Pad & Quill Founder Returns With New Apple Accessory Company Burton Goods
source link: https://www.macrumors.com/2024/01/04/pad-quill-founder-burton-goods/
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Pad & Quill Founder Returns With New Apple Accessory Company Burton Goods
It's been a few months since Apple accessory maker Pad & Quill announced the closure of its business, ending a 13 year run as a creator of leather accessories for Apple products. This week, former Pad & Quill president Brian Holmes has announced his new venture, Burton Goods, and it has a 20 percent off grand opening discount.
Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with some of these vendors. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.Holmes detailed everything that happened from the closure of Pad & Quill to the founding of Burton Goods in a blog post. Burton Goods will follow in Pad & Quill's footsteps in many ways, focusing on high-quality leather accessories for iPhone and iPad, leather bags for tech enthusiasts, and more.
In regards to the grand opening sale, Burton Goods is offering a 20 percent discount sitewide for the entire month of January. This sale will be applied in your cart and does not require a coupon code. It's also specifically a pre-order discount, as Burton Goods' first wave of products doesn't launch until the first week of February.
Some featured accessories include the Heritage Leather Strap for Apple Watch ($63.96), Luxury Leather Slim Case for MacBook Pro ($119.96), Modern Pocket Book Wallet Case for iPhone 15 Pro ($79.96), and the Magnetic Leather iPad Case ($143.96).Keep up with all of this week's best discounts on Apple products and related accessories in our dedicated Apple Deals roundup.
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Top Rated Comments
This seems.. wrong? As the other poster hypothesized - did they just declare bankruptcy and stiff all their creditors in order to open a new business selling the same goods? If the original business model didn't succeed, what makes them think this go-around will work?This is a fundamental principle of capitalism. Companies are not individuals. It’s possible for someone to make a bad business arrangement, fail, liquidate, try again under a new structure and succeed. As long as no agreements were broken it’s not illegal.
Companies failing is as capitalist as companies succeeding, it’s supposed to put fresh demand and opportunity and investment capital back into the market. Supposed to.
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