What Face Mask Fabrics Do People Actually Order?
Around the end of May I realized that our little mask business had become more of a fashion business than a utility business. By which I mean that, once huge numbers of inexpensive masks of all kinds arrived in stores, our business would live or die on whether we could offer unique features, including a wide selection of attractive fabrics, higher quality construction, super-luxurious silk linings, and better nose wires. That’s how we ended up needing special shelves to hold the 200 different fabrics we stock.
Now that we are closing in on 4000 masks sold, I thought I would take a look at which patterns have been the most popular, and which have…not. So below you can see a complete dump of the number of each pattern we’ve sold to date.
Some of the high-ranking choices are there because they were early selections, back when we had only a few fabrics available, so people had to order what we had. Intense Swirl is an example of that. Others are recent favorites: Molecules on Blue, which has sold more than Intense Swirl, is a recent addition. Black Chemistry 2 is one of our most recently added fabrics, and is selling like masks in a pandemic. The popularity of those two is due, no doubt, to promotions to chemists, and a coattails effect from the star-by-a-wide-margin, which I am very pleased to say is my own photographic periodic table fabric (based on my book The Elements).
Many of the fabrics that have sold only a few masks are just as nice as the more popular ones, but they arrived at a time when we already had a hundred or more choices. Fortunately we only need to sell about two masks of a given fabric for it to be break-even (I’ve learned not to buy much of any one fabric until it’s proven). And of course the popular ones more than make up for the money-losing cases. That’s pretty typical of many businesses, including publishing, and I assume fashion as well. Nobody knows what’s going to be popular, so you hedge your bets and hope for a few whales to cover the dogs. (Speaking of which, The Dogs of Christmas is a cute and playful fabric: surely we can do better than just 8 sold?)
So, here is the list. If the name isn’t a link, that’s a fabric we have run out of and can’t get any more. (How can we have run out of some that we only sold a few of? Because we also, for a while, sold them in retail stores, using up fabric which is not accounted for here. And a few fabrics early on were things we just had lying around and we only had enough for half a dozen masks total.)