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D&WC: Please give a detailed
description of your company and its history.
Jean Astie: Our forged ironwork business
began in France with my father. When my brother Georges and I moved to
the United States in 1972, we started an iron business in Miami, FL, keeping
the same family name. We moved to Dallas, TX, in 1978 and started Astie
Art Metal Studio specializing in hand-forged wrought iron and furniture
for showrooms.
In 1990, we founded Gabys Shoppe manufacturing mostly furniture
and selling directly to designers. By demand of our customers, drapery
hardware was added to the business and has become the largest part of
it. We have a large selection of drapery hardware in our catalog and add
items regularly to fill the needs of our customers.
We currently have an 18,000-square-foot facility with showroom and blacksmith
shop and 11 employees altogether.
D&WC: What window coverings products
did you handle initially? What products do you handle today?
Astie: We used to do anything in wrought
ironfurniture, fancy stuff, all custom. If they could supply us
with a drawing, we would make it. We actually made twisted wrought iron
curtain rods back in 1980 before we even started Gabys Shoppe because
the machine we do that on we used for other thingsfor making wrought
iron tables and things like that.
Now, weve ended up doing more drapery hardware than we do furniture.
We started with drapery hardware because customers asked us for it. It
has become 75 percent of our business. We started with practically nothing
and we added to the line and added to the line and we ended up with, I
believe, the biggest drapery hardware catalog in the industry.
D&WC: What is your approximate
sales volume? What was it after your first year in business?
Astie: Again, we started with practically
nothing and now we do about $1 million in drapery hardware.
D&WC: Do you have a company Web
site, and how is it used to communicate with customers?
Astie: Our whole catalog is on our
Web sitefurniture and drapery hardware. We do not take orders from
the Web site. We are very strict at selling to the trade only.
D&WC: Who are your customers?
What parts of the country do you service?
Astie: We sell to the design, drapery
workroom and architect marketsor whatever trade. We sell all over
the country.
We also sell in Europe and around the world. Sometimes we dont even
know it. The designer is from the United States, but we sometimes ship
to a port of entry in New York. We recently shipped some product to New
York that we knew was going to Saudi Arabia.
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Gabys Shoppe
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1311 Dragon St.
Dallas, TX 75207
(214) 748-6644
Fax: (214) 748-7701
(800) 299-GABY
www.gabys.com |
D&WC: What best describes your
niche in the marketplace?
Astie: I think its the ability
of doing custom work and understanding what the customer wants. If we
understand what the customer wants, we can make anythinga bay window,
curves, anything they want.
Also our finishes; we get a lot of compliments on our finishes. We have
20 different finishes, and we do custom. They are all done by hand. There
is a lot of call for faux finishes.
D&WC: How has your segment of
the industry changed since you first began?
Astie: It hasnt changed that
much. My brother Georges works the forge, hammering and shaping the wrought
iron. We forge it like the old blacksmiths used to do. Everything we sell
we manufacture our self, with the exception of some cast iron finials.
Anything in wrought iron we make it our self.
My brother Georges is the only one here who does the forge work. Compared
to making a wrought iron table, the time for forging the components is
about 25 percent of the time needed to complete the project.
D&WC: What are some of the key
factors involved in your growth and success?
Astie: Customer satisfaction. Customer
satisfaction is very important. With custom work, sometimes it is very
difficult to know what the customer has in mind. Even if the customer
is a little bit wrong, he is right. We go out of our way to satisfy the
customer. Sometimes we have to rework a piece.
With our experience in ironwork, we can know from early on if something
is not going to workif its early enough in the process. Sometimes
the customer explains what he wants to accomplish and then we can work
together.
D&WC: What distinguishes you from
the competition?
Astie: I think there are a lot of
companies offering drapery hardware. We are not the only one. We are aware
of our competition, and we compete on quality the best we can. We try
our best.
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