ART Member Spotlight – Feizy

Feizy

Dallas, TX

Feizy has made philanthropy a cornerstone of their company

 “Family, integrity and a service mindset are all central to what we do at Feizy Rugs. Our involvement with local, national and international charities and service organizations is a natural outgrowth of that,” said Leah Feizy, a principal of the company. “Giving back to the communities in which we live and do business and making a positive impact fosters that sense of family. “

At the end of 2020, the Dallas-based rug manufacturer donated $25,000 to Feed My Starving Children. FMSC is a non-profit that provides nutritious meals to starving children in 70 countries around the world. With the help of last year’s donation, FMSC opened its first permanent site locally in the Dallas area, near Feizy’s corporate headquarters. This year’s donation will continue to support the work of the FMSC providing additional funding to fill the gap in giving caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to giving to FMSC, Feizy has participated in packing events as well in recent years.

Community Partners of Dallas is the Christmas Toy Drive that Feizy has done about every year in recent memory. It started after the untimely death of Jeanne Carroll, advertising and marketing manager who got the company involved with ART.

Feizy supports Operation Kindness locally with auction donations for their annual fundraisers, and support a few other local charities with auction donations as well, including Cattle Barron’s Ball and Crystal Charity Ball.

“Charitable giving and service is not only our duty, it’s also a privilege — a value that my brother and I were taught by our parents at an early age.  But beyond that, we feel it’s a way to honor and celebrate the relationships with our client partners and team members who have put Feizy Rugs in the position to be able to give back.  Without their support, none of it would be possible” says Leah Feizy.

Feizy Rugs –  https://feizy.com   

 

ART Member Spotlight – The Arrangement

The Arrangement

Dallas, TX

March is Women’s History Month to highlight women leaders and their contributions to history and contemporary society.   ART salutes Katherine Snedeker of The Arrangement for her commitment to sustainability.

By investing in sustainability, ART member and Texas-based retailer Katherine Snedeker of The Arrangement is investing in its customers, its community and the business.

“What does furniture have to do with that? Furniture gets handed down. If we do a spectacular job on the furniture, it gets passed down to the next generation,” said Katherine Snedeker, president of the store, which has locations in Dallas and Houston. “It’s our goal to create a fabulous, timeless design so the legacy of the family furniture gets handed down.”

 

That’s a cornerstone of everything that has gone into making The Arrangement successful for more than three decades.

“For us, the education of the clients when they come in is what our brand is about. If we do our job right, sustainability is not an add-on bonus. It’s the cachet; it’s the reason you buy it,” Snedeker said.

Snedeker said The Arrangement has bolstered its sustainable efforts by having Susan Inglis, executive director of the Sustainable Furnishings Council, to the store a few times to help educate her staff. Snedeker has also completed many of the SFC’s courses and is a certified Green Leader.

Snedeker said 87% of The Arrangement’s case goods are made from reclaimed and recycled woods and she designs pieces that will use that as a wood source. Additionally, the store uses premium leather that will last for 30-50 years, which makes it sustainable, despite tanning methods.

The Arrangement, Dallas, TX –  store vignettes
She said when the product checks a lot of boxes on the consumer’s checklist, sustainability can sometimes help seal the deal.

“It’s like music. You have to hit certain notes to be of value to the consumer,” she said. “It’s not just that it’s sustainable but it’s the right style, the right price point AND it’s sustainable.”

Sustainability is important in Snedeker’s selection of home accents as well. She chooses items made with natural elements like rock, glass, copper, pottery, wood, handcrafted items and original art from artisans.

Elsewhere, Snedeker said The Arrangement has made itself part of the community fabric in other ways. It has donated furniture to its local Hospice center and with a local horse therapy center to furnish its lobby, with furniture, design time and installation. Additionally, she said the store works frequently and exclusively with the Houston Furniture Bank.

ART Member Spotlight – Black Whale Lighting

Black Whale Lighting

Encintas, CA

March is Women’s History Month to highlight women leaders and their contributions to history and contemporary society.   ART salutes Kirsten Recce of Black Whale Lighting for lending a hand. 

Recently, Black Whale Lighting President Kirsten Recce saw a post from a friend who was spearheading a drive to buy and deliver meals to healthcare workers at Scripps Encinitas Hospital. Recce said the hospital has been busy with COVID-19 cases; so much so that it had tents outside the facility to begin the triage process.

So Recce reached out to her friend and asked to take responsibility for buying and bringing enough individually wrapped meals for one day — with a few extras.

“We had to come up with enough individually wrapped food for 75 people,” Recce said. “It wasn’t my vision but the vision so resonated with me that not only were we dropping off food and good wishes, but we delivered thank you cards and later, I delivered candy for Valentine’s Day and things that were individually wrapped and gave them coffee.”

While delivering food to healthcare workers is part of it, Recce said another appealing aspect of the drive was making a significant purchase with local restaurants, including Tin Leaf Kitchen in Carlsbad, Calif. Recce said when it was Black Whale’s turn to lend a hand, she insisted on paying full retail prices because these businesses need all the help they can get.

“What I loved about the program was not just the obvious of feeding the healthcare workers and security guards but also picking restaurants in the community to provide the food.   I picked one that owns three independent restaurants,” Recce said. “I imagine they’re crazy impacted. We called them up and placed the order; no discounts or favors. I said, I want you to charge me in full because I wanted to give money to a restaurant that’s struggling. I love that it was a two-fold thing. Either one would be gratifying but this became a double bonus. ”

Recce said lending a hand in the community is part of the ethos at Black Whale. She said the retailer has contributed to its local Habitat for Humanity chapter numerous times over the years, and personally, she has done a number of things to help out at her kids’ schools.

She said it’s important for Black Whale to be a good corporate citizen and help build a stronger community.

“It was a nice way to become engaged,” Recce said. “It’s easy to be a small business owner working 60-80 hours to get lost. This was a nice way to give back and get to meet people I wouldn’t have been able to meet otherwise.”

Kudos to Kirsten Recce of Black Whale Lighting for taking this initiative.   So inspiring.  For more information on Black Whale Lighting, visit their website.

ART Member Spotlight – Bountiful

Jamie Merida / Bountiful Home

Easton, MD

Bountiful shares its bounty in hometown

Over the years, ART member Bountiful Home, an interior design and retail business owned by Jamie Merida, has made it a point to become a part of the fabric of its Easton, Md. community.

“We’re located in a small, close-knit community and have received so much support and loyalty from our customers over the years,” Merida explained. “The least we can do is give back to the community that has given us so much.”

As part of those efforts, Bountiful supports several charitable causes in and around the area annually. They include:

Komen Maryland – Bountiful hosts a Pink Party every October with 20% of sales donated (Merida says he adapted this in the same way during COVID). “This cause is especially important to us because breast cancer has affected so many of our customers, staff, and loved ones,” he said.

A Pink Party to support Susan G. Komen is one of Bountiful’s key annual charitable efforts.

Talbot Hospice – Bountiful hosts a holiday kickoff party with 20% of all sales donated, along with raffle proceeds. During COVID, it adjusted by having a holiday kickoff weekend with 20% of sales from a three-day period donated to Talbot Hospice. This let it continue to support them without having a crowded event.

Mid-Shore Council on Family Violence – Every year Bountiful hosts a “Helping Hands” tree in the store. Customers choose a tag for a local child affected by family violence, and they return a wrapped gift to the store. Merida also serves on their Board of Directors and volunteers time to help with their strategic and fundraising efforts.

Channel Marker Inc – This is an organization that helps individuals with mental illness or addiction issues live more independent lives. When Bountiful expanded and opened our new store, Merida said it donated 20% of sales from its opening party to Channel Marker.

Habitat for Humanity / Restore – Merida said Bountiful works extensively with its local chapter. It donates items it replaces in design projects, and Merida said Bountiful usually uses its own installation crew to gather materials and make the delivery, which helps stretch Habitat’s resources. “This approach also keeps more stuff out of the landfill, which is always good,” Merida noted.

To learn more about Bountiful Home, please visit their website.

ART Member Spotlight – carpenter + company

Patti Carpenter – carpenter + company

New York, NY

The mission is to foster an under-acknowledged design community 

For ART member Patti Carpenter principal of carpenter + company and Global Ambassador for Maison et Objet and consultant for NYNOW, stepping out of her normal routine of trend watching and presentation to help others was a calling. Besides the many COVID discussions and how to navigate the changing trends and turbulent times for business, Carpenter was called upon often to comment and offer context. One of the conversations ultimately resulted in the forming of a new non-profit company, the Kaleidoscope Project.

The Kaleidoscope Project is the result of brainstorming by Carpenter and industry sales representative Amy Lynn Schwarzbard. It was founded by the pair with the later addition of Liz Nightingale. This non-profit company aims to address the inequities found in the creative design industries. Their first project is to renovate the historic Cornell Inn, a 28-guest room property nestled in the heart of the Berkshires in Lenox, Mass., which will host a showhouse-inspired exhibition open to the public May 16 to June 6, 2021
“Amy called me early on at the advent of the Black Lives Matter movement and we had this discussion,” Carpenter recalled. “She said she wanted to do something actionable and wanted me to participate. We landed on this model we have and formed a nonprofit company.”

For Carpenter, the chance to showcase a collection of designers who might not ordinarily get the spotlight was the perfect opportunity.   “We wanted to give a voice to those who aren’t often invited to the table at large for magazines to focus on or for showhouse participation,” Carpenter said.

The Kaleidoscope Project has invited 21 BIPOC (Black, Indigenous People of Color) designers to participate. The designers will tackle the main building and the carriage house, and unlike many showhouses, at the conclusion of the exhibition, the designs and products will remain and each room will be named for that particular designer.

The exhibit proceeds will be donated to the Black Artists + Designers Guild (BADG), Parsons School of Design, and New York School of Interior Design (NYSID) in support of their educational initiatives to assist Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) interested in an art or design career.

“It’s a fabulous project. In talking with sponsors, many of them are looking for ways to change how they’ve done business. They are becoming more diverse and adding a new range of designers with whom they work,” Carpenter said. “They love this. There are names on the designer list you’ll know but many you don’t know.”

Participating designers include Rhydima Brar of R/teriors; Everick Brown of Everick Brown Interior Design; Chanae of Oloro Interiors; Patti Carpenter of carpenter + co; Doreen Chambers of Doreen Chambers Interiors; Gail Davis of Gail Davis Designs; Rasheeda Gray of Gray Space Interiors; Rio Hamilton of Rio Hamilton Associates Inc; Linda Hayslett of LH. Designs; Johanna Howard of Johanna Howard Home; Nile Johnson of Nile Johnson Interior Design; Nikki Klugh of Nikki Klugh Design Group; Inc; Jennifer Owen of Designs by Jennifer; Purvi Padia; Dennese Guadeloupe Rojas of Interiors by Design; David Santiago of Casa Santi; Virginia Toledo of Toledo Geller; Denise Gordon, Tanya Lewis and Marilyn Lavergne of Austin Gray Group; Ianatha Carley of Iantha Carley Interiors and Christy Davis of Christy Davis Interiors who will modernize the centuries-old Main House and Carriage House with their distinct vision.

But the showhouse-exhibit isn’t all that Carpenter has been up to. Recently, she was co-emcee for the NYNow awards live show that was recorded.  And, she led a panel discussion with a group of diverse retailers on Feb. 10 at Shoppe Object and has done color and trend projects for ASID and FAIRE.   Carpenter has also been a frequent speaker for ART at conferences and ARTful Wednesdays.   She also works with individual companies to prepare product focused trend reports for sales tools.

For more information on The Kaleidoscope Project, please visit their website.

ART Member Spotlight – Classy Art

Classy Art

Houston, TX

Philanthropy part of Classy Art’s mission

For ART member Classy Art, a big part of their corporate ethos is giving back.  CEO Gabriel Cohen shaved his head at High Point Market after raising money for the National Breast Cancer Foundation.  More recently, this Houston-based company has committed to donating a meal for every piece of wall décor it sells.

“This idea hit me while packing for market, I saw my pink suit hanging there, and I recognized that it wouldn’t fit after packing on my quarantine weight. I then realized that there was not going to be an official Pink Out Market day that normally occurs during October markets,” Cohen said. “So, it struck me that just because our attention has been diverted towards the pandemic, we shouldn’t forget about the struggle that so many women have faced long before COVID-19 and will face long after the virus is gone. Our founder, my mother, Biatriz Cohen and her sister are both breast cancer survivors, so this issue hits close to home for me, and I feel like most people have had some encounter at some level with this shattering diagnosis. While I was eager to raise a good amount of money, what I am really hoping for is to inspire others to take action as well.”
The challenge –  Let’s raise some money for the breast cancer cause and if we do, I’ll shave my head.   So on Oct. 19, 2020 at 6 p.m., after noting that their High Point Market fundraising effort had raised $3,600 (which the Houston-based wall art company matched), Cohen sat down in his company’s Center Point on Hamilton showroom and parted with his locks.

Cohen said since shaving his head, he has received plenty of outpouring from inside and outside the industry.  “That was fun but I do miss my hair. We received a nice handwritten thank you card and the people reaching out—I had no idea we had so many friends that were survivors,” Cohen said. “That was cool, but scary because of how many people it has impacted. It was nice to hear from everybody.”

The National Breast Cancer Foundation was hand selected by Cohen because the charity had one of the lowest salaried CEO as well as lowest administrative operating costs  leaving the majority of the funds for research and programs.

In this new year, Classy Art is at it again.  In early January, they announced that for each piece of art they sell, the company will donate one meal to the Million Meal Movement. This nonprofit, based in Indianapolis, has a two-fold vision: feeding the hungry and teaching the importance of volunteerism. They feed the hungry by working with food banks to deliver meals to more than 600 food pantries. They unite the community by empowering volunteers of all ages and backgrounds to make a difference through hands-on, high-energy meal packing events.

For more information about Classy Art, visit their website.