Okay, folks, it is time to get out your pitchforks and give the tines a good sharpening. LOL
Because I just now realized that The Hobby Lobby types of stores are exactly what the 21st century "mainstream" American modeler needs and wants.
A 21st century mainstream modeler doesn't buy kits the way I used to. I used to waltz into a hobby shop and pick out a stack of kits that I had saved up for, and then made the trip to that shop to get. Every trip I left some kits behind that I would "get next time", because I had a model list larger than what my wallet weight would support that day.
Then, I would alternate those trips with weeks whereby I sent my money off as a money order in a letter and waited 6-8 weeks for my package to arrive. That package would have kits too exotic for the LHS to take a chance on stocking, or on decals that weren't for sale in person, only via mail.
Now, it is the 21st century,,,and getting models, decals, books, resin and photoetch is a a matter of clicking on a website, and filling in a credit card or paypal form and then haunting the email inbox for the next two days in order to see how early that "your order is received" email arrives. Then posting online "where is my stuff?" after 5 days have passed. lol
So, how is Hobby Lobby a fit for the 21st century? Well, they fit because they do exactly what a "modern modeler" needs in the hobby. A modern modeler doesn't need a full range of plastic kits, he gets them somewhere else. A lot of modern modelers have never seen those clear decal binders that we used to pour over in the "olde timey LHS", so he doesn't miss those. A modern modeler doesn't even need his exact range of paints or any of the tools hanging in that section. He gets his paints from online shops that list page after page of paint ranges. Knives and blades and brushes, also.
What a modern modeler needs a shop for, is that "halfway through a project" running out of something type of event. When you run out of "woop-dee-doo" exact Blue, but, know the Model Master or Vallejo "nearly the same" color,,,,,you go to the Hobby Lobby or Hobby Town and pick some up to finish your project. The same when you realized that the cat played with your favorite #2 brush, or that you just snapped the tip off of your last #11 blade.
At those times, he dashes off to the Hobby Lobby, gives their dwindling supply of kits a lookover, and then buys two items, one of them, the most expensive one, uses that 40% off coupon.
Then when he gets home, he places an order from his favorite online vendor for a pack of knife blades (all 6 types he uses, after he checks his supply), a pack of brushes, and 8-20 bottles of paint, again after checking his supply and seeing that some of the other colors are about to run out.
All we really want from Hobby Lobby is just what they are doing, they give us a place to browse while SWMBO is getting a frame and matting done on that antique photo of her Grampa's second car.........or a place for newbies to find out that "hey, they still make plastic model kits?,,,,cool, I think I will try one"
They also give you far more options than a "real LHS" ever could, when it comes to paintbrush choices, casting supplies and mediums, and "real world" colors and paints,,,,and combining different mediums to enhance your paints.
Granted, you might have to "suffer" and use Model Master Enamels, because that store didn't have the same paint range as you usually use, but, not every LHS I was ever in had all the items that I wanted all in one place, even back in the heyday of modeling when I lived within biking distance of 8 hobby shops in Southern California.
Just some thoughts from an old time modeler, thinking about how we do it today.
Rex
"Pitchforks, Parrr,,,,,,,Raiddddd,,,,,,,Restttttt"