SASSY® Announces New Line of Made Green Plastic Toys for Infants

2022-06-18 17:28:49 By : Ms. Julia Hung

GONZALES, La., May 13, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Crafts, Inc. (NASDAQ-CM: CRWS) (the “Company”) today announced that Sassy Baby, Inc. (“Sassy”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, has introduced a Made Green line of SASSY® Eco toys.

For over 30 years, the team at Sassy has created developmentally focused toys that inspire and entertain babies. They are now pleased to announce their new Made Green line of SASSY® Eco toys. The same great toys that Sassy’s customers and end users have come to know and love are now made using environmentally responsible materials.

Designed with sensory and STEM developmental learning features, the Made Green line of SASSY® Eco toys are made with renewable materials that are plant-based. The plastics used in the product line are derived from sugar cane and other plant materials. These sustainably-sourced products pass Sassy’s high-quality standards and are built to last. The products are also BPA and paint-free.

The paper used in the packaging of Sassy’s Made Green product line has achieved the Forest Stewardship Council (“FSC”) certification, which ensures that the packaging is sourced from forests that are responsibly managed in the most environmentally sustainable way possible.

Sassy is committed to helping to create a cleaner planet for its youngest end users – our babies!

Crown Crafts, Inc. designs, markets and distributes infant, toddler and juvenile consumer products. Founded in 1957, Crown Crafts is one of America’s largest producers of infant bedding, toddler bedding, bibs and developmental toys. The Company operates through its two wholly-owned subsidiaries, NoJo Baby & Kids, Inc. and Sassy Baby, Inc., which market a variety of infant, toddler and juvenile products under Company-owned trademarks, as well as licensed collections and exclusive private label programs. Sales are made directly to retailers such as mass merchants, large chain stores and juvenile specialty stores. For more information, visit the Company’s website at www.crowncrafts.com.

Craig J. Demarest Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (225) 647-9118 cdemarest@crowncrafts.com

“We are exiting that regime, and it’s going to be bumpy,” said the famous Fed watcher Mohamed El-Erian of the world where central banks let the money flow.

Anyone positioning their portfolio for a recession could be making a big mistake.

Inside Boeing’s cavernous factory at Everett, 30 miles north of Seattle, engineers quietly put the final touches to its new Jumbo Jet.

Investors might take some comfort in crystal-ball gazing by Bank of America, which uses history to plot the next bull market.

The Bitcoin carnage continues, as the cryptocurrency breaks $20,000 to trade at its lowest level since 2020.

Already, very early signs of slowing demand and inflation are cropping up. If the economy averts all-out disaster, then stabilizing or declining rates would spur a market rebound.

AMD and Nvidia have been swallowed up in the bear market, with each stock declining at least 50%. Here's how to trade them now.

A weekly look at the most important moves and news in crypto and what's on the horizon in digital assets.

A decline in earnings could be the next shoe to drop for investors. But it’s all a prelude to what may be the best buying opportunity in decades.

It's no secret that Warren Buffett is one of the best investors alive, delivering investors returns of 20% compounded annually since becoming chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway in 1965. Numerous factors can explain Buffett's success, and an important one is his love of dividend stocks. Dividend stocks are a great source of returns in the market and, according to Fidelity, have accounted for 40% of the S&P 500's total returns since 1930.

Remember TINA? She’s the one everyone was talking about for the past few years, when it came to buying stocks. ‘There is no alternative,’ they said – pointing out that the near-zero interest rate policy has pushed bond yields down to nothing, and that the housing crisis of 2008 had left investors wary of the real estate market – and stocks were the highest returning game in town. Not anymore. The Federal Reserve has just cracked the whip on rate hikes, implementing a 0.75% increase to the benchm

President Joe Biden and a slew of other democrats have been lashing out against Big Oil, accusing the companies of price gouging

(Bloomberg) -- Most Read from BloombergPutin Gets Unexpected Pushback From Ally Over War in UkraineChina Says It May Have Detected Signals From Alien CivilizationsSergey Brin Seeks Divorce, Joining Gates and Bezos in SplitMusk, Tesla, SpaceX Are Sued for Alleged Dogecoin Pyramid SchemeMonkeypox Testing Shows the US Learned Little From the Covid-19 PandemicA shareholder dispute over one of the world’s biggest copper and cobalt mines is heating up in the Democratic Republic of Congo, after state m

Exxon Mobil has gained as oil prices surged and Russia attacked Ukraine, but is XOM still a buy after Q1 earnings and softening oil prices?

Bank stocks are dirt-cheap right now, and Citi in particular looks like a bargain. Watch the Fed’s stress-test results—and Warren Buffett’s purchases—to see what might be in store.

This year’s plunge in the stock market, unprecedented crash in the bond market, and surging inflation threaten new retirees in ways not seen before, he says. “The Jan. 1, 2022 retiree is retiring under conditions which have no certain precedent in the historical records I have used for my research,” Bengen tells MarketWatch. If the recent surge in inflation isn’t brought under control, he says, “we may witness history being made, and the first decline in the ‘safe’ withdrawal rate in more than 50 years.”

Future Perfect Ventures Founder Jalak Jobanputra joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss bitcoin falling over 30%, the crypto recovery, and the outlook for cryptocurrencies. 

Stocks' stomach-churning start to 2022 raises big questions for the next six months. Here's what you should know.

A TikToker explained why she was forced to spend two weeks on vacation with her ex-boyfriend.

Credit Suisse has warned of a “new world order” in financial markets after central banks began aggressively ramping up interest rates.