Does seem rather ironic that we have access to all kinds of exotic things we 
never thought we could get our hands on, via the Internet, but, locally, our 
choices are less and less. I still have one JoAnn's that is "run out and pick 
up a spool of thread" close enough, and two more, along with G Street Fabrics, 
within reasonable driving distance. But even G Street's assortment is sadly not 
what it once was--it is a sorry state of affairs when I go there with a 25% off 
coupon and can't find one thing I want to buy! I think ALL of our WalMarts have 
gone out of the fabric business. I know their assortment was hit or miss, but I 
once scored 6 yards of blue/orange Indian cotton plaid that made great early 
19th century headwraps in the $1 bin. Hobby Lobby, which recently opened in our 
area, has a decent assortment of cotton prints. (When I reminded someone of 
that, she complained because they are more than $5 a yard, but THEY DO HAVE 
THEM!) 

Ann Wass



-----Original Message-----
From: Katy Bishop <katybisho...@gmail.com>
To: Historical Costume <h-cost...@indra.com>
Sent: Thu, May 17, 2012 9:16 am
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Grrrrr ... !


Exactly--I miss the days of being able to pop out to the store and grab the
ye I need that day, or have a jug of liquid starch available when I don't
ave the time to mix my own,,,,,, I do still have one of the Wal-Marts with
 fabric section nearby, so I can pop out for kid's costume fabrics if I
eed to.  Small consolation for the Fabric Place being gone.
On Thu, May 17, 2012 at 7:35 AM, <annbw...@aol.com> wrote:
> Many formerly readily available items are available via mail order,
 granted. But that doesn't help if you need it tomorrow!  I know, I know,
 just need to plan ahead.


 Ann Wass



 -----Original Message-----
 From: R Lloyd Mitchell <rmitch...@staff.washjeff.edu>
 To: Historical Costume <h-cost...@indra.com>
 Sent: Thu, May 17, 2012 6:56 am
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] Grrrrr ... !


 I googled both Argo and Sta-flo and these brands are readily available on
 line...coupons and free shipping for some of the sites. Letting my fingers
 do
 the shopping sure saves on gas!
 -----Original Message-----
 From: <penn...@costumegallery.com>
 Sent 5/17/2012 3:44:33 AM
 To: "'Historical Costume'" <h-cost...@indra.com>
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] Grrrrr ... !I believe the reason people are having
 trouble
 finding starch depends on
 supply and demand.  I have no trouble finding Argo and the old blue bottle
 of Sta-flo starch in my area.  If there is not a big demand for the product
 in your area, the stores will drop the product.  In my county, there is
 diversity in age depending where you live.  In the neighborhoods near me,
 people are old enough to know what to do with powder or liquid starch.  If
 I
 drove 10 miles west, where the average people are younger generation, the
 stores' products differ. That generation would rather go to a dry cleaners
 than iron their clothes.    If you show a lot of the younger generation a
 box or bottle of starch, they probably wouldn't know what to do with it.
 Many do not even own an ironing board.
 As far as product selection and retailers:
 Watch the Costco documentary that is showing this month on MSNBC.  We have
 problems with Costco dropping products.  The documentary explains how
 Costco
 buys, product lines, markets, etc.  The problem is that the retailer and
 manufacturer cannot agree on their wholesale prices.  When this happens,
 Costco drops the product.  Costco has a 15% markup and regular grocer
 retailers have 25%.  Costco is the number one retailer right now. When
 Costco, Sam's Club or WalMart drops them a product... what an impact the
 top
 three grocery stores can make on a manufacturer.   Costco carries a limited
 assortment or only one product (example ketchup) to deliberately not give
 customers choices.  Research shows that if you only have one or two choices
 of a product, a customer will buy it on spot so they don't have to go to
 another grocery store.  Given a big assortment, a customer is confused and
 will not purchase.
 Here a video of 10 minutes of the documentary:
 http://video.msnbc.msn.com/rock-center/47182853#47182853
 Calvin Klein sued Warnaco Group, a supplier to Costco and other retail
 clubs, for selling CK goods to these cheaper retailers. BTW, you can still
 buy SK goods at Costco.

 http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20000601&slug=40239
 91  Which would you choose for clothing-- Costco's 15% markup or a
 department store's 50%+ markup for a designer brand.
 My husband and I did an interesting survey last week.  I was at Sam's Club
 and he was at Costco at the same time.  We both had a copy of our monthly
 grocery list.  We talked on the cell phone and compared prices.  Sam's does
 carry a larger assortment of products than Costco.  Costco only carries
 4,000 products.  Off the mainland U.S., Costco carries more products...I've
 been to their stores in Hawaii and Liverpool, England...love them!  I wish
 we had the choices these location have.
 A big problem with retailers and manufacturers is the extreme couponers who
 are purchasing entire shelves of products.  I don't think either end knows
 how to get a grip on this problem.  But it is causing problems of keeping
 merchandise on the shelves for the other customers to purchase.
 Lastly, some retailers have different prices according to the location of
 the store.  I have seen this at Lowe's and Food Lion within 10 miles of my
 house.  Strange, both charge higher prices in lower income areas.  Lowe's
 actually carries lower and higher ends goods at higher income
 neighborhoods.
 Now, Lowe's is tracking your purchases by your name.  Try it!  Get their
 Lowe's discount card, and purchase an item.  Go to any Lowe's without a
 receipt to return the product.  They will scan the item and card, and pull
 up your receipt from when you originally purchased the item.  This can be
 good and bad.
 Penny Ladnier, owner
 The Costume Gallery Websites
 www.costumegallery.com
 15 websites of fashion, costume, and textile history
 FaceBook: http://www.facebook.com/TheCostumeGallery
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-- 
aty Bishop, Vintage Victorian
atybisho...@gmail.com                www.VintageVictorian.com
    Custom reproduction gowns of the Victorian Era.
     Publisher of the Vintage Dress Series books.
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