July 9 on
PBS station KRSC. It's a 30-minute show hosted by Pattie Donham who
demonstrates new products and techniques in crafts; painting, paper
crafts, stamping, sewing, beads, etc. ... Decorative painting icon
Priscilla Hauser, founder of the Society of Decorative Painters,
has a new PBS series, In The Studio With Priscilla Hauser,
which will be available to PBS stations beginning in September. Cutters
Productions and UNC-TV are the producers. For info visit www.unctv.org
and www.cuttersproductions.com.
SEEKING EMPLOYMENT. Craft industry exec looking for
employment in the Southern California area. Able to travel. Eight
years experience designing and marketing products for a scrapbook
company ... Also, a true industry pro in marketing, product
development, PR and on-camera work is looking for clients
vendors, publishers, and retailers. For more, in confidence, email mike@clnonline.com.
STOCK. CLN reported in our last issue about A.C.
Moore execs selling company stock. They're not the only ones.
According to Vickers Stock Research, Michaels CEO Michael
Rouleau has sold 250,000 shares of Michaels stock from Jan. 3 - Mar.
29 and Jeffrey Boyer has sold 50,000. Jo-Ann's Chair/CEO Alan
Rosskamm has sold 102,000 shares from Jan. 3 - Apr. 25 and Rosalind
Thompson has sold 19.950 shares. They're not bailing out though;
Rouleau still owns 125,662 shares and Rosskamm owns about 1.1
million shares.
ROLODEX. Clover Needlecraft, 13438 Alondra Blvd.,
Cerritos, CA 90703. Call 562-282-0200 or 800-233-1703; fax:
562-282-0220; email: cni@clover-usa.com;
visit www.clover-usa.com.
DIVIDENDS. The Hancock board declared a cash
dividend of $0.06/share on outstanding common shares, payable July
15, to shareholders of record July 1 ... Michaels board declared a
quarterly cash dividend of $0.10/share to be payable July 29 to
shareholders of record at the close of business on July 15.
QUILTS. This month some PBS stations will use World's
Fair of Quilts: For the Love of Fabric, an hour-long feature on
the Int. Quilt Festival, as an hour-long fundraising special.
Karey Bresenhan and Nancy O'Bryant Puentes give a guided tour of
their collection of quilts, also featured in their C&T
Publishing title, Celebrate Great Quilts!, the June 2005
pledge gift in connection with the program. The program includes
footage of the antique and contemporary quilts and winning quilts
from the Int. Quilt Assn. contest, and interviews with
C&T authors such as Laura Wasilowski, Becky Goldsmith &
Linda Jenkins, and Patty Albin.
GARDEN RIDGE. May same-store sales rose only 1%, but gross
margin dollars were up 6.6%. For the fiscal year to date, same-store
sales are up 5.2%.
THE
CREATIVE NETWORK: JOB OPENINGS
The Creative Network is the only personnel recruitment firm
specializing in our industry. To see a partial listing of the jobs
currently available, click on Jobs in the left-hand column or click HERE.
THE CLN RETAIL INDEX
A. C. Moore (ACMR). Last*: 30.03 ... Change**: +0.72
Hancock Fabrics (HKF). Last*: 6.03 ... Change**: +0.67
Jo-Ann Stores (JAS). Last*: 27.80 ... Change**: +2.05
Michaels (MIK). Last*: 41.73 ... Change**: -0.93
Wal-Mart (WMT). Last*: 48.93 ... Change**: +1.58
CLN Retail Index. Last*: 154.52 ... Change**: +.2.7%
Dow Jones Index. Last*: 10,623.07 ... Change**: +1.5%
*June 17 ** from June 4 Prices are exclusive of dividends
AN INDUSTRY PIONEER ... AND SO
MUCH MORE
Industry pioneer Bob Valliere is highlighted in a new book, The
Bomber Boys, to be published in July. Bob was a navigator in the
385th Bomber Group that flew thousands of B-17 missions over Europe
in World War II. In the book Bob recounts his first combat mission.
From the website: "This 'milk run' to drop food and supplies to
the starving people of the Netherlands (during a shaky truce with
the Germans there) would put at risk the lives of every man on board
Lieutenant Michael Swana's B-17...and earn them all a special place
in World War Two history."
Bob returned home and founded Signaigo & Rossi, whose Pretty
Petals line of silk flower parts touched off one of the
industry's earliest hot trends, flowermaking, and became one of the
most successful product lines in industry history.
To learn more, visit www.thebomberboys.com/page5.htm.
What Bob did for the industry was invaluable. What he did for this
country was far more important. So as we approach the 4th of July
... thank you, Bob.
REMINDERS
1. For more information on how your business can be the
subject of a "Business Profile" call Mike Hartnett at 309-925-5593 or email mike@clnonline.com.
2. If you want a hard-copy of this issue, click on
"Printer Friendly version".
3. If your company is a paid subscriber, everyone in the main
office is welcome to register, free. Just click on "Work for a
paid subscriber? Click here to register."
4. If you want to recommend CLN to a friend, use the
"Tell Your Friends" box on the home page.
5. Creative Leisure News is published the first and
third Mondays of each month. Your next issue will be Monday, July 4.
Happy 4th of July!
xxx