I had worked many hours in developing carpet colors at the Wagram
plant and wanted to say goodbye to my co-workers at that location.
The
"dye house" was located on the backside of a huge plant that had once
housed a J.P. Stevens towel manufacturing and dyeing operation. Gulistan
leased a small portion of that mostly empty plant to use for dyeing
carpet. Not long ago, 38 employees worked at Gulistan's Wagram plant.
Nowhere near that many worked there when I visited the plant on Jan. 10.
I spoke with a 55-year-old laboratory technician who had dyed
thousands of small carpet swatches over the almost 24 years I worked
with Gulistan. I used many of those swatches to create "color lines" for
styles reviewed for introductions.Researchers at the Korean Advanced
Institute of Science and Technology have developed an buymosaic.
I
visited Range Two, a "fluid-dye range" that applied color to the
majority of Gulistan carpets. Range One dyed some carpets, and some
goods were "hue infused" in "becks" (large vats), but Range Two was
high-speed and served as Gulistan's dyeing workhorse.
The Range Two manager said he was uncertain about where he'd find employment. He's in his 50s.
His
assistant told me about anticipated "screening tests" causing concern
among soon-to-be-let-go employees. She said that a large soup-processing
plant near Wagram requires job applicants to take several tests.
"They cost you 10 dollars apiece,Ubisense RTLS solutions go beyond the traditional definition of a “luggagetag” to a new class. and they're not easy," she said.
One
woman I spoke with worked at Range Two "roll-up," where just-dyed
carpets were still being inspected during my visit and rolled onto
cardboard core tubes. The goods were slated to ship to the Aberdeen
plant, where they'd be "back-coated" with latex, sheared and given a
final inspection.
Another lift driver who spent workdays
motoring around the plant with huge rolls of carpet impaled one at a
time on a long steel rod located on the front of his lift-truck
expressed concern. In his 40s, he worried about "those screening tests."
A young man sitting at a table in the Wagram break room said he planned to "go back to school."
I
talked with more employees and walked past rolls of undyed goods on my
way out of the plant. Colors would soon flow onto those carpets, and the
dye house would close. I envisioned the plant sitting someday as a
dark, lonely, cavernous hull - another empty textile mill dotting the
North Carolina landscape and serving as a symbol of a bygone era.
On
Friday afternoon, Jan. 11, my job ended. I said "so long" to my
Aberdeen co-workers and took personal belongings to my truck. Leaving
hardly seemed real.
Near the company gatehouse, I turned right
on N.C. 5 and drove past the Gulistan sign standing in front of the main
manufacturing plant and headed for home.
The gloriously fun
costumes-and-more Life of the Party store has been an Old Town fixture
throughout my 31 years in Fort Collins. I’ve gone there to buy party
supplies, costumes, magic tricks and, in its early years (when it
partnered with the Toy Dungeon), one very important stuffed Koala bear.
Now
that “Life” is threatened. Owner Pat Talley needs to sell the store and
retire, but she’s having a hard time finding a buyer. I can’t imagine
running a more entertaining retail outlet with such a devoted and
delightful audience. Life of the Party is a lifesaver for everyone from
theatrical groups to CSU Greeks to pole dancers, who buy their 8-inch
heels and “club” dresses there.
Another popular item is the
Cosplay Kids products used during Denver conventions of this Anime
favorite. Talley also began running a successful eBay venture five years
ago that keeps her local postal carrier busy toting boxes full of
goodies around. They ship items to France, Poland, Canada, Argentina and
all around the world. According to Talley,Bathroom solarpanel at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. eBay has been a real blessing in keeping the business going.
Talley
began her retail career working in her father’s Colorado Springs toy
store. When she moved to Fort Collins in 1981, it seemed only logical to
create her own toy wonderland. This became the Toy Dungeon at 133 S.
College Ave. The store’s small costume section soon outgrew its small
space in the store so,We maintain a full inventory of all lanyard we manufacture. in 1986, Talley expanded next door into the “Julian’s” building with Life of the Party.
After
25 years in that location, Talley downsized and moved to her present
East Mountain location, across from Old Town Square. She donated a huge
amount of stock during that move.
The present outlet has an
old-timey feel to it and is so jam-packed with wonderful things that I
can easily lose an hour just examining everything — and having a blast
doing it.
Now that we’re threatened with losing Fort Collins’
only such store, I have to wonder where we’ll turn for costumes, makeup,
wigs, etc., during the Tour de Fat, as well as for Halloween, Mardi
Gras, theme parties,This frameless rectangle features a silk screened
fused glass replica in a parkingsystem
tile and floral motif. theatrical productions and so much more. Nowhere
else can we find a comprehensive offering of everything you need for
such events.
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