Registration is Open for ART Conference 2024

Registration is open for ART Conference 2024
May 8-10, 2024 – New Orleans, LA

January 8, 2024 – Charlotte, NC – The Accessories Resource Team is excited to announce that registration for our upcoming conference is now open! The conference will take place at the Loews New Orleans Hotel, New Orleans, LA May 8-10, 2024. .

This year’s conference schedule is different and set to begin on Wednesday afternoon, May 8, and conclude with Friday lunch on May 10. Attendees will learn from industry experts, participate in roundtable discussions during the popular ART Talks series, and experience a new interactive session called Change the Tracks. Attendees will gain valuable knowledge and skills that will help them grow their businesses and stay ahead of the competition. The networking opportunities allow everyone to connect with fellow professionals in the accessories industry through activities, events, and the annual community service project.

ART Conference is accepting sponsorships, many of which include conference registration.  Click here to see the open opportunities.  The current list of sponsors include Dallas Market Center, Hubbardton Forge, Savoy House, Kuzco, High Point Market, Jola, Global Views, Currey & Company, Progress Lighting, Crystorama, Feizy, My Samm, Varaluz, j douglas and Uttermost..  

We look forward to welcoming you to the Loews New Orleans for what promises to be an engaging and informative conference. Register now to secure your spot  We can’t wait to see you in New Orleans.

For conference details and registration, please visit the ART Conference website

 

2021 Service Project Update

ART Conference 2021 – Fort Myers, FL

Always one of the favorite events at ART Conference, this year’s community service project touched nearly 200 individuals in southwestern Florida.

For this year’s project, attendees helped fill up 180 bags with provisions for individuals in need. The care packages were distributed by the Abuse Counseling and Treatment Center, Golisano Children’s Hospital and several United Way organizations. 

In all, 20 bags were filled for the children’s hospital, 50 backpacks were filled for the United Way to distribute to children, 30 each were sent to respective women’s and men’s missions and 20 went to an elder care center. 

Additionally, quilts and blankets provided by Avasa were sent as part of the project, and Goode Deals, Inc., a Tulsa, Okla.-based business owned by Rex and Jan Yoakley, went above and beyond with donations. Additional sponsors who contributed tothe project included Elk Home, Loloi, Howard Elliott, Juniper and Aviva Stanoff Designs. 

A special thanks is owed to IMC’s Janice Lassiter, who spearheaded the project and worked closely with the organizations to ensure that everybody touched by the organizations got everything they needed.   Long hours, dedication and persistence, we couldn’t have done it without her.  

It all came together here…..

ART Member Spotlight – Aviva Stanoff

Aviva Stanoff

Vista, CA

The gift of a virtual hug

For nearly a decade, Aviva Stanoff has designed weighted blankets that are as aesthetically pleasing as they are effective. The need stemmed from raising a special needs son.

 

As the COVID-19 pandemic raged through the world, Stanoff saw the blankets as a way to give a hug to folks who need it. So she decided if people will cover the cost of shipping, she will send a blanket to a requested individual who could use it.

“Everybody needs a hug right now. It’s almost like a swaddling effect,” Stanoff said. “It was a blessing because people were able to do something. I was able to do something. It made us all feel like it’s all going to be OK. That was my toe in the water to help.”

Stanoff said being able to contribute gave her a feeling of affirmation. “Everything will be OK. You just have to give in this moment and put it out there and they will connect.”
She said the generosity shown by her contemporaries and colleagues was also inspiring.

“The part that’s the most fascinating is there was more money offered to pay for other families than for weighted blankets to be sent to their recipients. That’s our community. This was just my mailing list from my home furnishings design world. It was our design tribe,” Stanoff said. “When I sent the email out, I had to turn the computer off because requests were coming in so fast. There were more requests than weighted blankets. Then it was people offering to pay for another family and another family.”

Stanoff said there are still some blankets available, and requests can be made by emailing her at aviva@avivastanoff.com.

ART Member Spotlight – American Home Furnishings Hall of Fame

American Home Furnishings Hall of Fame

High Point, NC

These are heady times for the American Home Furnishings Hall of Fame as it nears opening its new home

The American Home Furnishings Hall of Fame Foundation, Inc., is an industry-wide organization founded over 30 years ago to preserve its history of the home furnishings industry, to celebrate exceptional individuals who have made extraordinary contributions to the U.S. home furnishings industry, and to create a new class of innovation and leadership. In October 2021, it will welcome its newest class of honorees, and in 2022, it expects to open the doors to its new, permanent home at 311 S. Hamilton St. in the heart of High Point’s market district.

At next month’s High Point Market, CEO Karen McNeill will be spending three days with the team from Roto, which is responsible for designing the facility and its exhibits, to help them gain a better understanding of our industry and how each of the Hall’s four tenets play into it.

“We’re still in the concept stage for the exhibits. You have to have organizing themes and we have four,” McNeill said. “The first is the industry: to explain the industry and the scope. The second theme is people: everything from inducted members to people behind the scenes. Third is the process: how do we go through design, manufacturing, logistics, etc. The fourth theme is products: this will be oriented toward design side, color, style trends.”

 

 

 McNeill said when finished, the facility will serve as a place for consumers to learn about the industry, a place for newcomers to absorb information (with a lot of information available on demand online).

“The first [aspect] is for the industry. It will be focused on creating educational and training programs for the industry. There will be gathering places for seminars and other training,” she said. “The concept is to create pride in our industry and help consumers build a better appreciation for home furnishings.”

Additionally, it will provide a place for inter-industry gatherings and celebrations.  “It’s going to be a gathering place for the industry. Right now, there is no gathering place. You can go to a showroom but there is no place to gather,” McNeill said. “Our Celebration Hall will be big enough for 400 people or a seated dinner for 150.”

To learn more about American Home Furnishings Hall of Fame, please visit their website.

ART Member Spotlight – Global Views

Global Views

Dallas, TX

Global Views hosted COVID vaccination clinics

The COVID-19 vaccine is making its way into arms at a rapid pace, as millions of Americans have taken steps to protect themselves from the virus that turned 2020 into an unprecedented year.

 

In Dallas, ART member Global Views held a vaccine clinic for its employees and family members on April 21. In all, 62 people signed up for the Pfizer shot.  COO Frederick Rayner coordinated the clinic after hearing how simple it was to set it up.  “Our warehouse manager told me about it because his daughter’s employer offered this service for a team to come in and do vaccines. I thought it sounded great and decided to get more info,” Rayner said. The clinic was conducted by RealTime Laboratories, Inc and returned on May 12th to administer the second round of Pfizer shots.

Rayner said his rationale for setting up the clinic was a simple one: he wants a sense of normalcy to return sooner rather than later, and he wants to see people be as safe as possible.
“I really want people to be vaccinated,” he said.

 

Note: Most communities around the US are making it very easy to get vaccinated. If you are interested in setting up your own vaccination clinic for your company, contact your local health department or hospital system to see if on-site vaccination clinics are available in your community.

ART Member Spotlight – Sandra Standefer, Loloi

Sandra Standefer, Loloi

Dallas, TX

Standefer, Loloi help kids get their childhood back

As president of the Dallas alumni chapter of Delta Delta Delta, Sandra Standefer has helped the city’s Cookies & Castles event take root.

Tri Delta Cookies & Castles – Dallas is a two-day gingerbread extravaganza that benefits the prosthetics department at Scottish Rite for Children, a Dallas-based specialized pediatric hospital. Each December, families and friends gather to decorate gingerbread houses and cookie men. Participants select delicious decorations from the “Candy Bar” filled with more than 5,000 pounds of sweet treats. The first day’s event is an annual Ladies Luncheon where decorating houses and cookies has become a treasured tradition for those who attend. The second day of gingerbread decorating is Cookies & Castles Family Day. This day is a true multigenerational event where parents and grandparents bring children of all ages to experience the magic of the season. Families can choose a morning or afternoon seating for this event. Both days include photos with Santa, raffle items and plenty of holiday music.

Standefer, Loloi’s director of textiles, has had a hand in the event since the Dallas chapter adopted it 14 years ago. She noted that since she joined Loloi seven years ago, the Dallas-based company has stepped up its participation and began sponsoring it six years back. During that time, Standefer has been the sponsor chair for Cookies & Castles for several years and chaired the entire event in 2015.

“The way we’ve grown our sponsorship is by doing private rooms. Loloi has been a Sugarplum sponsor and has a private room,” she said. “We host customers and employees in the room and have special guests like Olaf and Santa and dancing reindeer. The kids have a blast.”

“For all the wonderful things the dedicated doctors and medical professionals at Scottish Rite for Children do to support children and families in need, the annual Cookies & Castles fundraiser is near and dear to our hearts,” said Amir Loloi, founder and president of Loloi. “We are happy to donate money specifically targeted for the prosthetics department. As the hospital’s slogan says, Loloi wants to help give children their childhoods back.”

Standefer said the Ladies Luncheon is one of the most poignant parts of the event, as kids who have received prosthetics share their stories. She said many times, there isn’t a dry eye in the house by the time the children are finished speaking.

“Scottish Rite says they want to give children back their childhood no matter their ability to pay. The stories are so heartwarming and you see what goes into it,” Standefer said. “A child growing up with a limb deficiency will need 25 prostheses in their lifetime and each costs $15-$25,000 or more depending on how specialized they are.”

In 2020, with COVID-19 as the backdrop throughout the year, the Dallas chapter shifted its structure and turned Cookies & Castles into an at-home event. Families picked up materials via a drive-through set-up at Scottish Rite and then made their gingerbread creations from home and shared them digitally.

As conditions (hopefully) continue normalizing, Standefer is hopeful that this year’s Cookies & Castles can be truly special for a few key reasons.
“Scottish Rite is celebrating 100 years [this year],” Standefer said. “It’s near and dear to the Loloi’s heart and it’s near and dear to my heart as well.”