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The Advocate - Business
Friday, August 08, 2003
Allbrands founders got their start in fabric store
By ELLYN COUVILLION
ecouvillion@theadvocate.com
Advocate business writer
John and Annette Douthat had varied business careers before finding their way
to the Internet model that would grow their local Allbrands company.
In the early years of their marriage during the 1970s, the couple spent two
years overseas, opening animal feed plants in Thailand and Korea for John's
employer, Ralston Purina.
After returning to the United States, the Douthats settled in Fort Wayne, Ind.
There, John, who holds an MBA from Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.,
changed jobs and went to work for a farm equipment company.
His wife, a home economics graduate from LSU, went to work for a Stretch-N-Sew
fabric store.
To get closer to home (her family is in Plaquemine and his is in Florida),
the couple decided to open a Stretch-N-Sew franchise in Baton Rouge in 1976.
John Douthat was planning to sell farm equipment here, but when he realized
that what sold in Indiana didn't sell here, he joined his wife in the fabric
business.
With a mostly female clientele, John Douthat said that he at first had a "crisis
of identity."
He took classes and learned to repair the sewing machines that the store also
sold.
The couple's store was in the top 10 Stretch-N-Sew franchises within a few
years, he said. The chain had about 120 stores in the country.
Eventually, the couple decided to get out of the franchise to be able to expand
their fabric offerings.
They opened Fashion Fabrics in 1983 on Florida Boulevard, across from the Broadmoor
Theater.
The couple changed the store name to Allbrands in 1996 as they made the transition
out of fabric to sewing machines and other appliances and got into Intenet sales.
"Fabric is a mature industry. There are not too many independent fabric
stores left," said John Douthat. "Fabric takes up 90 percent of the
space in stores, (but it makes) only 10 percent of profit."
The Douthats had 10 Allbrands stores at one time, with eight in Louisiana and
two in Mississippi.
In some instances, their stores were located within fabric shops.
Today, there are four Allbrands stores. In addition to the local store, there
are locations in Lafayette, Slidell and New Orleans. The couple kept the stores
closest to Baton Rouge, making delivery and other operations easier, John Douthat
said.
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