iti ■Lai B! 12- icasl mi Seven Sheep Launch Multi-Million Dollar Company BY LOU ANN GOOD EL VERSON (Chester Co.) To take a flock of seven sheep and turn them into a multi-million dol lar international business sounds like a dream. For Eric and Jean Flaxenburg of Elverson, it’s “shear” reality. They now use 10,000 to 20,000 sheepskins annu ally to fill orders for their shearling coals and apparel worn here and abroad. In 1966, the couple purchased a 40-acre abandoned farm bordered by the French Creek State Park. They did not intend to start a busi ness. Eric, commuted to a Phi ladelphia university where he taught American civilization. Jean, a fashion designer, quit her job when their first child was bom. Putting her fashion flair to prac tice, Jean designed a baby bunting from one of their sheepskins. ■aep , from one of the 10,000 to 20,000 sheepskins that the com pany uses annually to produce It’s shearling coats. Eric Flaxenburg has watched his 40-acre abandoned duces apparel from sheepskins, farm grow into a multi-million dollar company that pro- Amazed, she noticed that whenev er she lay their collicky baby in it, he quieted. Convinced there was a market for her sheepskin baby buntings, she stitched a dozen, which Eric showed to a major New York department store. The store ordered 12, paid $2O a piece, slapped a $75 price tag on them, and did not pay the Flaxen burgs for eight months. Frustrated by the redtape involved in wholesales, and per haps, enticed by the high price tags of retail sales, the Flaxenburgs decided to pursue direct markets. They printed brochures and advertised their baby buntings and sheeplined coats that Jean designed. That was in 1970. After they had mailed the brochures, people ridi culed the ideal of selling a high price item through mailorder. Then, typical mail-order cata logues flaunted cheap, gimicky wares. “We were ignorant,” Eric admits. “We did it.” It was a good thing they did, for the Flaxenburgs proved the busi ness community wrong. Not only did the Flaxenburgs sell mail order, they were forerunners in a whole new era of upscale catalogues. As Eric fingers the fleece of a Corriedale that will become part of a $2,000 coat made by his com pany, he insists, “We were very lucky. He pauses, then adds, “It’s better to be lucky than smart.” He shuns comments that infer that marketing skills and brilliance caused the business to flourish. ' “We were simply there at the right place, at the right time. Postal rates were cheap. Shearlings were* fashionable. In fashion, success is 10 percent hard work and 90 per cent luck,” Eric insists. But luck did not eliminate sleep less nights of agonizing how they were going to pull through finan- ' Selleck cannot resist coats sewn by the French Creek Company. Ftaxenburg examines one of the coats that a sewer fronv his company stitches from beginning to end. dally. In fact, Eric said, “In this business, you never feel confident. People think we 4iave it made— traveling to New York for trade and fashion shows, visiting tanne ries in Europe—but there are times I don’t enjoy the business at all. There is always something bad happening even when good is happening.” In fashion, it’s easy to be suc cessful and it’s easy to fail, and these nagging doubts add to the wmes(ead td/StfiS pressures of keeping control of a ever-changing business. As Eric sits in his office four sto ries high in a silo-like tower attached to the bam that has been remodeled to house all the stages of clothing construction, he talks about the toughness of surviving in the fashion and business world. He glances out the French doors that open onto a balcony overlook ing a panoramic view of the rolling (Turn to Page B 3)