Edith Rosa went to work as ordinary Tuesday morning. She arrived on the entrance to Painted Tree somewhat after 10 a.m., solely to search out that her day was something however regular.
As a substitute of strolling to her store, Edge81 Jewellery Studio, she was stopped on the door. Painted Tree was closing, retailer staff instructed her.
“I assumed I used to be going to puke, as if anyone hit me within the intestine,” Rosa mentioned.
The nationwide chain, which rented area and dealt with gross sales for greater than 200 small companies at its San Antonio location, abruptly closed all of its shops this week. The change has left many small enterprise house owners like Rosa reeling as they attempt to safe their income from this month and chart a course ahead.
“I’m attempting to determine it out,” Rosa mentioned. “However as of now, I don’t have a solution.”
The closure of the Park North Purchasing Middle location prompted a whirlwind of feelings and actions. As quickly as she realized in regards to the closure, Rosa began boxing up her stock and transferring it out. She gives everlasting jewellery companies and needed to shortly reschedule appointments and reimburse prospects.
“I had like 4 breakdowns in there whereas I used to be packing,” she mentioned. “You pack your dream. In two to 3 hours, it’s packed and you must discover someplace new. It’s arduous.”
Painted Tree San Antonio shared the next assertion this morning:
“The retail panorama has modified in methods none of us might have absolutely anticipated. Rising prices, shifting market situations, and the evolving nature of how individuals store have introduced challenges that, regardless of our greatest efforts and our group’s unwavering help, we now have not been capable of overcome. We’re heartbroken by this consequence.”
The corporate thanked customers and staff and mentioned it didn’t make the choice calmly. It’s the second main closure to hit the world after Saks Fifth Avenue at North Star Mall introduced it might shut its doorways completely subsequent month.
Communication with Painted Tree, a nationwide chain with 61 areas, in line with its web site, has been troublesome for distributors. Rosa realized the shop was closing when she went in particular person Tuesday morning. She acquired an e-mail round 11:30 a.m. informing distributors they’d have till April 24 to take away their stock from the property.

Melissa Rojas, who owns zarape-inspired clothes model Chasing Camilla, additionally rented area at Painted Tree and was blindsided by the closure. She had been invited to a pop-up market in California for Karol G’s Coachella efficiency and realized in regards to the closure whereas touring again dwelling.
“I don’t know the place to go at this level. Even getting ahold of them at this level [is difficult],” she mentioned. “We’re in limbo.”
Rojas and Rosa mentioned this was one of many busiest seasons for companies at Painted Tree as individuals flocked to small companies for Fiesta put on. Each are planning pop-up retailers in the course of the week. Tax returns had been hitting financial institution accounts, Rosa added, and he or she had stacked up stock to fulfill that demand.
San Antonio residents have been vocal of their help with distributors receiving presents to assist retailer and transfer their stock and to arrange store in new areas. However each Rosas and Rojas are cautious of ending up in a worse scenario.
Painted Tree had dealt with gross sales at a single checkout for its distributors inside the shop after which distributes funds initially of every month. Rosa estimates the corporate has $5,000 from gross sales of her merchandise.
Rojas’ cropped guayaberas are extremely common, however particularly throughout Fiesta season. She estimated the corporate owes her $10,000. Neither have heard updates from Painted Tree.
“I don’t know if I’m going to get it,” Rojas mentioned. “They’re not telling us something.”
Painted Tree didn’t reply to an e-mail asking about funds to distributors.
For Rosa, meaning she’s scrambling to make ends meet this month. She has an worker. Her finances and common funds for her payments are immediately up within the air.
“That’s some huge cash,” she mentioned of her gross sales from April. “We have now 15 days to recoup.”
Deeper points
Rosa paid round $560 each month for a roughly 140-square-foot area. Painted Tree additionally stored 10% of proceeds from her gross sales.

“Theft was one thing that was very noticeable,” Rosa mentioned. She began conserving a good stock and locking up or taking dwelling priceless jewellery over the previous 18 months.
Rojas was contemplating leaving resulting from late funds, excessive enterprise turnover and the shortage of communication. When Painted Tree opened, she additionally rented a location in Austin. She closed that one after a yr as a result of it wasn’t turning a revenue.
Painted Tree signed a 10-year lease with Seritage SRC Finance, the New York-based house owners of the constructing at Park North, in 2019, in line with court docket data. Annual hire was $416,193.15 for the primary 5 years and $457,995.81 for the final 5 years, in line with the lease, with a chance to resume at a better annual hire for an extra 5 years.
Seritage sued Painted Tree in 2020, alleging the corporate didn’t make early funds and take possession of the premises on the location. The 2 events reached an settlement to dismiss the lawsuit in March 2022.
In February 2023, Seritage bought the property to San Antonio Central Park Associates, a restricted legal responsibility firm registered to Ok. Alan Hassenflu. Hassenflu is co-founder and CEO of Fidelis Realty Companions, a industrial actual property firm close to Houston.
Rosa mentioned that the closure of Painted Tree was one thing that she had feared, however enterprise house owners there had labored arduous to draw shoppers and construct up curiosity. There had been robust help from common prospects, she mentioned, and it might be troublesome for a lot of small companies that had relied on that location.
“It’s loads of woman-owned companies, loads of Hispanic-owned companies. It’s households. It’s 200 households,” she mentioned.
“Some individuals relied on this,” Rojas added. “How are they going to pay their payments? I’m simply in shock.”
