Monday, April 30, 2012

Why are scrapbooking stores closing?

A current thread on a scrapping board I read wants to know why so many local scrapbooking stores are closing. The posts before mine named all the usual suspects, mostly the Internet. So, I wrote this:

Stores are closing because a lot less people are scrapbooking. It's that simple.

How many hobbies and/or crafts did each of you try before you found scrapbooking? How many of those do you still do?

I would suspect that I have been scrapbooking longer than most anyone here- I made my first scrapbook in 1960. In those days cameras, film and developing were expensive and there weren't that many pictures. We scrapped mostly special events- a graduation, anniversary, etc. I did my own wedding album in 1977- all my friends thought I was either crazy or really cheap!

My list of "did it for a while" is long and includes ceramics, oil painting, sewing, bobbin lace and lots of others. I still crochet (50 years), do needlework (almost 30 years), quilt (about 12 years) and scrapbook. As a needle worker before stitching was hot, and one who still does it long past it's most recent peak and decline, I saw the shops, and the magazines, and the conventions and all the rest bloom, flourish for a few years, and then die. I was at a cross stitch festival in the mid-90s that attracted 10,000 women to a convention center in ONE DAY!!!!! Now there are no needlework conventions and only small gatherings for the truly committed, and most of the LNS are gone. Even what was arguably the most famous LNS in the country, the one many people credited with the resurgence of interest from the 80s through the 90s, is gone.

Does anyone still do macramé? Actually, yes! Google it and you will see a small but serious group still at it. I do some tatting, and am frequently told that it is "a lost art". Well, no, it can't be if I am doing it. But I am one of a very small number compared to 80 or 100 years ago.

All hobbies and crafts are cyclic. The Victorians did scrapbooking, although it was somewhat different- but the word has been around for almost 200 years. Quilting comes and goes as a major activity, as does embroidery, knitting, etc. The crafts that appeal most, those that make something of lasting beauty or value, always come back into vogue. Even when they are out of style, there are always the faithful who continue to participate and pass it along to the next generation. So, scrapbooking will survive and depending on our ages, some of us might even see it come back once again as the dominant activity in the crafting world. But, in the meantime, it seems that everyone is beading and making jewelry right now.

The real culprit for the downfall of so many LSS is human nature. All of the many reasons in the posts above cover some of it- we want more for less, we want convenience and ease, we want it now, we want the newest, we jump in where we have no business being. But ultimately, it is our restive natures, our desire constantly to try something new, something else, our short attention spans, that have closed the LSS- and will bring back a 21st century version, whatever that may be, the next time scrapbooking is hot.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

O.K.with you.but i'm french,and have some problemes to tell it...
it was fancy to have ribbons;then masking tapes;then,stamps;and inks...and never twice the same...and i don't speak about "machines"...do you understand.today,we must have money,more and more;or stop scrapbooking...

Auntie Em said...

A very interesting post. I have been scrapping for awhile and actually, here in Atlantic Canada, it's still going pretty strong. I have watched stores come and go but I don't think it was due to the lack of shoppers. Mostly it was due to lack of interest by the store owners. They were young women who thought it would be easy to own a store full of toys and pretty trimmings. Then reality hit in that you had to work, and work hard, to keep any business afloat in these economic times. So they gave up.
Often too they weren't listening to what the customers wanted to buy, but what they decided to buy at shows or for a wholesale deal. And then they found out no body really wanted to use all those sheets of 'throw-up yellow' flimsy paper no matter how cheap it was.
And service is so often lacking. They mean well maybe when they start but if they are miserable about being there at the counter serving the customers, the consumer won't want to be there either.
Going to big too fast without keeping things in line happened to a lot of stores as well.
Too many jumped on the money making bandwagon and when it gets too crowded some have to fall off. People only have so much money but give out a shout and you will still find lots of dedicated paper crafters cutting and pasting away and some smart and hard working store owners thriving! :)

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