A whole new range of Smith & Wessons...

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Preacherman

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From the Cincinnati Post (http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/S/SMITH__WESSON_FASHIONS?SITE=OHCIP&SECTION=HOME):

Oct 13, 6:52 PM EDT

Gun Maker Launches Home Decor Catalog

By ANABELLE GARAY
Associated Press Writer

PHOENIX (AP) -- One of the country's most recognizable brands - Smith & Wesson - is taking aim at consumers' love of the American West by going into the catalog business selling cowboy boot lamps and studded velvet jackets.

Smith & Wesson Holding Corp., the gun maker's Scottsdale, Ariz.-based parent company, wants to attract new customers with the launch Tuesday of the Crossings by Smith & Wesson catalog. The catalog and its Web site are part of Smith & Wesson Interactive Management LLC, the parent company's newest division.

"We're trying to reach a more dynamic mix of customers and we're pushing the brand name as much as we can," said Colton Melby, president of Smith & Wesson Holding. "The opportunity to get out and make the name known in different circles, that's what we're after."

Catalogs offering teakwood tables, horsehead soap dish sets, cigar store Indian ornaments, faux elephant suede skirts, turquoise rimmed jewelry and copper silk shantung blouses should begin arriving in homes this week, said Amy Armstrong, a spokeswoman for Smith & Wesson Holding Corp.

About 70 percent of consumers targeted by the catalogs are not current Smith and Wesson customers, Melby said. The company is targeting women 30 to 60 years old who are homeowners and have higher incomes than the U.S. average, Armstrong said.

Company officials would not predict sales from the catalog business.

An estimated 148 million Americans shop from home, according to the Direct Marketing Association Inc.

Smith & Wesson's home and fashion catalog venture follows the gun maker's attempts to rebound from slumping handgun sales.

Sales began to drop after some consumers abandoned the company, angry over its 2000 agreement with the Clinton administration to install safety locks on all its guns and adopt other safety measures and marketing changes.

Gun rights supporters had accused Smith & Wesson of selling out, and some vowed to boycott the company. Still, nearly 87 percent of Americans recognize the 151-year-old Smith & Wesson brand, according to the company.

The Smith & Wesson logo appears on some items in the catalog but it's not always displayed prominently.

From a business sense, the catalog is a way to expose more people to the brand, said Jim Gardner, editor of San Diego-based Guns Magazine. "Not everybody is going to buy a $900 weapon but they might like that brand," he said.

Smith & Wesson Holding also licenses the company's name for use on golf clubs and markets flashlights and police and consumer bikes.

By launching unrelated products, gun manufacturers are seeking wider acceptance, said Tom Diaz, senior policy analyst at the Violence Policy Center.

"One of the things the gun industry has pushed for is to get away from the image as something sinister and portray the industry as a sport," said Diaz, author of "Making a Killing, The Business of Guns in America."
 
going into the catalog business selling cowboy boot lamps and studded velvet jackets.

.......................NEW FROM SMITH AND WESSON.............................

..............................TRAILER PARK DECOR...............................
 
Maybe if S&W is successful in their endeavor to sell cheap tacky decor
they can get out of the icky gun business entirely.
 
Since this bucks the current trend in business of "concentrating on your core business" it would seem that this is driven by a desire to diversify a bit. Perhaps trying to insulate themselves from possible legal ramifications of firearms manufacture, or perhaps a Colt Industries-like embarassment of making such things as firearms.

OTOH, why then keep the name?

Oh well, not like I'm gonna buy any of it.
 
I need a studded velvet jacket--
\To make my "legalandpolitical" statement--:D
 
"they can get out of the icky gun business entirely"

They've tried before. I have an antique Smith Corona typewriter from my great-somethingorother. They also made bicycles, washing machine parts, and meto trains (or was that Remington?).

So far as repudiating the gun lock thing, they politically can't easily do that. They would be smeared for being 'unsafe' and uncaring towards innocent widdle chilwun, especially given the SB489 B.S. that Davis* signed into law. At least, with S&W, you can remove the locks...unlike Tarus.

(Edited to add: oops, I havent looked at a new S&W in a long time. I didnt know about the intergral lock sillyness. Sorry, my error.)

In any event, why do you think the "cowboy" look is in? Maybe George W. might have something to do with it? (His "President of the United States" boots not being a tasteful, but relavent, example of this)







*the EX governor of CA :neener:. Sorry, I just like saying that.
 
Jim, I was going to say the same thing. I'll bet the products are identical except for the logo.

Odd how one product will be detested and the other one will be on a Christmas list.
 
KC,

Smith & Wesson had NOTHING to do with typewriters.

That was L. C. Smith, the shotgun maker.

At different times in their history most American gunmakers branched out into other products.

Winchester had an EXTENSIVE line of hardware products.

Iver Johnson's main business for many years as bicycles.

Ruger's main business isn't firearms, it's precision investment casting, mainly of titanium products.
 
Wonder how much of that "stuff" will bear tags saying...
Made in ------ (pick a thirld world country.)

Smith and Wesson, maker of fine firearms. RIP

Sam

And...trigger locks are a miniscule portion of the onerous parts of the agreement.
 
A little story about names, lawsuits, and money:

Yvon Chouinard was one of the best rock climbers in the world back in the 1950s and 1960s. He grew up around L.A., but his home was on the big walls of Yosemite. He and some other climbers started a company called "the Great Pacific Iron Works" to make such things as carabiners, pitons and chocks, and to sell them to other climbers. They labeled their hardware with the founder's name: "Chouinard." It was the best around, and Great Pacific made more and more kinds of climbing hardware as the years went by. They also made money. After a while, this group of climbers, older now, started to sell outdoor-sports oriented clothing, too. They created a separate company called Patagonia (oh, you've heard of it?) to do that. Years went by, and clothing and hardware sales grew.

Back in the - 1980's? - when Patagonia was growing by leaps and bounds, the hardware company, Great Pacific Iron Works, took a huge financial hit. I believe that it was due to a lawsuit brought against them, and against Yvon Chouinard personally (his name was on the gear, after all) by some people who did NOT take responsibility for themselves (sound familiar?), but who used Chouinard gear while pretending to be climbers. They got hurt, of course. Did the gear break? Don't think so. The gear failed to make the world safe for them, though, and it didn't insulate them from physical reality. A jury awarded them plenty, IIRC. The company (Great Pacific) gave up for a while, then it was reborn as "Black Diamond Equipment." This name took the place of Chouinard's name on the gear. I think that the company's assets were bought by employees and the company was patched back together (or some sequence of events like that). It still exists, making climbing hardware.

Patagonia was never sued, and, if I heard the story correctly, its assets were never raided. Guess which company made Yvon Chouinard rich.

Did any other old climbers from Yosemite in the 50s and 60s start companies that sold gear? One of Yvon Chouinard's old friends and Yosemite big-wall climbing rivals did. I don't think that he ever made hardware, though. His name's Royal Robbins - I think Skunkabilly's heard of him. :D

Do you suppose that Smith & Wesson executives might have decided that they'd be just as happy, and richer, if they were executives in a clothing and home decor company - like Ralph ( :cuss: :fire: :barf: ) Lauren, but with the added drawing power of a famous old American name?

It's not beyond the realm of possibility.
 
"We're trying to reach a more dynamic mix of customers and we're pushing the brand name as much as we can"
Translation: We're not selling enough firearms to produce a positive cash flow. Let's sell some high-margin junk.
 
Why you guys so testy about a company wanting to make money?

It's really not that. It is more about adding insult to injury.

When S&W did their infamous Frenchified surrender to the Clinton administration it was like a kick in the head to gun owners.

They have been trying "a little" to win back customers by throwing a bit of camo on the agreement (out of sight out of mind)

S&W now has crap quality control.

Now they think they can make ends meet with faux elephant suede? Probably made in China.

To me that adds insult to injury. The last desperate gasps of a mismanaged
leaderless company.

Do you know what would happen to me if I brought home horsehead soap dish sets, cigar store Indian ornaments, faux elephant suede skirts, turquoise rimmed jewelry and copper silk shantung blouses ?

My wife would kill me and use that gaudy crap to ignite my funeral pyre.

Do you know what would happen if I brought home a quality Smith and Wesson handgun?


My wife would say: "Neat lets go shoot it"
 
MuzzleBlast:
roflmao.gif
 
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