bcla
On our rugged Eastern foothills.....
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2012
- Messages
- 25,711
I remember Consumers Distributing, Service Merchandise, and Best Products. They typically had a relatively spartan showroom (especially CD), display cases for jewelry, and perhaps a few display models.
As a kid I'd pore over the CD catalog looking for all the stuff I'd really wanted, including bikes and other stuff. They also have interesting items like gold bars. My parents wouldn't buy me a full video game console, but they did get me an Atari Touch Me handheld game. Around the age of 12 I got a microscope. I really wanted a telescope and ordered one, but didn't pay for it once it came from the back and we saw it had a plastic body. I got my first scientific calculator from a CD store and it's still working. The stores themselves were mostly catalog stands where people could go through the catalogs and fill in order forms.
Best Products was also heavily on the West Coast. They seemed to be more of a hybrid with some traditional retail items on store shelves, rather than in the back to be ordered. They also had fun with their buildings, making them look like they were falling apart or somehow defective.
http://www.siteenvirodesign.com/proj.best.php
The one that was closest to where I lived is now a Best Buy. My dad thinks they're somehow related, but I told him it was just a coincidence.
I think Service Merchandise was the biggest. They didn't have much of a retail presence around where I lived until maybe the late 80s, and by then their business was slowly dying due to competition from Wal-Mart and big box electronics stores. I bought an alarm clock at one location in the mid-90s. I actually bought the display model since they didn't have any more in the back, and got a discount for it. As a kid, I only remembered the name because Service Merchandise gift certificates were mentioned on Wheel of Fortune.
I'm sure there were more companies, but these three were the ones I remember in my area. There were other stores with a similar model like Gemco or Fedco. Sears and JC Penney had catalog sales including catalog pickup windows in their traditional retail stores.
As a kid I'd pore over the CD catalog looking for all the stuff I'd really wanted, including bikes and other stuff. They also have interesting items like gold bars. My parents wouldn't buy me a full video game console, but they did get me an Atari Touch Me handheld game. Around the age of 12 I got a microscope. I really wanted a telescope and ordered one, but didn't pay for it once it came from the back and we saw it had a plastic body. I got my first scientific calculator from a CD store and it's still working. The stores themselves were mostly catalog stands where people could go through the catalogs and fill in order forms.
Best Products was also heavily on the West Coast. They seemed to be more of a hybrid with some traditional retail items on store shelves, rather than in the back to be ordered. They also had fun with their buildings, making them look like they were falling apart or somehow defective.
http://www.siteenvirodesign.com/proj.best.php

The one that was closest to where I lived is now a Best Buy. My dad thinks they're somehow related, but I told him it was just a coincidence.
I think Service Merchandise was the biggest. They didn't have much of a retail presence around where I lived until maybe the late 80s, and by then their business was slowly dying due to competition from Wal-Mart and big box electronics stores. I bought an alarm clock at one location in the mid-90s. I actually bought the display model since they didn't have any more in the back, and got a discount for it. As a kid, I only remembered the name because Service Merchandise gift certificates were mentioned on Wheel of Fortune.
I'm sure there were more companies, but these three were the ones I remember in my area. There were other stores with a similar model like Gemco or Fedco. Sears and JC Penney had catalog sales including catalog pickup windows in their traditional retail stores.