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The following members sell Made in the USA Products in the Bedding Category
eshop at Faribault Woolen Mill's web store for Made in the USA products
One of the products Faribault Woolen Mill sells is Made in the USA Blankets. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Faribault Woolen Mill and its American Made products see the following:


ESTABLISHED IN 1865

Founded on the banks of the Cannon River in Faribault, MN, the Faribault Woolen Mill is a living testament to American craftsmanship. Founded in 1865, the year Lincoln died and the Civil War ended, Faribault woolens are renowned for their comfort and quality. From providing woolen blankets for pioneers heading west to comforting our troops through two world wars, our woolens are woven into American history.

eshop at Find Bed Bugs Now's web store for American Made products
One of the products Find Bed Bugs Now sells is American Made Bed Bug Detector. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Find Bed Bugs Now and its Made in the USA products see the following:


The home of the BBD-100 personal bed bug detector on the web.

When bed bugs are out in the open, they don't need detection. The thing is they like to hide, and with our personal bed bug detector you can find where bed bugs hide and stop them before there is an infestation. These parasites feed at night when you are sleeping. In some cases a person knows they have a problem from the allergic reaction to a bed bug bite and in other cases the bite is not evident. In some case there is evidence of bed bug infestations including dark fecal spots, dried blood spots, molted shells, eggs, and of course bed bugs - dead or alive.
Get Rid of Bed Bugs

In order to get rid of bed bugs you have to find everywhere these parasites hide. The BBD-100 locates the hiding and nesting spots for bed bugs extermination. This is an essential tool in both locating and treating these parasites.
Find Bed Bugs Now


Video: The Portable Bed Bug Detector Field Test
BBD-100 Finds One Hidden Bed Bug
Holden Beach, NC Field Test
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Travel and Hotel Hidden Bed Bug Slide-Show

The BBD-100 Bed Bug Detector for Home and Travel
Prevent Bed Bug Bites
Check your mattress, box springs, pillows, furniture, headboard, blankets, electrical outlets, molding. Use the Bed Bug Detector when you travel in motels, hotels, hospitals, nursing homes, movie theaters, locate bed bugs in infested seats. With the BBD-100 you can find where these parasites hide.
Prevent Bed Bug Infestations
Stop bed bugs before there is an infestation. With the epidemic, the BBD-100 bed bug detector prevents you from bringing bed bugs and their eggs home. Detect bed bugs and stop the hitchhikers from getting into your luggage and property while traveling.
Bed Bug Symptoms
The BBD-100 will identify bed bug infestations before symptoms become apparent. If you already have bed bug symptoms the Portable Bed Bug Detector can identify where the parasites are hiding.
Get your BBD-100 today for $389.00 with free shipping and handling.
The BBD-100 Bed Bug Detector is portable and very easy to use. Everything is included to find hidden bed bugs today.

eshop at Heritage Lace's web store for Made in America products
One of the products Heritage Lace sells is Made in America Throws. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Heritage Lace and its American Made products see the following:


At Heritage Lace, our passion is creating timeless designs that make your home unique ? and uniquely yours.

Our American-crafted textiles and high-end specialty products ? including fine sheers, laces, linens, silks and embroideries ? appeal to modern tastes and sensibilities while bringing beauty and bliss to your home and surroundings.

More than 90 percent of Heritage Lace products are created at our North Carolina mill and Iowa facilities by accomplished American craftspeople. This model ensures the highest quality and helps us meet demand for rapidly changing styles and trends.

We believe variety is the key to a truly enjoyable shopping experience. Thus, our collection features leading brands that share our passion for creativity, authenticity and value. In addition, Heritage Lace has recently curated a delightful line of home decor and textile collections inspired by the award-winning PBS series Downton Abbey?.

Your home is an expression of your true self. Bring happiness and harmony to every space with unique styles from Heritage Lace. Welcome to?Inspired Living.

eshop at Hoohobbers's web store for Made in America products
One of the products Hoohobbers sells is Made in America Crib Accessories. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Hoohobbers and its American Made products see the following:


In 1979 Bill and Judy Sommerschield and their two young daughters were having Thanksgiving dinner with Bill's parents. One daughter used a bulky booster seat to raise herself up to table size, the other was left with the Chicago phone book having to do the deed. Bill wondered why there wasn't a portable booster seat to solve this seating problem, a compact chair that could be easily carried from place to place.

Over the next year Bill pursued the idea of creating a portable booster seat. Along the way he met Mike Wilson, an industrial designer. Mike designed what is now Hoohobbers' signature product, its junior director chair/booster seat. Focus Groups were enthusiastic. One lady described how she thought the chair was an item her little toddler could easily control all by herself, a legitimate product -not just a fad or piece of candy or some such, that would help develop the child's emerging personality and sense of self-awareness. Wow! Though more than a bit wordy, she hit the nail on the head. This idea of child control and self-fulfillment would be used as a measure for all Hoohobbers products that would be born later.

Over the next 18 months Bill pursued development of the chair, first thinking it a good idea to have someone else bring to market, then determining to do so himself. Reluctantly leaving his advertising career, Bill decided to give the chair a go. In June of 1981 it was ready. Made of solid polypropylene, it just happened to emerge at the same time maturing plastics technology allowed it to be fashioned with a bright, highly cosmetic finish. It stood out. People took notice. Sales passed $3million in Hoohobbers first fiscal year, the vast majority of which were from the little booster.

Rumors soon began to circulate about companies preparing to copy the chair's design (at least 6 ultimately did). To help counter this, added products were developed. These included a director chair for older children, a rocking chair, a combination toddler/adult table, a baby rocker, a toy box, an easel, a laundry hamper, dinnerware, silverware and more. The new products maintained the same high-design motif as the original chair, as well as reflecting its uniqueness in their own way. All the products folded, all were made to be used outdoors as well as indoors, and all were highly portable.

Hoohobbers product uniqueness proved to be a hurdle to overcome, however: there was no established market for this kind of product, and at first appearance the distinctiveness and utility of Hoohobbers products were not totally apparent. Here were items that constituted an entirely new product concept. A concept consumers ultimately adopted, as it was totally consistent with the increasing mobility of American households and an emerging awareness of the tremendous advantage offered by product-compactness.

Accolades followed, including over 75 awarded patents, Best Design Awards from America's Juvenile Products Association, Parents Choice Awards, repeated awards from various juvenile industry magazines, frequent editorial recommendation, even jury-selection into the permanent product collection of MOMA, America's leading modern art museum in New York. As for product quality, Hoohobbers has never had a product recall. And product returns are virtually non-existent.

Beginning in the late 1980's soft goods were developed. These include crib bedding, diaper bags, Moses baskets, cradle, port-a-crib and bassinet linens, receiving blankets, hooded baby towels, lunch boxes and bibs, plus related room decor items such as drapes and valances, ottomans, throw pillows and floor lamps. Later, personalizing services were also added with embroidery becoming a 'must have' product enhancement in recent years.

As the company grew and the product-line expanded, Judy sold a personnel-placement company she had started and moved over to Hoohobbers full-time. As head designer she is now responsible for creating all design collections, which she refreshes with new collections at least twice annually. A notable, recent inspiration: a line of washable linen bedding customers themselves design right here on our web site.

All Hoohobbers products continue to share not only the same high-design commitment but are offered in the same colors or design collections. This creates the ability for a customer to create an entire houseful of childrens products with a single design statement! Today, Hoohobbers offers its products in over 25 distinct, classic to contemporary design collections, products purchased for home use and as gifts by people who appreciate fine design. Indeed, as an interesting side-note, Hoohobbers has many customers who have been purchasing that first chair and other items for decades, some sending 35 chairs and more over the years as their standard, 'go-to' newborn and birthday gift.

Since its founding Hoohobbers has maintained its commitment to generating incomes at home for both its employees and its suppliers by manufacturing in America, at Hoohobbers Chicago factory.

And today, those two girls no longer need boosters at Thanksgiving, though a couple of their children have. The little 1970 toddlers -along with their younger brother- are now intimately involved at Hoohobbers. And if you peruse Hoohobbers web site closely enough you may still spot a picture or two of them from their toddler-modeling days alongside pictures of their own children. Generation to generation, Hoohobbers products continue meeting the real world needs of kids.

We are so grateful for the continuing support of our long-time, dedicated Hoohobbers loyalists as well as all our new customers who hear of us year after year, Judy says. And to have our children now working with us?we have so much for which to be thankful.

eshop at Johnson Woolen Mills's web store for Made in America products
One of the products Johnson Woolen Mills sells is Made in America Wool Blankets. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Johnson Woolen Mills and its Made in the USA products see the following:


Located in the village of Johnson, just north of the skiing mecca of Stowe, the clothing company still makes the same woolen shirts, jackets and the famous iceman's pants that have been best sellers for nearly 50 years. The heavy, 28 ounce forest green pants were named for the men who wore them while cutting blocks of ice from frozen ponds and lakes. In spite of the fact that icemen no longer ply their trade on those frozen expanses, the Johnson mill is still selling plenty of the amazingly thick, warm pants and much more old-fashioned cold weather gear as well. The mill's early owners catered to fishermen working in winter camps in sub-zero temperatures. Today's fourth generation ownership sells its products to cross-country skiers, snowboarders,hunters, ice fishermen, winter runnersessentially to a new generation of outdoors, sports-minded people who refuse to stay in the house in bad weather. As Vermonters well know, in order to survive winter, you must find something that you like to do outside. It's really that simple. And although the character of the customer has changed, the pants and heavy coats, shirts and jackets, are still essentially the same as they have been for over a century and a half. You may now see our clothing in an ever-increasing number of urban centers across the country as the concept of made in America takes on a special significance with the American consumer.

Beginning in Johnson
Vermont native Stacy Barrows Manosh is the fourth generation owner of the mill, bought by her great-grandfather Delmer A. Barrows in 1908. The mill had its beginnings as one of many making fabrics from the wool of local sheep. The clapboards of the old mill are painted to read: Founded 1842. The company's manufacturing now goes on in a more modern building next door to the original mill, which is now a company store and popular tourist destination. Workers in the new mill do the cutting, sewing, piecing, serging, and finishing of traditionally patterned, checked, and plaid hunting clothes, all made of a material that is 80 to 85 percent wool. The company store displays all of the freshly made winter garmets in a welcoming atmosphere of deep reds and greens that stand out against pine boarded walls and polished floors.

Traditional Tailoring
On the production line in the new building, a garment starts at one end of a room the length of a football field and is passed up the line of workers, each at a work table specializing in a single tailoring operation. Pieces are first cut from patterns on an amazing, bowling alley-like cutting table over 50 feet long, made of maple and birch flooring which was put in before the building was completed. otherwise, it never would have fit through the doorway. We have our own way of cutting and sewing garmets, according to Del Barrows, third generation owner and father to Stacy. A lot of people would like to know exactly how we do it. It takes about a week from the time the cloth is cut from huge 40 foot bolts of wool to the moment the Johnson tag is sewn in a garment. Stacks of bright green and red collars, cuffs and sleeves are ready to be sewn together for Johnson jackets. Well-worn cardboard patterns hang on the wall, used for the cutting of the traditional clothing made at the mill. Some of them are 50 years old and the styles they represent go back a century and a half to the days when the mill was first established, using water power on the banks of the Gihon river. With true Yankee frugality and good business sense, nothing is wasted at the mill. From the discarded ends of materials, mittens can be made, some by cottage-industry workers who freelance for the mill from their homes. Other scraps are bagged and sent off to a specialized factory to be ground up and recycled, still others end up in wool rugs.

Century-Old Patterns
Many of the plaids and patterns have been traditional with the company for at least a century. One of the few changes in Johnson's wool has been the addition of some nylon for added strength. Another change has been the cutting back of the thickness of some of its garments. According to Mr. Barrows, some of the pants we used to make we don't make any more because they were so heavy. Today, instead of the heaviest pants, people wear insulated underwear with somewhat lighter-weight outer pants. Although Johnson Woolen Mills supplies such big names as L.L. Bean, there are numerous small mom & pop stores among Johnson's retail outlets. Company officials say that because of the relatively small size of Johnson Woolen Mills, they can do many things that larger companies simply can't or won't do. In addition to opening a new manufacturing facility in the mid 1980s, the main innovation at the mill has been the addition of a ladies' line and a childrens' line. Because of the addition of the new lines, a new color pallet made up of softer colors was introduced including light blues and violets.. .a real shocker for some of the company's traditional customers who were used to the traditional hunting patterns.

Barrows Famiy Ties
We're native Vermonters. We go back to the 1790s said Stacy Barrows Manosh. The family came over here from England and settled in Irasburg, VT. My great-great-grandfather is buried there. They were farmers and then my great-grandfather became a retailer and he owned a store in Woodsville, NH. About 1905, this great-grandfather bought a half interest in the Johnson mill from its owner I.L. Pearl, and in 1907 he bought Pearl out altogether and changed the name to Johnson Woolen Mills to better represent what the company did. And now, over a century and a half and four generations later, Johnson Woolen Mills continues making world famous products, integrating old world values with new world ideas, all with a very bright eye to the future.

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