I remember when I was a little kid walking past Central Hardware. It had automatic doors that opened when you walked by, and you could always smell the sawdust. I remember going in there, and everything was very well laid out. The screws were in the isle marked screws, the bolts in the isle marked bolts. If you wanted a hammer guess where you would go? Yeah thats right, the isle marked hammers.
A number of years ago a store called HQ put Central Hardware out of business. I never once went inside HQ before it was run out of business by Lowes. I hate Lowes. It’s not a hardware store, its a “home store.” For a long time I didn’t know the difference, except home stores are gi-fucking-giantic. But the truth is that there is one big difference; it’s how the goods are organized. At a hardware store, the goods are organized by type. Tools, hardware, etc. At a home store, goods are organized by project. So if you want wheels, you might have to look in 4 different places because lawnmower wheels are in the isle with the lawnmowers, and caster wheels are over by mail boxes; pulley wheels on the other hand are over by door hinges. I don’t understand why they place some things in some areas. If you want a particular size screw, you still have to hunt through 3 isles of screws because they aren’t organized simply by size, they are organized by what you will use them for. Wouldn’t it be easier if all the 3/16 inch screws were in one place?
And have you ever tried to use the websites of the homes stores? Right now, go over to www.lowes.com, and do a search for wheel. Do you see any wheels on that page? How about the 4 other pages of results? Nope. I know they have wheels there, you just can’t find them under wheels. Ok, how about this. Search the word “dirt.” Whoa! No results for dirt? I buy dirt there all the time. WTF?


Yes, Lowes is a pain to shop, especially if you know what you are looking for. Everything comes in a kit in this place! I don’t want the 9 pipes in this kit, just the one. And, 50% of the store is curtains, appliances and displays. I cannot recall a time where I shopped for less than 1 hour – by the time supplies are purchased, it’s time to call it a day. I miss True Value and other real hardware stores.