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birdtalker_gw

Anybody know who owns Joann's fabric stores?

birdtalker
12 years ago

Joann's used to be decent, even had great fabrics then they ran out all the other stores and recently they got really bad. They rearranged our local store and now it is downright filthy, messy and disorganized. The shelves are mostly empty and the aisles are so tiny you can't walk down them. I was wondering if it had recently sold or in in bankruptcy or something? I'd like to boycott all their related businesses. Any body know anything about it?

Comments (38)

  • caroline94535
    12 years ago

    I don't know who owns them, either, but they are terrible people.

    Our JoAnn's will not let paying customers use the restroom; it's for "Employees Only". Even if a person just had a surgery and may need to "go" quickly; even if a person is 8 months pregnant and her compressed bladder has passed its 2-tablespoon capacity...you still have to leave the store, trek down the strip mall, into and through a huge grocery store to use their facilities.

    I got so angry about this policy that I wrote the company through the "contact us" link on their home page. They said basically that was the store's policy and they wouldn't interfer. I'll try to find the email and post it here.

    You're spot-on about the "downright filthy, messy and disorganized" conditions, too.

    I try to not shop there if I can help it. I will grab a 99-cent pattern now and then but everything else can be mail-ordered or can wait until I make my twice-a-year trip to Fargo.

  • susie53_gw
    12 years ago

    I have noticed the difference, too. I went to a big sale they had and had 37 people in front of me for cutting fabric. They took away having 3 cutting areas into 1. What a mess. I wrote to the main office and quickly got a response. In a few weeks I went back during the week and it wasn't busy. I talked to the cutting lady. She was there the first time I was there. She told me they had been sold and were changing a lot of things. She said they were getting a lot of complaints. I went to a smaller store close to me and talked to them about what had happened at the big Indy store. They told me they have cut back on their help. They were only allowed to have 2 people working in the store at one time. She said it really gets bad when they are really busy. I have not found the stores to be dirty or disorganized but they sure lack the help. The workers themselves have always been very nice and as helpful as they can be.

    Don't fault the workers, their hands are tied and have to do it the way they are told.

  • ohiojudy
    12 years ago

    the local store here was messy and unorganized but in the last year has straightened up. the problem is more craft stuff, less fabric. If you want anything besides fleece or cotton quilting type you're out of luck. And always different help, they must not give them enough hours to keep good help on.

  • donnar57
    12 years ago

    Ours is getting better with the type of fabrics they are carrying, but still don't have a huge collection.

    I went down there for the Veteran's Day Weekend sale, as I was looking for specific fabric. When I went to the cutting table, there were only 2 cutters. They were on #76 of the take-a-number system, and when I went to get a number, it was #2. I left it there, put my fabric back where I found it, and left. It just wasn't going to be that big of a savings for the amount of time I would have had to wait to have my fabric cut.

    I hope things get better....

    Donna

  • msmeow
    12 years ago

    I've learned to never, ever darken the door on a weekend afternoon. I go first thing Saturday; Sunday is even better. I hate the single checkout line...it never fails I need a spool of thread and there are 10 people ahead of me with carts full. Another thing they need is an information table. Many times one of the cutters is occupied forever trying to explain patterns and sewing to someone who has apparently never sewn anything in her life and suddenly decided she's going to make a prom dress or her daughter's wedding dress.

    For me, like many of you, JoAnn's is the only game in town, unless I want to pay $15 a yard for quilt shop fabric.

    Okay, off my soapbox now.

    Donna

  • evaf555
    12 years ago

    In our Joann's I think the manager they had was not very good. Once a new manager came in, things were tidied up. He's since left, but the store looks pretty good, still. So maybe the old manager just needed some retraining, because she's still there.

    If I wanted good service anyplace, I would avoid Saturday and Sunday afternoons. My frustration with them is the ever-growing wall of fleece and calicoes, and no quality garment fabric. But i can't really blame them, they're going to stock what sells. Frankly, I can buy everyday clothing cheaper than I can make it.

  • Marion1959
    12 years ago

    Went to Joanne's 11/29/11 to reactivate a member card, bought fabric at 5.99 a yard and there was a sign showing $2 off, but when you read the receipt the regular price shows up at $8.99 a yard. Sort of to the side you will see $3.99 and add the $2 then it becomes $5.99 I had used a 20% discount coupon but none of the figures add up to the supposed discount that "you saved". I always end up asking the cashier, "just where is this discount". Not good.

  • sheesh
    12 years ago

    Lucky me! I have a wonderful Joann about 10 minutes from me, and two others within 25! Clean, well stocked, friendly staffs, good prices and coupons! Since I sew a lot - garments, mainly - I guess I am one lucky duck, as I also have a pretty good Hancock Fabrics nearby.

    I am thanking my lucky stars!

  • soonergrandmom
    12 years ago

    I have always thought they were a very poor store and that their fabric was terrible. If you have actually found a good one then I would say it is the exception, not the rule.

  • msmeow
    12 years ago

    Aw, I miss Hancock Fabrics! The two in my area closed several years ago.

    Donna

  • nanny2a
    12 years ago

    The JoAnn's closest to me, (Savannah), is well stocked, clean, has spacious aisles and has a wonderful selection of apparel and home decor fabrics, as well as all the craft items. The women working there are all very personable, helpful and pleasant to do business with. And their restroom is open to the public.

    I visit the one where my daughter lives, in Athens, and it's cluttered, dirty, narrow aisles and just minimal selection and very crowded. It's as though it's a totally different company.

    So I guess I'd consider myself lucky, because there's also a Hancocks close by, too, with a fairly decent selection and friendly staff.

  • yeolebag
    12 years ago

    I work at the Viking Store in JoAnn"s. We are in Macon. Our store is clean and well stocked. The help is wonderful. We have public bathrooms, but I do have to say some people are messy and of course we clean the restrooms. I wonder where they get their manners. I love our store.Come and visit us in Macon.

  • Keedril
    12 years ago

    The only thing I can think of is that the stores in smaller areas don't have as many employees. I live in the metro Phoenix area and we have small stores and large stores and there are always plenty of staff in all of them. Several cutting areas in the large stores as well as several cash registers and other support folks. Yes, some of the aisles are narrow but I can get a handicap cart down them and still have a cart going the other way. Only time I have noticed dirty floors is at the end of the day with a big sale going on and it has been a zoo in there. Bathrooms are always available to the public. I have just never had a problem and we don't have a Hancocks Fabric, which was always dirty but we do have some Hobby Lobby stores which are always clean too.

  • Grannateri
    12 years ago

    One think I recently discovered about Joann's is that if you cut out the 40% off coupon out of the paper and take it in the store, almost anything you might want to purchase with it is "on sale" even if it's $2 off. And the coupon specifically states on regularly priced items. That way, they don't have to sell their better items at 40% off. I think that is just rotten.

  • mudbubble
    12 years ago

    Joanns is just a terrible place to shop! I don't believe anyone who says that their local store is "well stocked". It is a large retail chain and all the stores are supplied with the same awful junk. They do not have a selection for one store that they do not send to the others stores. They operate on a national level, not a local level. Maybe,just maybe, they might supply a Florida store with more piecing cotton and less fleece, and visa versa for Michigan. But, mostly it is all the same awful junk.
    There is a very large one near me, but, you would be hard pressed to find any decent apparel fabric in it. It is stocked to the roof with cheap craft stuff and plastic flowers. Just disgusting!
    Most of the stores are walls of fleece and cheap piecing cottons.
    About the only fabric that I buy at Joanns is some linen or linen blends.
    Given the dearth of good fabric from just about any source anymore, it is almost the only thing that I sew with.
    I did buy some flannel back last Fall when they had the sale. It was such cheap stuff the it pilled up with the first washing--cheap, short fiber cottons. I ended up buying some better quality flannel online. That cheap JOanns stuff was woven and filled out with fiber fluff. Really cheap quality! I will never waste my time or money on it again.
    They recently advertised "fashion knits". They had about 6 bolts, all ugly. I don't want a dress with images of skulls on it! What?!!! It is almost useless to try to shop at either Joanns or Hancocks.
    I just ordered from Fabric.com. We will see what if it is any better.

  • nanny2a
    12 years ago

    I do have to disagree with mudbubble - the JoAnns in Athens was less than half the size of the one in Savannah, and DID NOT have the same choice of decorator fabrics. I know because I had to go to Savannah because what I needed was not available in Athens. And the crafts department in Savannah was at least twice the size of Athens, with far more selection there, also! So in this instance, I do not believe that apples equal apples when you compare one store to another. Especially when one store is at least three times larger than the other! I have never had any problems with any material that I purchased at Savannah Joanns. I have purchased flannel for crib bedding, duck cloth, fleece, home decor fabrics galore, quilting fabrics and hundreds of notions, and not had a problem with any of them. The flannel I purchased for the twins bedding has been washed at least two dozen times, and looks great!

  • cocontom
    12 years ago

    Mudbubble, I'm not a fan of Fabric.com (too much of a mixed bag on quality, and never amazing QPR).

    I love Fabricmart though. I've gotten a few clunkers from them, but at least the clunkers were cheap (like $2 per yard or less cheap, and they usually add an extra foot onto any cut over a yard).

  • puzzlefan
    12 years ago

    Before the take over, I was growing more and more dissatisfied but now won't shop there for political reasons. My daughter serves in a refugee camp and the conglomerate strongly supports the opposition. We boycott all such companies. (endtheoccupation.org)

  • sheesh
    12 years ago

    How lovely, mudbubble. Thanks for that. Love being called a liar. Hope you find what you're looking for.

  • jomuir
    12 years ago

    OMG puzzlefan are you really bringing the Israeli/Palestinian conflict into this? JAS gets their fabric produced mainly in Asian countries, not sure where the facts are to support your statment.

    I looked around the link you posted & still don't see what the tie to JAS is.

    Sewing as political terrorism, wow. Maybe we should take this over to Hot Topics, it could be a fun convo. But for here & now, I'm keeping my strong opinions to myself. Sewing is a hobby & the only political bent I could possibly think of related to it is gender bias. All those womyn sewing away madly, some are madder than others though.

    Shermann, I wouldn't take any offense from the post, it doesn't seem to be directed at you personally, rather pf has an axe to grind & uses any opportunity however inappropriate to air their complaints.

  • FlamingO in AR
    12 years ago

    My closest Joann's is in Fayetteville AR, about an hour from my house, so I don't go there very often. I was there a few weeks ago, though and it was clean, spacious, had an enormous variety of everything and I could have spent half of a day in there, but I only had an hour. I browsed all over the whole store and had the best time, shopping their sales, using the coupons, etc. I spent about $20 and saved about $10, which was nice. It was a Friday morning and they weren't terribly busy, which was lucky for me. I'm now on their mailing list and they're sending me coupons and I can't wait to go back. I think I'm a little bored with Hobby Lobby.

  • gardenpea_gw
    12 years ago

    I just went to a beautiful new store in Baton Rouge today. I could have spent all day there. I live four hours away, so that's distressing. Next time I'm here I know where I will be headed. There used to be a Joann's 35 minutes from home, but it closed. It wasn't nearly as nice, but I miss it. I was excited to see all the decorator fabrics today as our HL has a pitiful selection.

  • Northeast Gardener, Central NJ, 7a
    12 years ago

    The Joanne's near me, in Staten Island, New York, is awful as well, and though at some level, I guiltily admit it comforts me to hear your stories, I just wish it weren't so since for me it's so conveniently located. The customer service, the staff's disinterest and lack of knowledge about the merchandise, and the mess in the store all make me travel completely out of my way in search of better options. I'm lucky to live in NYC where there are lots and lots of local, family/individually-owned stores to choose from. Still, I wish Joanne's would clean up their act.

  • luvtosharedivs
    11 years ago

    Wow! I was unaware that so many of you have had bad experiences at your local (or not so local) JoAnn stores.)
    I regularly shop at JoAnns in Racine, about 15 minutes from my home. The store is always well kept, with public access bathrooms which they clean themselves.

    There is a wide variety of fabrics from apparel to quilting to appholstery. I do agree with many of you that there is a heck of a lot of fleece, but in our northern climate, it is well used. There is a good amount of batting material, muslin, lots of sewing & quilting tools and books. (Can you tell I'm more into quilting than apparel sewing?)

    I've trained myself to look for the better fabric by feel (closer weave & heavier than the cheap stuff.) Yes, they have some cheap calico fabric...just pass it by. I am also on their mailing list and frequently use their coupons. Unlike some others who have posted above, I am usually able to find a fabric or batting or thread or tool that is not on sale in order to use the 40% and 50% coupons. The fliers also offer coupons good for ALL items, including sale and red tag items.

    The staff is friendly and knowledgable and very helpful. The only time the store is crowded is during a big sale. Yes, the long lines are tiresome, but worth it if you get a good deal on sale items. You just need to exercise a lot of patience on those sale days....hey...strike up a nice conversation with the people in front of you or behind you...it helps pass the time!

    I think the JoAnns in Racine stays on its toes because there is a high-end quilt store a couple of miles away that sells top grade fabric along with sewing machines. I believe the managers at JoAnns will lose many "quilting" customers to the quilting store if they let their service slide.

    Oh, and one more thing...the Joann's near me also gives sewing lessons. I've never attended, but it must be a success, because they are always advertising new classes.

    Again, I was sad to hear of some of your unpleasant experiences, and consider myself fortunate to have a wonderful JoAnn store and staff near me.

    Julie

  • anitastitch
    11 years ago

    I have 2 JoAnn fabric stores near me and have no problem with either one.
    I have noticed that the expensive fabric I'm looking for is usually on sale whenever I happen to have a coupon that excludes sale items--But that's the case in other stores these days. (It happens to me at Macy's too).

    I guess as far as stock, cleanliness, personnel, etc.--it depends on management.

    As I mentioned in the other thread on gripes about JoAnns--I'm just happy to have fabric stores in my area.

    And then there's Walmart--The one in my area just brought back fabric and some of the fabric is actually pretty nice.

  • evaf555
    11 years ago

    Our Walmart just brought back fabric, but near as I can tell, the same cheesy, cheap stuff they had before: suitable for Halloween costumes, not much else.

    Having worked for chain stores, (So Fro Fabrics, David's Bridal, Macy's) I can tell you the companies absolutely do have different mixes of products to send to different stores.

  • Batwings
    11 years ago

    Whoever has control over these places needs to get their act together. I just spent 1 hr. 45 minutes in our local Joanns just to get a gift card. Everyone there didn't have the slightest idea how to do the process and the store manager would not come out of his "Hiddy Hole" to help. The floor manager double charged my debit card and couldn't cancel that transaction. She locked up the entire system, screwed up the transaction and ended up paying me cash for the 2nd transaction. Then I had to go to my bank and pay for the 2nd transaction.
    This place totally sucks!!!!
    I WILL NEVER GO IN THAT PLACE OR ANY JOANN'S EVER AGAIN!!!!!
    BTW: This store is in Vancouver, WA.
    Someone needs to be fired.

  • laVerneMaynard7
    11 years ago

    The JoAnn's near me was recently renovated; they had several younger employees. I asked one young male employee where the cheesecloth was. He blinked, and said, "You mean cloth with pictures of cheese on it?"
    Haha. I don't think he got much training. I just wish they would train the cutters! I hate getting home with fabric so badly cut I have to cut two inches off before I can start!

  • susie53_gw
    11 years ago

    The Joanns that is closest to me is not a really big store but the ladies that work there are so helpful and nice. On the other hand the huge store in Indianapolis is awful. Crowded, messy and not very organized. They changed it a couple years ago. They used to have 3 cutting areas, now they only have one. The first time I went there after the change I was shocked. You now take a number at the cutting area. There was 30 some people ahead of me. People were just walking out and leaving carts full of fabric sitting. I went back during the week and the same lady was working. I told her of my experience. She told me the new management want them to only spend 4 minutes per customer. They don't want them to leave the cutting table if a customer needs help such as picking the right thread and such. She said it was awful. If you are a new sewer you often need help. How many times have you been there and someone doesn't know if the have the right fabric for the project or how many yards it would take? Wouldn't you think they would want their workers to help customers? Sadly, Joanns is about the only fabric store around. We do have a Hobby Lobby but their fabric is so high priced. While taking a different way home from the hospital while hubby was in I ran across a Hancock Fabric. I am going to check it out soon. Do they have sale flyers that they mail out like Joann does?

  • Michelle Dellaratta
    8 years ago

    Joanns is an overpriced, outdated store where customers don't matter, service is extinct, and the employees are some of the most unfriendly beings on the earth (not to mention, unable to do math calculations in their head when needed) When you call customer service , a very sympathetic representative will aww and aah and lament over your dissatisfaction but even then give you no customer service. The agent answering my dissatisfaction call told me that she would get in touch with the district manager and let them know my complaints. Based on the lack of service I received in the store, I informed her that the stores are so far gone that I will await their demise.

  • oldgeezernmaine
    8 years ago

    it's not so much the lack of service any more. It's just that our store has very little one would actually make a decent looking clothing out of. Fleece and more fleece, is piled to the ceiling. There is stiff, sparkly stuff suitable to make Disney princess costumes for your six-year-old, and shiny Lycra. The printed materials look dated. it all looks cheap. Sometimes I can pick up lining there, but not much else.


  • sandy2_gw
    8 years ago
    I say bring back the old fabric stores from the 60's they were the best. I made so many outfits back then, really most of my clothes I made and the service was professional. I drive an hour away from home now and get me sewing materials from amish country store in Ohio called Zinks. It is a great place, you can purchase bolts of material for $1.00 a yard and it is good. I have yet to be disappointed. Have made some nice outfits but purchased the patterns on sale when Joann's has them marked down. Very happen there is no other good fabric stores around my area, unfortunately. Keep sewing!
  • oldgeezernmaine
    8 years ago

    I had the same experience as another poster here: made a pair of knit pants, and after exactly four wearings, they were so pilled and crummy looking I threw them out. The quality just isn't there. I can buy a pair of pants at Macy's for $50 (or one of the discount places for $20) and wear them a couple times a week for a year or two...and I didn't have to make them myself. I've had very mixed results buying online, but generally, one gets what one pays for. I don't mind making a dress or jacket that's really different, but for day-to-day clothing, store-bought is a pretty good value, especially if you find a brand that fits and wears well.

  • donnar57
    8 years ago

    Our Joann's has gotten a little better in recent years, but it still has a long way to go. Still way too much fleece (really -- three long aisles on BOTH sides? and this is Southern California?!), and not enough of the linen-look or other apparel wear. Even our Walmart appears to have a better selection of fabric.

    My daughter and I were just in there today. I hear the complaints about the 40-50% off coupons. It's hard to find anything to use it on because when they offer them, everything else is already 20% off, 30% off, $5 off per yard, or similar. We did manage to find some fabric that she wanted, for the project we're going to work on, and she used one of my 50% off coupons for it. Everything else was already marked down.



    Donna


  • msmeow
    8 years ago

    Donna, I am in central Florida and our JoAnn stores have tons of fleece, too. I don't get it! I know we have lots of retired grandmas probably making stuff for the grandkids, but still...

    The store near me is about 70% craft items and 30% fabric, of which at least half of that is fleece. I'm starting to sew clothes again after a long hiatus and have not found much decent quality fabric. Plus I need the Pantone people to come up with a color palette I like...for several years now fabrics (and RTW clothes) are in colors don't care for.

    Donna

  • PRO
    Magnolia House Design
    3 years ago

    I agree and pricing is crazy! Way overcharge on regular price items so that u can use a coupon. Selection is dreadful.

  • wednesday morning
    3 years ago

    I saw this thread and then saw the date it was posted! Years ago!

    The only thing that has changed about Joanns in all these years is that it has just gotten worse. The only reason it still is open is because it is the ONLY thing around for miles and miles


    Wow! how many years ago we were complaining about it!

    To update, I am not going in there anymore.



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