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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Paul Simon has Something to Sing About with their New Range of Rugs

(original article from http://www.prweb.com )

(PRWEB) January 21, 2011
One of the largest UK home furnishing chains has today introduced an extensive range of rugs to its online store.

Paul Simon, a leader in England’s home furnishing market, has increased its range of products available to buy online by including a vast selection of quality cheap rugs. The introduction follows customer feedback requesting that they were included on the chain’s website.

Since June, Paul Simon stores nationwide have incorporated an expanse of rugs in contemporary and classic designs into their existing product range of curtains, beds, blinds, linens, tracks, poles and home furniture.

Paul Ludwin, Managing Director of the Paul Simon chain, said: “We are thrilled to be increasing our product range online. There was huge popular demand from our customers to integrate our selection of rugs onto our website so that people were able to browse and buy online and not just in the stores. As our brand continues to grow both in terms of actual stores and online presence, it only made sense to expand our range and offer almost identical choice on the website to what we offer in store.”

“The rugs that we offer are of a very high standard and boast many desirable features such as colourfast and anti-static materials. Our rugs are also soil-resistant and water repellent making them an ideal choice for the chaotic households that we can all admit to sometimes having. ”




Paul Simon has made its name in the world of home furnishing retail by offering an extensive range of home products at low cost prices. Since their launch in 1990, the company have been very successful and have even won awards for their services within the curtain sector.

Since their launch in 1990, Paul Simon stores have specialised in offering an extensive range of curtains at low cost prices. Having won awards in this sector, they have become known as one of England’s top curtain retailers.

Notes to editor(s)
Paul Simon Home Furnishing Stores is an award winning "ready made curtains" retailer established in 1990.
Since their launch 21 years ago, Paul Simon has grown from strength to strength and has even seen web traffic and sales treble during the current recession.
Paul Simon currently operates 51 stores across England.

Contemporary Youth Rug Designs Introduced by the Rug Market America Capture Attention at Winter Markets

(original article from http://www.sbwire.com )


Over forty new rug designs are being introduced at the Las Vegas World Market Center by contemporary interior and exterior rug designer and manufacturer, The Rug Market Kids. 

Los Angeles, CA -- (SBWIRE) -- 01/21/2011 -- The Rug Market America, has introduced its latest collection for the youth market at the recent winter markets. For this season, over forty vibrant designs have been created for a variety of ages and style interests.

"The youth market and our contemporary styling is a natural fit," said Mike Shabtai, owner of The Rug Market America. "Bold colorations and free flowing design motifs are a combination that works in the infant to teen marketplace." The latest designs in the youth collection offer variety in not only design, but also in constructions and price points. "We are able to provide retailers with unique products to fit designers' tastes while at the same time the homeowner's pocketbook," said Shabtai.

Each season, The Rug Market's award-winning designers produce a depth of new introductions encompassing 40 to 70 designs. While creating one of the largest kids lines in the industry, attention is given to combining the whimsy of youthful motifs with quality looks that will stand the test of time.

"Crazy Cars," a 2011 introduction, offers a vibrant contrast between the simplicity of cartoon-like illustrations and a clean yet bold tangerine backdrop. This indoor or outdoor quality polyester hook rug offers fade and stain resistance as well as ease of care and cleanup. Spill-like images create the "Pollack", a cotton hook rug perfect for a budding young artist. This introduction incorporates splashes of blue, green, purple and fuchsia on a neutral background.

Other designs in this Kid's Collection include "The Sherwood," a floor play rug of polyester tufted construction and "Buggy Day," also polyester tufted featuring a rich tomato red, orange and yellow coloration with a giant lady bug checking out a flower-loving bumble bee. "Batter Up!" hits a home run for any all-American boy's room in its red, white and blue sports design.

The Rug Market America offers customers next day shipping, retailer support and superior customer service along with nationwide representation.

For more information about The Rug Market America and its lines of interior and exterior rugs, contact: info@therugmarket.com or visit http://www.therugmarket.com.

Syracuse's Jacobsen's Oriental Rugs still holding out hope it will remain open after rug selloff

(original article from http://blog.syracuse.com)

2010-12-02-sdc-jacobsens1.JPG

Jacobsen's Oriental Rugs vice president Bruce Gianni (L)
and manager Frank Asef hold up an 1880s rug purchased by Colonel Jacobsen and put in his store
in the early 1920s.Syracuse, NY.



We’ve lighted a fire under the value-added features of Store Front — the free e-Newsletter, the daily blog and Twitter feeds.

The latter prompted @GordonParkhurst to tweet, “What’s up with Jacobsen’s Rugs? I thought they went out of business. Now there are new billboards on 690.”
I, too, noticed those billboards on 690 on Wednesday.

But I’m told they’re not new and they’re coming down. That’s according to Bruce Gianni, vice president of Jacobsen Oriental Rugs, located in the Learbury Building in downtown Syracuse.
“They were supposed to be down at the end of December,” said Gianni.

But FYI, Jacobsen’s is still running its huge sale that could make or break the rug dealer, founded in 1924 in downtown Syracuse, where it remains.

“We contracted with an outside company who is running the sale for us for another six weeks or so,” said Gianni. “We’re still optimistic we will re-open down the road, but I can’t say for sure. We haven’t closed the gap yet.”

Company executives said Jacobsen’s got into an overstock situation just before the Great Recession hit two years ago and people stopped buying luxury items.

Signs of an impending “closing” sale began to appear in customers’ mailboxes in the summer.
It became a full-fledged “going out of business” sale in November and the last day of operation was supposed to be Dec. 19. But Jacobsen’s is carrying on, and Gianni said if they can hit the right mark, the store may stay in some form.

“We’re close,” said Gianni. “We’re just not there yet.”

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Final closeout of rug war - Selling business, brothers turn to archrival

(original article from www.philly.com)



By Kathy Boccella

Inquirer Staff Writer

It's hard to imagine that the Main Line's fiercest rivals in the cutthroat world of Oriental carpets - Jerry Sorkin and the three Tehrani brothers - were ever friends, worshiping in the same synagogue and going to their kids' bar mitzvahs.

But that was years ago - before the lawsuit and the bitter allegations and countercharges of shady business practices, and before the competitors who ran rug shops just down the street from each other in Wayne for years finally stopped speaking to each other.

"Mortal enemies - they couldn't stand one another," said Ray Albed, yet another Oriental-rug dealer in Wayne, speaking of Sorkin and the Tehranis - fifth-generation rug dealers from Iran - as if he were relating an ancient tribal feud simmering in the dusty heat of a Persian desert town.

Which makes the concluding episode of this Byzantine soap opera all the more surprising.

When the Tehranis finally decided in the fall to close up shop in Wayne and at a second location in Bryn Mawr after 34 years, they turned the marketing of their going-out-of-business sale over to the one man they had decided could get the biggest bang for their final bucks: Jerry Sorkin.

But just because the Tehranis and their liquidator, Ofer Ben Aharon, are working with Sorkin doesn't mean the longtime enemies are suddenly saying nice things about each other. Indeed, Sorkin's promotional mailing for an auction this month to start the liquidation seemed to almost gloat over the brothers' downturn and blamed their failure on the fact that Sorkin, who closed his own store in 2006, was no longer down the street luring shoppers.

"They don't talk to each other," said Ben Aharon, the liquidator caught in the middle. "There's a lot of bad blood between each other."

Benjamin Tehrani, the middle brother, confirmed that assessment. "I'm surprised he's working for us. . . . It's a joke."

Sorkin insisted he was working not for the Tehranis but for Ben Aharon, who bought the business.

"I've done my best to keep an arm's length from these guys," asserted Sorkin, who said he was stunned to learn how poorly the Tehrani Bros. Oriental Rugs business had performed in recent years. He has made it clear "they're not to come in the store" when he's there, he said.

Then he added, "They're desperate."

The entire Oriental-rug industry is in disarray, not just on one stretch of Lancaster Avenue but across America, where the purchase of a Persian rug was once a brightly woven badge of upward mobility.

That all changed with the Great Recession and the aggressive entry of lower-cost mass-marketers such as Costco into the rug business. The Tehranis, who had grossed as much as $1 million a year at the start of the century, sold just $100,000 worth of carpets from their two stores last year, Ben Aharon said.

"It's a tough time," said Mike Joseph, president of the Oriental Rug Retailers of America. In recent months, membership in his association has dropped 20 percent, weavers in the Middle East or China have walked away from the looms because of the lack of business, and a major dealer in New York has liquidated his inventory for what amounted to $500 a rug.

Things were different in 1977, when the oldest brother, Reuben Tehrani, who had come to America five years earlier with a scholarship from the Iranian government, graduated from Kutztown State College. He started rug-dealing as a student and, two years later, with most of his family having fled the Iranian revolution, set up shop in Wayne.

The brothers bought their current building in 1998 and their Bryn Mawr store in 2001, just before the business began its prolonged slump – exacerbated, the Tehranis believe, by anti-Iranian sentiment after the 9/11 terror attacks.

Sorkin, originally from St. Louis, also dabbled in rug-dealing in the late 1970s and early 1980s while earning a degree from the University of Pennsylvania in Middle Eastern studies - a subject he would later teach there. He said he loved "the behind-the-scenes rug business, but the people in it I always disliked."




The rise of his business was tightly woven with his other interest, tourism. Since the 1980s, he had been organizing cultural tours of Tunisia and other countries in the region with his company, now called TunisUSA.

In the early years, the Tehranis and Sorkin became friendly through Berwyn's Congregation Or Shalom. "When he lost his father-in-law, we went to his house," Reuben Tehrani said. Sorkin also recalled the period, but was more cynical, saying: "I used to speak with their wives and the kids at the synagogue. The kids are not guilty for the sins of the fathers."

But religion became one of the issues driving a wedge between the merchants. Reuben Tehrani contended that Sorkin had been jealous that the Tehranis, who are Orthodox Jews, closed their shops on Saturdays and Jewish holy days. "He worked seven days a week," Tehrani said, "and he couldn't make it, with all the things he put into advertising and auctions."

Sorkin said it was the Tehranis who had been "irate" that "Sorkin gets all this business from the Jewish community."

The turning point in their relationship was a 2001 lawsuit. On Oct. 26, 1999, contractor Bruce Irrgang had his employee pick up four antique Oriental rugs, which he had bought from Sorkin for $377,000, and take them to the Tehranis, who reported finding substantial defects.

When Sorkin refused to return his money, Irrgang sued, and three appraisers testified that the rugs were worth no more than $125,000; the most valuable even had urine stains and dry rot, and had been cut and patched together, they said. One of the appraisers was Reuben Tehrani. The judge ruled against Sorkin.

To Irrgang, the whole affair revealed the unseemly underbelly of the rug world. "I've come to the conclusion that . . . it's impossible to find someone who is honest and forthright" in the Oriental-rug business, he said recently.

Sorkin and the Tehranis also accuse each other of faulty ethics. "The Oriental-rug business is a business that is filled with very sleazy people," Sorkin said, singling out the Tehranis as "constantly doing things that damaged the industry, and I know they did things to intentionally damage my business."

Reuben Tehrani didn't exactly return the fire - "I have no hate for Sorkin," he said - but did toss the jealousy accusation and said he saw a rich irony in Sorkin's working on his liquidation sale.

"There's an expression in Persia: You put honey in the mouth of a person, and after he sucks all the honey, he bites you," the eldest Tehrani said. "That's why he's marketing for me. He's making money."

Accusations of shady tactics are nothing new in the rug business, and none is more controversial than the going-out-of-business sale. Joseph, of the Oriental-rug association, said retailers often inflate prices ridiculously high, then "mark down" to still-profitable levels. Inferior merchandise is brought in from wholesalers, and sales can go on for months.

In fact, the Tehranis had "a retirement sale" about six years ago when Reuben Tehrani decided to move to Israel. But after a few months, he said, things didn't work out, so he returned and resumed business. This time, Ben Aharon insisted, the shops will really close this year. So far, the company has yet to obtain the going-out-of-business-sale permit from Radnor Township that's required by law.

What remains of the two once-thriving businesses is a legacy of bitterness that has outlasted customers. Sorkin recalled that in agreeing to work for him, he had told Ben Aharon, "If you tell me the Tehranis are closing, I would be happy to bring the shovel."

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Welcome To Rugs Usa Offer Dot Blogspot Dot Com


 

RugsUSA.com have travelled a long journey back since 1998, starting humbly as an online store retailing mainly on variety of area rugs.  As per today RugsUSA.com while still being known for the exceptional  quality merchandise have enriched their excellent service by adding other categories of home accents.  To match the evolving nature of its products and services RugsUsa.com may change its current name to reflect its new image in the near future.

RugsUSA,com is now a retail store bringing you from an eclectic collection of rugs to elaborate tapestries, elegant lighting to charming wall clocks and exquisite mirrors, discover an array of accessories that you will find suitable to accentuate different areas of your home.  More products categories are coming in a few months, so we advise you to always stay in touch with RugsUSA.com  and check out the new home furnishings that will be available while enjoying the latest designs at the BEST PRICE :




At RugsUSA.com, the so called America's online area rug superstore you will find a wide selection  of choice of rugs from contemporary rugs, outdoor rugs, Flokati shags, leather rugs, children rugs, Oriental and Persian rugs,as well as a wide range of accessories for the home. Not only that RugsUSA.com also offer big discounts on America's leading brands, including KAS Oriental, Milliken, Mohawk, Momeni, Couristan, Colonial Mills, Capel, Home Dynamix, United Weavers, Feizy, Rug Market, Shaw, Oriental Weavers, Sphinx,Homespice Decor, Safavieh Carpets, Balta, Radici, 828, and rug pads, hall runners, and stair treads by Surya, and many more. As we are constantly adding to our selection of clearance rugs, bargain-hunters are highly advise to  check back frequently.

At RugsUSA.com, the best assurance for customer would be its goal  to provide you with discount rugs and house accents at 40% to 70% off suggested retail prices.



On top of that there is no shipping fee at RugsUSA.com and yes, its hard to believe but shipping  is always FREE no matter how large your order or where in the USA the item is shipped.  Do not forget to use the Price Match  function to further ensures that you are getting the best value from the wide range of quality home accents. In fact, they are so confident that they offer the best prices on everything that they carry that we'll beat any competitor by 10% guaranteed.
You should check out  their Rug Blog for tips on decorating with area rugs and to learn about the latest trends in home decor and home accents. If you are interested to get their color catalog just ring their  toll free number. RugsUSA.com includes hundreds of unique and hard-to-find rugs from around the world for you to choose from.

At Rugs USA,they  strive to be your source for all of your home decor needs.
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