Houston Chronicle Sunday

Making room for big dreams

ATD-American owner takes leap to online retail with American-made, West Texas-grown organic cotton sheets

- By Diane Mastrull

Bedding heir tested comfort zone with online, niche product.

PHILADELPH­IA — Janet Wischnia has been working in her family’s wholesale bedding and bath linens business, ATDAmerica­n, for nearly half of its 88-year history, 10 years as president.

About to turn 60 in August, the grandmothe­r of three was itching for a new challenge within the company. She found it by venturing way out of ATD-American’s comfort zone, launching in January a line of U.S.-made sheets created from 100 percent organic cotton grown in West Texas for sale direct to consumers online.

That’s right, a company that started the year that Al Capone was convicted of tax fraud and a dozen eggs cost 18 cents is vying for customers in today’s social media-driven retail environmen­t, where so-called influencer­s — those with big online audiences — can make or break a business with a blog post or YouTube video review.

“You can’t be afraid to change. It’s scary, but it’s also fun,” Wischnia said recently about her new “baby,” American Blossom Linens, which

she’s overseeing from ATDAmerica­n’s headquarte­rs in Wyncote. “It’s good to learn new things.”

Selling anything but wholesale is not something that ATD-American or its sister company, Thomaston Mills, has done in about 60 years — ever since Wischnia’s father, Jerome Zaslow, and his brothers Arnold and Spencer changed course for a business their parents started in 1931 as Jaffe’s Art Linens, a storefront in what was Philadelph­ia’s garment district.

A couple of years ago, Wischnia decided it was again time for something new. She took her cues, in part, from Donald Trump.

“With the political climate, the current president, Made in USA is more out there, people seem to think about it a little bit more than they did before,” Wischnia said. “When we saw that trend and the whole environmen­tal trend, the trend for people wanting products made out of organic fibers, we thought we would give a try at creating a product and doing direct-to-consumer.”

In a sense, there was a feeling they had little to lose.

“Not a lot of people have gone into American textile manufactur­ing recently thinking it’s a great new career. We needed to get better at all of these things and change,” Tim Voit, chief marketing officer at ATD-American and Thomaston Mills, said of setting out to make “the greenest, most sustainabl­e product out there when we saw that there was a niche in the retail market.”

American Blossom sheets are made from cotton grown in Texas and spun in North Carolina. Weaving is done in South Carolina and cutting and sewing at the Thomaston Mills plant in Georgia, founded in 1899 and a part of what Wischnia said her family bought out of bankruptcy in 2001.

Thank you cards tucked into every American Blossom order describe a product that is “100 percent American — from farm to bed.” Wischnia said no other company is making organic linens in the United States, with most coming from India. Even some of ATD-American’s wholesale products are imported.

The idea for American Blossom came from Wischnia trying a heavyweigh­t fabric — as sheets go — that Thomaston Mills had made for a company in Canada and thinking it would be even better made with organic cotton. She came across the documentar­y The True Cost, which explores the clothes-making industry and its global impacts, which led her to a West Texas co-op of organic farmers and the cotton now being used by American Blossom.

“It’s really fun learning new things,” Wischnia said, declining to disclose sales as a privately held company, but acknowledg­ing that American Blossom’s $289 queen set is “a lot more expensive” than cotton/polyester blend alternativ­es made overseas. She noted the set includes four pillowcase­s rather than the standard two, and features bigger and deeper sheets with wider-thanusual elastic.

Consumers are willing to pay more for products from companies with “ethical business practices,” said Kathryn Kellogg, the San Francisco author of 101 Ways to Go Zero Waste. She cited a “new wave of consumeris­m” that favors ethically sourced and made products that don’t harm the environmen­t.

Alexandra Breines, 30, is a Brooklyn-based marketer specializi­ng in new product launches, including American Blossom. While saying “all of Janet’s instincts are correct ... people, millennial­s especially, we want products we can feel proud of,” Breines said the key to success for American Blossom “will be really building a community and engaging with that community.”

That’s where influencer­s are key, such as the Daily Connoisseu­r blogger Jennifer L. Scott, author of the Madame Chic book series on lifestyle pointers, who also claims 50,000 subscriber­s to her YouTube channel. A Scott follower for five years who has bought products she has recommende­d, Wischnia reached out to her, asking if she would like to try American Blossom sheets.

“I get a lot of those requests — I ignore 95 percent of them,” Scott said from her Southern California home. She, however, was charmed by Wischnia’s demonstrat­ion that she really had been a longtime reader.She was impressed, she said, that the bedding was organic, American-made, and high quality, and that “there were faces behind the company. It’s like a family and I really like that.”

 ?? Jessica Griffin / Tribune News Service ?? “You can’t be afraid to change. It’s scary, but it’s also fun,” says Janet Wischnia, director of American Blossom Linens.
Jessica Griffin / Tribune News Service “You can’t be afraid to change. It’s scary, but it’s also fun,” says Janet Wischnia, director of American Blossom Linens.

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