Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Sunny Skies Ahead, Save Money, Time & Energy...


It seems that lately every time we pick up a newspaper it is not good news. With the price of gas going sky high it seems like there is a whole lot of belt tightening going on. At Mary Jo's we have come up with a few ideas on how to save some time and leave more money in your wallet. Did you know Mary Jo's posts new "Sale" items almost everyday? Yes. At Mary Jo's Cloth Store we are sticklers for low prices and great service. Mary Jo has been in the cloth business for over 60 years and in that time we have seen good times and bad. This is another rough patch, but we know it will all be fine, life goes on and we will be stronger for the experience. Having said that, we are very sensitive to your needs at this time. Check on our Sale page often and remember the prices in all of our regular departments beat most fabric stores, across the nation, hands down.
Save gas, save time and find exactly what you are looking for at www.Maryjos.com. We have a vast selection of Quilting Fabrics, Fancy and Fine Fabrics for upcoming weddings, dances and special occasions. We are always adding to our Upholstery & Drapery Fabric Selection featuring name brands, and fantastic pattern and color choices. Our everyday fabric for children's clothes, men's shirts and summer dresses is colorful, bright and beautiful. So make yourself a deal and shop online. You will save money, time and energy. Sometimes everything you are looking for can be found on your computer screen. (Well almost everything, but fabric, especially!)
A while back we asked you to share your recent quilting projects with us. Thanks to all of you who responded, such lovely work and wonderful stories. Today we are featuring a gal named Jean Loussarian. She Has also created a website for her quilts.
"The quilt was inspired from when I was in Bonn, Germany touring the house that Beethoven lived in. He was also born in this house.
My name is Jean Loussarian from Westminster, SC. I travel at least twice a year to Mary Jo's to load up my car with the beautiful fabrics from Mary Jo's. My web site is loussarian.com if you would like to see some other quilts that I make. I have attached a picture of a quilt I recently made using fabric from Mary Jo's.

Jean, thanks for sharing your quilt and the inspiration behind this beauty.

If you have a quilt to share, we would love nothing more than to feature you here on our Fabric & Design Blog. Email us today.
Thanks for reading, save some money and log onto Maryjos.com today!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Mary Jo Has A Favor To Ask...


Today we have a special request. Mary Jo's granddaughter Rebekah is quite the horse woman. She has had a passion for horses since she was a young girl. She is now a sophomore at William Woods University and is still going to competitions and showing her horses. So here is the deal. A photograph of her with her horse at a competition has been chosen to possibly be one of this years best photos for National Horseman Magazine! But here is the catch. We have a big favor to ask of you all. Could you please log onto The National Horseman website on the photo contest page and vote for Rebekah. She is #8. We appreciate your participation. It would be super if she could win this prestigious contest and we can do it with your help. Thanks in advance.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Red & White Quilts Take Center Stage...

The buzz around "The Red & White Show" is in print, on the web and television. This show was a BIG DEAL. Joanna S. Rose claims she is not a quilt "collector". But she is. She recently turned 80 and her darling husband decided to give her 651 Red & White Quilts a 6 day show at The Armory in NYC. This show was curated by the Folk Art Museum. The layout and presentation was stunning. The quilts, more so. A high society Red & White Gala kicked off this event and then the show was open to the public for 6 days with free admission. Wow. What a guy, what a gift and what a pleasure to see 651 quilts hung and displayed so artfully and lit so perfectly. Quite a production.
The visitors had much to say, "Just came back from the exhibit. Visually stunning. Felt like Alice in Wonderland wandering around the deck of cards!"
"An unbelievably gorgeous exhibition! I would never have thought there could be so much variation in such a simple color scheme; the graphic quality of the quilts is impressive and incredible."
"As a quilter and a person who appreciates art, it was amazing to see how these things blend so seamlessly together. Thank you to Ms. Rose.".

For inspiration click on any, or all of the following links. These are talented quilting bloggers and newspaper writers who waxed poetically not only about the show but also about the history and the fantastic possibilities of Red & White Quilts and this exhibit. All of these sites have many photos of the show. This will be a true inspiration for all of you quilters and for those of you who love beautiful pieces of art.
Folk Art Museum , Wall Street Journal, Pincushion Blog, Helen James Design, Blackbird Design, Repro Quilt Lover, and The Bohemian American.



This show was a wonderful tribute to the art of quilting, which is great for all of us who quilt, or aspire to quilt. Take a minute and Google, "Red & White Show New York", you will not only be inspired, we think you will be amazed. We certainly were.

Mary Jo's Cloth has all of the Red & White fabric you will need for your next, collectible quilt. So what are you waiting for, great prices and amazing choices. Please send us your Red & White quilt projects, we will do a follow up article in the next few months, and your quilt could be featured. Have fun. Please take a moment to explore the sale section, you will never be disappointed, we promise. Happy quilting.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Quilting, Dresses & A Bit Of Dr. Suess...

Spring is in the air. In a few weeks we will be featuring some of the new lines from the fabric designers at Marcus Brothers, designed just for quilters. They have created some fantastic "Hobo" quilt fabric. It is terrific, you can cut the printed fabric up, re-sew and have a Hobo Quilt in a snap. Does your guild or organization have a show coming up? Drop us an email, include your web address, we will feature your Quilt Show info on the Community page section of the website. We also will list some of the shows in our special quilt article, featured on this blog at the end of March.

A special thanks to all of you that have been sending us your projects and letters. We are always impressed with the projects and special stories that you share with us. It is a delight to feature your projects on this blog. We encourage you to continue to share your magical creations and your heartwarming stories. It is as simple as an email, remember to include photos and if sewing or products derived from your projects is also your business, go ahead and provide your website or Blog address. We can then can share it in the article with our Mary Jo's Blog readers.

The other day a gal sent us a sweet note. She had been hearing about our store form several online sewing groups and could not resist. Thanks Jerry, so happy to see the lovely outfits you created.
First, let me tell you that I had the TIME OF MY LIFE the week before Thanksgiving when my husband and I took the “long way home” from DC to Mississippi. We came down through Williamsburg to spend the afternoon, and then drove on into Gastonia to spend the night. I belong to several online sewing forums and had heard all about the shopping adventure awaiting me at Mary Jo’s. I told my husband that I would need 3 hours at the minimum to be able to browse and see everything. Bless his heart, he dropped me off at 9 and was waiting in the car when I exited at 11:45. He told me I had cheated myself out of 15 minutes!! I bought three sets of coordinates to use for outfits for my granddaughter, Mary Kennedy, age 6. I have only finished up two of the outfits so far; the other set of fabrics is sitting in a holding pattern until I can get going on the heirloom Easter garments for MK and her little brother Charlie, age 2. I already have visions of how it will turn out! The first picture is of a Michael Miller Eiffel Tower print I loved. I found the perfect red-orange microcheck and Kona cotton coordinates to really make it special, I think. I loved that you had such a large selection of colors in your “basic” stock. And I bought that Children’s Corner Jacqueline pattern at Mary Jo’s too! (I bought four Children’s Corner patterns. One of them will be used for the Easter dress, done in a beautiful pale blue batiste I bought that day!!) The next one I finished up today. I had bought three of your Dr. Seuss prints, but found that the red fishbowl print just wouldn’t work for me with the panel print and the Cat in the Hat print; so I had to order the red “egg” dot to coordinate. I wish I had bought it that day. Darn. Thank you for the wonderful shopping experience. I hope that we will pass by that way again one day. I will have to hurry and sew up the fabric stash I have so hubby will agree to stop in next time!! J Jerry
Sweet, Thanks for sharing.
Springtime brings many new colors, patterns and prints to our collection of fabric available on the web and at the store. Take a few moments and cruise around maryjos.com, you will not be disappointed, we promise. Happy almost spring.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Sewing Seeds & Giving Back...

Have you often thought of the many things you could do for others, but haven't stumbled on your exact course of action? We recently received an inspiring letter from a gal who figured out her own special path to giving. She was haunted by the passage in Matthew 25, 36, "I needed clothes and you clothed me".

This was Jennifer Sinclair's course of action.
I'd like to share with you about my "Sewing Seeds" project for orphans. I was feeling led to sew for orphans but didn't really know where to start and what was needed. Just recently, I was approached about a need for girls' dresses in Uganda, Africa. Talk about an answered prayer! For more details, see a recent post on my blog: My two year old daughter and I had a great time strolling through Mary Jo's picking out fabric. Within a week, I have completed three dresses, but I'm excited to do more. I've attached a picture of the completed three dresses from Mary Jo's fabric. I wanted fabrics that were bright, colorful, and durable. Of course, at Mary Jo's there is a lot to choose from and I found just what I needed. The employees were great to offer help and suggestions. Although my project seems small, it is my prayer that God will use my dresses to make a precious girl not only feel special, but also feel God's love. Mark 4:20..."Others, like seed sown on good soil, hear the word, accept it, and produce a crop - thirty, sixty, or even a hundred times what is sown." I'd love for this to become much bigger than me and my little Singer sewing machine. God may just make that happen. Thanks for giving me the opportunity to share. Well, the sew must go on, Jennifer Sinclair
Thanks so much for your inspirational story. We hope some of our customers will be inspired to follow their "Giving Path". We have bolts and bolts of the style of fabric Jennifer did choose for her Passion Project. Bright almost retro, yet somewhat modern, this is a sturdy cotton blend with a giant pop of color. What could make a young girl, in any country happier then these sunny dresses. Remember, we also have incredible, beautiful fabric ON SALE in the store and online. Shop the Sale page frequently as the stock is always changing.

Do you have a project you would like to share? We are all ears and always delighted to see the handiwork of our Mary Jo's Cloth customers. Please send us an email with a brief description today.
Enjoy this lovely almost Spring day.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

A Letter, An Article and A Big Thanks...

Last week the Gaston Gazette featured an article about Mary Jo, her Cloth Store and the passion she has for her store. We also received a letter from one of our longtime fabric manufacturers, praising Mary Jo. Mary Jo mentions designing some of his fabric in the article.

The Letter From a Long time Fan...
Please let Mary Jo how much we enjoyed the article in the Gaston Gazette.
It does allude to but does not explain how "special " Mary Jo and Mary Jo's is to all in our business. Having had the distinct pleasure and honor of knowing and working with her for over 20 years being one of those who listened to her directions (see outhouses and much more) words can not express what she means to me and I presume many others.
Mary Jo congratulations, it is not everyday that one gets to work with a TRUE ICONIC person in an industry.
God Bless Mary Jo and all those are lucky enough to cross her path.
Richard Cohn


Richard owns Elizabeth Studios and designs some of the prettiest fabric. Oh, you are a dear to remember such sweet things.


Gaston Gazette article... Still Gaston County’s Fabric Queen
BY RAGAN ROBINSON

Mary Jo’s Cloth Store outfits the milestones that bookend lives. Starched white christening gowns. Sequined dance costumes. Glitzy wedding dresses. Millions begin here.
During six decades in business, the fabric mavens of Mary Jo’s have unfurled miles of stiff cotton and supple corduroy, intricate lace and iridescent taffeta.

In the middle of it all last week, sisters Joyce Mahaffee of Gastonia and Rebecca Jolley of Forest City scrutinized a bolt of quilted blue cloth. Jolley had a pattern in tow for a cushioned seat to fit inside any shopping cart lucky enough to receive her granddaughter.
She met up with Mahaffee for a late afternoon trip to Mary Jo’s because, she says, this is really the only place to buy fabric.It’s where their mother, who drove from Rutherford County to the former Dallas shop, came for the blue and pink material that adorned their bridesmaids.

It’s where the polyester originated for the side zip bell bottoms Mahaffee loved as a teenager. And it’s where she still goes when she needs burlap for table-scapes.

The cloth store has 32,000 square feet of retail space. That doesn’t include the top floor, where metal shelves are stacked with back-up stock and every alcove glitters with beads or buttons or bobbins of fancy trim. “You just always say if you can’t find it at Mary Jo’s, you can’t find it anywhere,” Mahaffee says.

Sewing’s siren song
-
Mary Jo’s celebrated its 60th anniversary Jan. 16. The shop’s namesake, Mary Jo Cloninger, opened her first store on her 19th birthday in 1951. A rented space in the back of her father’s barber shop, it was smaller than the upstairs room where she meets with salesmen today.
Cloninger’s father was a barber, landlord, used-car salesman and all-around small-town businessman in Dallas. His daughter didn’t think she had his entrepreneurial spirit. As a little girl in Dallas, she wanted to be a missionary. Cloninger daydreamed of Africa and spreading the gospel. She would sit with her dad, the church treasurer, and watch as he counted collection money and tithes on Sundays. She learned to keep her mouth shut about who gave how much,even when it was hard.

Not that Cloninger always followed every rule-
Her mother’s sewing machine was off limits to the little girl. But Cloninger couldn’t resist. Left to babysit her three younger brothers and her baby sister, she would gather cotton scraps and stitch them together. She had to hide the results from her mother. If anyone had ever told, Cloninger knew she’d get a spanking for sure.But there was something, she says, about that sewing machine. She couldn’t keep away.

Choosing her path-
By high school, she was expert enough to teach her classmates to sew in their home economics course. But when Cloninger was in 12th grade, she says her father pulled her out of Dallas High School to run the family grocery store. She’d been manning the register since she was tall enough to see over the counter, running straight from school, jumping three steps and getting to work every afternoon. But after managing the store full time for more than a year, she formed a different plan.
Cloninger appealed to her father’s business sense. What if she could sell that grocery store? Could she rent the back of his barber shop for a cloth store instead?
He said, "Well sure, if you can find a buyer you go ahead and sell it," Cloninger remembers.
“I told him I’d already sold it.”

Business grows – and grows-

Cloninger opened Mary Jo’s that year and eventually took over the entire building.
She later moved into a different Dallas location — one of two airplane hangar shaped buildings in downtown — and before long took over the neighboring “hangar.” Her parents’ home turned into a warehouse in time. Then Mary Jo’s built a two-story building nearby.
The business moved into its massive Gastonia store in 1986.
In the early years Cloninger drove to Charlotte for wholesale cloth. Or she went to local mills and collected remnants,piling them high in the car and on her children’s laps.
“You couldn’t see anything but their heads,” she says, clapping her seamstress’s hands and tossing back her head in a wide smile of remembrance.
These days the fabric salespeople come to her — and they listen to Cloninger’s expert advice.
She tells them what designs they ought to offer, sketches out illustrations for them on the notepad she keeps handy. More often than not, they come back with the suggested print, says Cindy Gardener, one of 62 Mary Jo’s employees.
One of the samples draws a giddy giggle from Cloninger. Outhouse scenes line the cloth and she points to the feet visible below random doors. That was her idea.

From Gastonia to Hawaii-
Gardener is sure the store has tens of thousands bolts and rolls of fabric. Much of it is discontinued or made by companies long out of business. “If Mary Jo can get her hands on it, chances are she’s going to buy it,” Gardener says. That’s what brought shopper Kitty Kuhr last week.A maker of clown and entertainer costumes, she lives near Raleigh but made the trip to Mary Jo’s because she knows the shop has fabric she won’t find elsewhere.
Cloninger insists her selection is the largest in the United States. It draws shoppers from the entire East Coast and beyond.
International buyers fill wheeled suitcases, she says. Costumers from Wilmington’s film studios come once or twice a year and theater groups are regular customers, according to Thomas Cloninger, who handles much of the business for his mother.
In the webmaster’s office, pins on a world map mark orders from Australia, Africa, the United Kingdom and the Hawaiian Islands.

Millions of yards to memorize-
Mary Jo’s sold 1.2 million yards of cloth last year, Thomas Cloninger says. And still, his mother can offer details on most of it. Her memory, like a favorite handmade nightgown, has faded with time. She has trouble remembering the generations of Halloween costumes and pajamas she stitched together. But the store’s merchandise is a different story.
“What’s that?” she asks, stopping at a roll of unassuming, bottom-shelf beige fleece she doesn’t recognize.
It’s only been here about a week, Gardener assures her. Otherwise Cloninger would have known about it already. Her employees live up to the challenge, too. Marcella Beard has been with Mary Jo’s for 20 years. She’s the person who answers questions about threading sewing machines, picking pillow case fabric, making pastoral robes — almost any query customers can bring. And she can’t be stumped. Where’s the polyester pinstripe? Up front,on the exact table to which she points. Green Bay Packers fabric? A side wall. Any snakeskin? That’s on the animal table (one of several) near the water and fish subsection. A tablecloth? You’ll probably need about 110 inches of special fabric.

A missionary after all-
Mary Jo Cloninger still sews a little. And she still keeps her scissors attaches to a belt loop with a piece of elastic. Just like she did as a one-room shop owner, she says she’ll offer advice on putting in zippers, working button holes, making the wedding and the christening and the bridesmaids gowns.
If she can’t help, Cloninger knows she has someone who can.
“I got to be a missionary here,” she says. “I didn’t have to go to Africa.”

Thanks for being longtime customers and faithful readers. We appreciate you. Do you have a story you would like to share? Send us a few photos and a brief description and you could be our next featured article. Thanks again, Happy Sewing.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Winter Blues? Rejuvenate A Room...

Have you shopped the Upholstery Department at maryjos.com lately? We have a wonderful collection of Fabric available online. All of the hip and cool colors and patterns you are seeing in the latest Home Collections are ready to be shipped to your door.
Neutrals, Pale Aquas & Celadon, Creams and Browns. It is a lovely, sophisticated toned down color spectrum with fantastic possibilities. These fabrics go well with dashes of Indigo's, Spring Greens and even a dash of Paprika. If you surf around the internet looking for ideas (check out The Pottery Barn, Restoration Hardware and Horchows) you will be inspired.
This week we are featuring two of our Mary Jo customers. One gal recovered a chair with "French Script" the other used a "Modern Pattern" to cover a Headboard. Both of these gals are part of the current trend and found what they needed at Mary Jo's.
Read on:
French Script Chair...
Hi MaryJo's
I just saw your request on FB for photos using fabric purchased from you. I have attached one of the two vintage chairs for my little eat in kitchen. I used this french script fabric I purchased last January (sorry I don't remember the real name of the fabric). I LOVE this fabric and have had several people ask me where I got the fabric once they saw my chairs. I happily directed them to your store. I hope you like what I did.
Cheers,
Gail Schmidt
www.shabbycottagestudio.com
Gail, you are one talented designer and we loved your website, thanks for sharing. Keep up the good work and keep in touch.

Modern Fabric Headboard...
Hey! I am a huge MJ fan and love shopping your store for a little inspiration! I saw the post on FB about sending in pictures of your winter projects and wanted to share this with you... using MJ fabric (and crib batting) I recovered my original (DIY) headboard and gave my room a completely new look and statement price for about $20!
Thanks :)
Melissa Fuller

Melissa,
Thanks so much,you did a terrific job and only 20 bucks! You can't beat that with a stick.

Do you have a project or a Mary Jo's story to share? We are always interested, please send us an email today.