Little clothes in store
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Alicia Robinson
It’s not often that all the children in one family can wear the same
piece of clothing before it falls apart, but that’s what Swedish
children’s clothier Hanna Andersson wants to offer customers.
The company began in 1983 as a catalog-only business, but now has
about a dozen retail stores, of which a Fashion Island location is
newest.
The store opened April 19 and held a grand opening celebration on
Saturday, with a special appearance by company founder Gun Denhart.
Twenty percent of the day’s sales were donated to Orangewood
Children’s Home.
The bright, airy store is designed to be inviting to shoppers,
with clothes in fun, punchy colors and a low table with toy trains so
kids can play while their parents shop.
Because the store is small, there’s no room for the adult clothing
lines that can be ordered through the catalog. But there are plenty
of dresses, shirts, shorts and sweatsuits in soft cottons for girls
and boys.
Many of the clothes are made with organic cotton and use natural
dyes, store manager Lori McCauslin said. The clothes are designed to
be comfortable and durable.
A native of Sweden, Denhart started Hanna Andersson as a catalog
business because she couldn’t find quality children’s clothes made
from natural fibers in America. She wanted her son to have soft,
bright clothes like the ones she remembered from her childhood, she
said.
“It just turned out that he wasn’t the only one that liked those
clothes,” Denhart said. “A lot of other people did too.”
Donations from Saturday’s event aren’t a one-time thing. The
company’s social conscience evolved as its sales grew, and in 2001
the Hanna Andersson Children’s Foundation was formed.
What started as a marketing idea -- having customers return used
clothes in good condition if they didn’t have children to hand them
down to -- became a program to donate the gently used clothes to the
needy, Denhart said.
“We thought that would be a good way to convey that the clothes
were good and they could last for more than one baby,” Denhart said.
Now the company donates 5% of its profits to charities, and
employees get paid time off to do volunteer work.
And the corporate structure is open, so even employees lower on
the totem pole could call the company president if they wanted,
McCauslin said.
“I’ve worked for a lot of big, big companies,” she said. “Being
here is so much more like a family.”
Hanna Andersson is at 279 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach.
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