The Denver Post

Indie retailers aided by magic, expertise

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

When a young customer returned to Mary Arnold Toys a few days after an Easter egg decorating event, store owner Judy Ishayik asked the child, “How is your egg?”

The little girl responded with a big smile, and her mother thanked Ishayik, telling her, “That’s so special.”

Mary Arnold, a nearly 90-yearold store in Manhattan, is thriving along with many other small and independen­t toy stores — even as Toys R Us is going out of business and more consumers shop online. These store owners know what they’re up against and focus on toys that customers can’t find at chains like Target and Walmart, and provide families with events, service, expertise and emotional experience­s that internet retailers can’t match.

At Mary Arnold, some customers come in every week. It doesn’t take long to tell which toys a child will like.

“I know your kid, so if you need a birthday present, I can help you find something in a particular theme or something new,” Ishayik says.

Many indie toy retailers carry internatio­nal and niche brands — items a shopper isn’t likely to find on the shelf of a big chain. Small stores are less likely to carry big brands like Barbie and Hot Wheels, or movie-related action figures. At Mary Arnold, the offerings include German brands Bruder, a line of trucks, and Haba, preschool toys, and Tegu blocks, made in Honduras.

The independen­ts may pick up some sales from former Toys R Us shoppers, but they’re not likely to see a windfall — partly because the small stores don’t tend to carry the big brands.

“I don’t necessaril­y think that people who are shopping for toys at big box stores are looking to shop at stores like ours,” says Scott Friedland, owner of Timeless Toys in Chicago.

Some of the brands the indies showcase are sold online, but store owners say they aren’t fazed by the competitio­n even though nearly 14 percent of toy sales were made online in 2016. That’s more than twice the sales of five years ago, according to the research company Globaldata Retail.

The number of very small toy stores in the U.S., those with under 20 employees, dropped 4 percent to about 4,300 from 2012 to 2015, according to the most recent Census Bureau figures. Meanwhile, the number of department stores also fell almost 4 percent to 7,885. As part of its liquidatio­n, Toys R Us plans to close more than 700 stores, including seven in Colorado.

Whitney and Joe Novak opened Kazoo in Atlanta five years ago, knowing that Amazon and other online retailers would be among their biggest rivals. They recognized the need for unique merchandis­e, Whitney Novak says.

“We were wondering where are the local toy stores? Where are we going to find something for our new baby to play with?” she says.

The variety of lesser-known brands at indie stores is part of their appeal, says Richard Gottlieb, owner of Global Toy Experts, a consulting group. Parents, grandparen­ts and other shoppers spy a doll, game or constructi­on set they’ve never seen before, and buy it.

“In a great retail store, there’s the excitement of stumbling on something,” Gottlieb says. “If you have a really fascinatin­g selection of merchandis­e that changes frequently, I’m going to go there.”

Indies also can thrive because staffers do more than point parents to a section of the store. Silver says parents with questions — how does a toy work, is it right for a particular child’s age and interest — may be more likely to get answers in a smaller store.

“In a big box store, I had to chase salespeopl­e down and sometimes they don’t know the difference between one toy and another,” says Heath Fradkoff, who shops for his son at two indie stores in Brooklyn, N.Y. “In a smaller store, sales people show you the different features in a toy and explain why some people buy it over others.”

 ?? Richard Drew, The Associated Press ?? A young customer checks out the merchandis­e Monday at Mary Arnold Toys in Manhattan’s Upper East Side.
Richard Drew, The Associated Press A young customer checks out the merchandis­e Monday at Mary Arnold Toys in Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

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