Quarterlytics / Consumer Cyclical / Furnishings, Fixtures & Appliances / Crown Crafts Inc

Crown Crafts Inc

crws · NASDAQ Consumer Cyclical
Claim this profile
Ticker crws
Exchange NASDAQ
Sector Consumer Cyclical
Industry Furnishings, Fixtures & Appliances
Employees 201-500
← All annual reports
FY2024 Annual Report · Crown Crafts Inc
Sign in to download
Loading PDF…
ANNUAL REPORT

Looking ahead to fiscal 2025, we will continue to 
manage the macroeconomic challenges facing our 
business and our consumers and expand the product 
offering across our brands. We believe we are well-
positioned for when the economy improves and our 
strong balance sheet will allow us to be opportunistic 
should a favorable acquisition opportunity become 
available that can strengthen our existing categories. 
I would like to thank our team for their efforts over 
the past year, and our customers for their continuing 
support. We look forward to updating you on our 
progress throughout the year and thank you, our 
shareholders, for your continued support.
Sincerely, 
Olivia Elliott 
President and Chief Executive Officer
TO OUR FELLOW STOCKHOLDERS:
Fiscal 2024 was a transitional year for the 
company. We started the year on the heels 
of acquiring Manhattan Toy and beginning 
the integration of the company as well as 
exploring the cross-selling opportunities 
made possible by the acquisition.  
We have successfully completed the 
brand’s integration into Sassy and the 
IT conversion is nearly finished. On the 
operations side, we adjusted the brand’s 
advertising spending and worked through 
the excess inventory to substantially 
improve the profitability of the brand 
compared to this time last year.   
We also continued to proactively manage the impact 
of the economic headwinds facing our operations  
and our customers. Inflationary pressures continue 
to linger, raising costs for materials and labor and 
reducing the discretionary income of consumers, 
which has a more meaningful impact on lower-
income households. Despite these challenges,  
we were able to minimize the impact on gross margin 
by proactively managing costs across the business. 
As a result, we reported another year of profitability 
and reduced our debt by $4.6 million from the end of 
fiscal 2023.
We are very encouraged by the strides Manhattan 
Toy has made on the product development front.  
Customers have given very positive feedback on  
the items viewed at recent events and they look 
forward to having these products on their shelves. 
These new designs expand our offerings across 
the toy category, which now represents the largest 
portion of sales across our portfolio. We plan to 
leverage our long-standing relationships with major 
retailers and specialty stores to gain shelf space and 
position our brands for future growth.

 
 
 
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Washington, D.C. 20549 
 
Form 10-K 
(Mark One) 
  
☑ 
ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 
  
For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024 
  
OR 
  
☐ 
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 
  
Commission File No. 1-7604 
Crown Crafts, Inc. 
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) 
  
Delaware 
58-0678148 
(State of Incorporation) 
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 
  
  
916 S. Burnside Ave. 
  
Gonzales, Louisiana 
70737 
(Address of principal executive offices) 
(Zip Code) 
  
Registrant's Telephone Number, including area code: (225) 647-9100 
  
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: 
  
Title of class 
Trading Symbol(s) 
Name of exchange on which registered 
Common Stock, $0.01 par value 
CRWS 
Nasdaq Capital Market 
                                      
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None 
  
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.   Yes ☐   No ☑ 
  
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act.    
Yes ☐   No ☑ 
  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing 
requirements for the past 90 days.   Yes ☑   No ☐ 
  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 
of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).   Yes ☑   No ☐ 
  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company or 
an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth 
company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. 
  
Large accelerated filer 
☐ 
Accelerated filer 
☐ 
Non-Accelerated filer 
☑ 
Smaller Reporting Company 
☑ 
  
  
Emerging Growth Company 
☐ 
  
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any 
new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.   ☐ 
  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal 
control over financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that 
prepared or issued its audit report.   ☐ 
  
If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the registrant included in 
the filing reflect the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements.   ☐ 
  
Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections are restatements that required a recovery analysis of incentive-based compensation 
received by any of the registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to §240.10D-1(b).   ☐ 
  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).   Yes ☐   No ☑ 
  
The approximate aggregate market value of the voting stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant as of September 29, 2023 (the last business day of 
the registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter) was $44.6 million. 
  
As of May 31, 2024, 10,310,719 shares of the registrant’s common stock were outstanding. 
  
Documents Incorporated by Reference: 
  
Portions of the registrant’s Proxy Statement for its 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders are incorporated into Part III hereof by reference.  
 
 


3 
  
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
  
  
  
Page 
  
PART I 
  
Item 1. 
Business. .................................................................................................................................................................................................. 
4 
Item 1A. 
Risk Factors. ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 
7 
Item 1B. 
Unresolved Staff Comments. ............................................................................................................................................................ 
12  
Item 1C. 
Cybersecurity. ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 
12 
Item 2. 
Properties. ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 
13 
Item 3. 
Legal Proceedings. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 
13  
Item 4. 
Mine Safety Disclosures. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 
13 
  
  
  
  
PART II 
  
  
  
  
Item 5. 
Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity 
Securities. ................................................................................................................................................................................................ 
14 
Item 6. 
Reserved. ................................................................................................................................................................................................. 
14 
Item 7. 
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations. ..................................... 
14 
Item 7A. 
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk ............................................................................................... 
18 
Item 8. 
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. ....................................................................................................................... 
19 
Item 9. 
Changes in and Disagreements With Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure. ................................. 
19 
Item 9A. 
Controls and Procedures. .................................................................................................................................................................. 
19  
Item 9B. 
Other Information. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 
19  
Item 9C. 
Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections. ............................................................................. 
20 
  
  
  
  
PART III 
  
  
  
  
Item 10. 
Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance. ..................................................................................................... 
20 
Item 11. 
Executive Compensation. .................................................................................................................................................................. 
20  
Item 12. 
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters. ............. 
20 
Item 13. 
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence. ............................................................. 
21 
Item 14. 
Principal Accountant Fees and Services. ...................................................................................................................................... 
21 
  
  
  
  
PART IV 
  
  
  
  
Item 15. 
Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules. ............................................................................................................................. 
22 
Item 16. 
Form 10-K Summary. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 
27  
  
Cautionary Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements 
  
Certain of the statements made in this Annual Report on Form 10-K (this “Annual Report”) under the caption 
“Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,” and elsewhere, including 
information incorporated herein by reference to other documents, are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of, 
and subject to the protections of, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”). Forward-looking statements include statements with respect to our 
beliefs, plans, objectives, goals, expectations, anticipations, assumptions, estimates, intentions and future performance and 
involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which may be beyond our control and which may 
cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Crown Crafts, Inc. (the “Company”) to be materially different from 
future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. 
  
All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that could be forward-looking. Such statements 
are based upon management’s current expectations, projections, estimates and assumptions, and may be identified as forward-
looking through the Company’s use of words such as “expects,” “believes,” “anticipates,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “forecasts,” 
“plans,” “projects,” “targets,” “should,” “potential,” “continue,” “aims,” “intends,” “will,” “could,” “would” and variations of such 
words and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause 
future results to differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking statements. These risks include those described 
in Part I, Item 1A. “Risk Factors,” and elsewhere in this Annual Report and those described from time to time in our future reports 
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) of additional factors that may impact the Company’s results of 
operations and financial condition. 
  
All written or oral forward-looking statements that are made by or are attributable to the Company are expressly 
qualified in their entirety by this cautionary notice. The Company’s forward-looking statements apply only as of the date of this 
Annual Report or the respective date of the document from which they are incorporated herein by reference. The Company has 
no obligation and does not undertake to update, revise or correct any of the forward-looking statements after the date of this 
Annual Report, or after the respective dates on which such statements are otherwise made, whether as a result of new 
information, future events or otherwise. 

4 
PART I 
  
ITEM 1. Business 
  
Description of Business 
  
The Company was incorporated as a Georgia corporation in 1957 and was reincorporated as a Delaware corporation 
in 2003. The Company’s executive offices are located at 916 South Burnside Avenue, Suite 300, Gonzales, Louisiana 70737, its 
telephone number is (225) 647-9100 and its internet address is www.crowncrafts.com. 
  
The Company operates indirectly through three of its wholly-owned subsidiaries, NoJo Baby & Kids, Inc. (“NoJo”), Sassy 
Baby, Inc. (“Sassy”) and Manhattan Toy Europe Limited (“MTE”) in the infant, toddler and juvenile products segment within the 
consumer products industry. The infant, toddler and juvenile products segment consists of infant and toddler bedding and 
blankets, bibs, soft bath products, disposable products, developmental toys and accessories. Most sales of the Company’s 
products are generally made directly to retailers, such as mass merchants, large chain stores, mid-tier retailers, juvenile specialty 
stores, value channel stores, grocery and drug stores, restaurants, wholesale clubs and internet-based retailers. The Company’s 
products are marketed under a variety of Company-owned trademarks, under trademarks licensed from others and as private 
label goods. 
  
The Company's fiscal year ends on the Sunday nearest to or on March 31. References herein to “fiscal year 2024” or 
“2024” represent the 52-week period ended March 31, 2024, and references herein to “fiscal year 2023” or “2023” represent the 
52-week period ended April 2, 2023. 
  
On March 17, 2023 (the “Closing Date”), the Company acquired Manhattan Group, LLC (“Manhattan”) and MTE, 
Manhattan’s then wholly-owned subsidiary (the “Manhattan Acquisition”), for a purchase price of $17.0 million, subject to 
adjustments for cash as of the Closing Date and to the extent that actual net working capital as of the Closing Date differed 
from target net working capital of $13.75 million. The Manhattan Acquisition was funded with available cash and borrowings 
under the Company’s revolving line of credit with The CIT Group/Commercial Services (“CIT”). From the Closing Date through 
the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024, the Company operated Manhattan as a wholly-owned subsidiary that manufactured and 
marketed developmental toys. On April 1, 2024, the Company merged Manhattan into Sassy. 
  
The Company makes its annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K and 
amendments to those reports filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act available free of charge 
on its website at www.crowncrafts.com as soon as reasonably practicable after such material has been electronically filed with 
the SEC. These reports are also available without charge on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. 
  
International Sales 
  
Sales to customers in countries other than the U.S. represented 8% and 5% of the Company’s total gross sales during 
fiscal years 2024 and 2023, respectively. International sales are based upon the location that predominately represents what 
the Company believes to be the final destination of the products delivered to the Company’s customers. 
  
Competition 
  
The infant, toddler and juvenile consumer products industry is highly competitive. The Company competes with a 
variety of distributors and manufacturers (both branded and private label), including large infant, toddler and juvenile product 
companies and specialty infant, toddler and juvenile product manufacturers, on the basis of quality, design, price, brand name 
recognition, service and packaging. The Company’s ability to compete depends principally on styling, price, service to the 
retailer and continued high regard for the Company’s products and trade names. 
  
  
 
 

5 
Human Capital Resources 
  
As of May 31, 2024, the Company had 162 employees, all of whom are full-time and none of whom is represented by 
a labor union or is otherwise a party to a collective bargaining agreement. The Company attracts and maintains qualified 
personnel by paying competitive salaries and benefits and offering opportunities for advancement. The Company considers its 
relationship with its employees to be good. 
  
Trademarks, Copyrights and Patents 
  
The Company considers its intellectual property to be of material importance to its business. Sales of products 
marketed under the Company’s trademarks, including Sassy®, Manhattan Toy®, NoJo® and Neat Solutions® accounted for 38% 
and 35% of the Company’s total gross sales during fiscal years 2024 and 2023, respectively. Protection for these trademarks is 
obtained through domestic and foreign registrations. The Company also markets designs that are subject to copyrights and 
design patents owned by the Company. 
  
Product Sourcing 
  
Foreign and domestic contract manufacturers produce most of the Company’s products, with the largest 
concentration being in China. The Company makes sourcing decisions on the basis of quality, timeliness of delivery and price, 
including the impact of ocean freight and duties. Although the Company maintains relationships with a limited number of 
suppliers, the Company believes that its products may be readily manufactured by several alternative sources in quantities 
sufficient to meet the Company’s requirements. The Company’s management and quality assurance personnel visit the third-
party facilities regularly to monitor and audit product quality and to ensure compliance with labor requirements and social and 
environmental standards. In addition, the Company closely monitors the currency exchange rate. The impact of future 
fluctuations in the exchange rate or changes in safeguards cannot be predicted with certainty. 
  
The Company maintains a foreign representative office located in Shanghai, China, which is responsible for the 
coordination of production, purchases and shipments, seeking out new vendors and overseeing inspections for social 
compliance and quality. 
  
The Company’s products are warehoused and distributed domestically from leased facilities located in Compton, 
California and Eden Valley, Minnesota and internationally from third-party logistics warehouses in Belgium and the United 
Kingdom. 
  
Licensed Products 
  
Certain products are manufactured and sold pursuant to licensing agreements for trademarks. Also, many of the 
designs used by the Company are copyrighted by other parties, including trademark licensors, and are available to the 
Company through copyright license agreements. The licensing agreements are generally for an initial term of one to three years 
and may or may not be subject to renewal or extension. Sales of licensed products represented 40% of the Company’s gross 
sales in fiscal year 2024, which included 24% of sales under the Company’s license agreements with affiliated companies of The 
Walt Disney Company (“Disney”), which expire as set forth below: 
License Agreement 
Expiration 
Infant Bedding .............................................................................................. 
December 31, 2025 
Infant Feeding and Bath............................................................................ 
December 31, 2024 
Toddler Bedding .......................................................................................... 
December 31, 2024 
Marvel .............................................................................................................. 
December 31, 2024 
STAR WARS Toddler Bedding .................................................................. 
December 31, 2024 
STAR WARS - Lego Plush ........................................................................... 
December 31, 2025 
  
Customers 
  
The Company’s customers consist principally of mass merchants, large chain stores, mid-tier retailers, juvenile 
specialty stores, value channel stores, grocery and drug stores, restaurants, internet accounts and wholesale clubs. The 
Company does not enter into long-term or other purchase agreements with its customers. The table below sets forth those 
customers that represented at least 10% of the Company’s gross sales in fiscal years 2024 and 2023. 
  
  
  
Fiscal Year 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
Walmart Inc. .................................................................................................................................     
42% 
      
51% 
  
Amazon.com, Inc. .......................................................................................................................     
19% 
      
20% 
  

6 
Products 
  
The Company’s primary focus is on infant, toddler and juvenile products, including the following: 
  
  
● 
developmental toys 
  
● 
dolls and plush toys 
  
● 
reusable and disposable bibs 
  
● 
infant and toddler bedding 
  
● 
blankets and swaddle blankets 
  
● 
nursery and toddler accessories 
  
● 
room décor 
  
● 
burp cloths 
  
● 
reusable and disposable placemats and floor mats 
  
● 
disposable toilet seat covers and changing mats 
  
● 
feeding and care goods 
  
● 
other infant, toddler and juvenile soft goods 
  
Seasonality and Inventory Management 
  
Approximately 20% of the Company’s annual gross sales typically occur during the first fiscal quarter (April through 
June). There are otherwise no significant variations in the seasonal demand for the Company’s products from year to year. Sales 
are generally higher in periods when customers take initial shipments of new products, as these orders typically include enough 
products for initial sets for each store and additional quantities for the customer’s distribution centers. The timing of these initial 
shipments varies by customer and depends on when the customer finalizes store layouts for the upcoming year and whether 
the customer has any mid-year introductions of products. Sales may also be higher or lower, as the case may be, in periods 
when customers are restricting internal inventory levels. Customer returns of merchandise shipped are historically less than 1% 
of gross sales. 
  
Consistent with the expected introduction of specific product offerings, the Company carries necessary levels of 
inventory to meet the anticipated delivery requirements of its customers. The Company will also typically increase the 
purchases and inventory levels of its products in the months prior to the Lunar New Year, a celebration beginning in late January 
to mid-February during which the Company’s contract manufacturers in China cease operations for 2-4 weeks. 
  
Government Regulation and Environmental Control 
  
The Company is subject to various federal, state and local environmental laws and regulations, which regulate, among 
other things, product safety and the discharge, storage, handling and disposal of a variety of substances and wastes, and to 
laws and regulations relating to employee safety and health, principally the Occupational Safety and Health Administration Act 
and regulations thereunder. The Company believes that it currently complies in all material respects with applicable 
environmental, health and safety laws and regulations and that future compliance with such existing laws or regulations will 
not have a material adverse effect on its capital expenditures, earnings or competitive position. However, there is no assurance 
that such requirements will not become more stringent in the future or that the Company will not have to incur significant costs 
to comply with such requirements. 
  
Product Design and Styling 
  
The Company believes that its creative team is one of its key strengths. The Company’s product designs are primarily 
created internally and are supplemented by numerous additional sources, including independent artists, decorative fabric 
manufacturers and apparel designers. Ideas for product design creations are drawn from various sources and are reviewed and 
modified by the design staff to ensure consistency within the Company’s existing product offerings and the themes and images 
associated with such existing products. In order to respond effectively to changing consumer preferences, the Company’s 
designers and stylists attempt to stay abreast of emerging lifestyle trends in color, fashion and design. When designing products 
under the Company’s various licensed brands, the Company’s designers coordinate their efforts with the licensors’ design 
teams to provide for a more fluid design approval process and to effectively incorporate the image of the licensed brand into 
the product. The Company’s designs include traditional, contemporary, textured and whimsical patterns across a broad 
spectrum of retail price points. 
   
 
 

7 
Utilizing state of the art computer technology, the Company continually develops new designs throughout the year 
for all of its product groups. This continual development cycle affords the Company design flexibility, multiple opportunities to 
present new products to customers and the ability to provide timely responses to customer demands and changing market 
trends. The Company also creates designs for exclusive sale by certain of its customers under the Company’s brands, as well as 
the customers’ private label brands. 
  
Sales and Marketing 
  
The Company’s products are marketed through a national sales force consisting of salaried sales executives and 
employees located in Gonzales, Louisiana; Compton, California; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Grand Rapids, Michigan; Bentonville, 
Arkansas; and London, United Kingdom; and by independent commissioned sales representatives located throughout the 
United States. 
  
  
ITEM 1A. Risk Factors 
  
The following risk factors as well as the other information contained in this Annual Report and other filings made by the 
Company with the SEC should be considered in evaluating the Company’s business. Additional risks and uncertainties that are not 
presently known or that are not currently considered material may also impair the Company’s business operations. If any of the 
following risks actually occur, then operating results may be affected in future periods. 
  
Risks Associated with the Company, Business and Industry 
  
The loss of one or more of the Company’s key customers could result in a material loss of revenues. 
  
The Company’s top two customers represented approximately 61% of gross sales in fiscal year 2024. Although the 
Company does not enter into contracts with its key customers, it expects its key customers to continue to be a significant 
portion of its gross sales in the future. The loss of, or a decline in orders from, one or more of these customers could result in a 
material decrease in the Company’s revenue and operating income. 
  
The loss of one or more of the Company’s licenses could result in a material loss of revenues. 
  
Sales of licensed products represented 40% of the Company’s gross sales in fiscal year 2024, which included 24% of 
sales associated with the Company’s license agreements with Disney. The Company could experience a material loss of 
revenues if it is unable to renew its major license agreements or obtain new licenses. The volume of sales of licensed products 
is inherently tied to the success of the characters, films and other licensed programs of the Company’s licensors. A decline in 
the popularity of these licensed programs or the inability of the licensors to develop new properties for licensing could also 
result in a material loss of revenues to the Company. Additionally, the Company’s license agreements with Disney and others 
require a material amount of minimum guaranteed royalty payments. The failure by the Company to achieve the sales 
envisioned by the license agreements could result in the payment by the Company of shortfalls in the minimum guaranteed 
royalty payments, which would adversely impact the Company’s operating results. 
  
Growing geopolitical tensions could adversely affect the Company’s operations and profitability. 
  
Mounting terrorist activity, ongoing wars and violence in the Middle East and Ukraine, the potential for the escalation 
of China’s aggression towards Taiwan and the increasingly erratic behavior of North Korea have resulted in growing geopolitical 
tensions. Nearly all nations have felt the effects of global economic uncertainty, including higher energy and food prices. These 
uncertainties could result in a slowdown to the global economy that may affect the Company’s business by reducing the prices 
that the Company’s customers may be willing or able to pay for its products or by reducing the demand for the Company’s 
products, which could negatively impact the Company’s revenues and result in a material adverse effect on the Company’s 
business, cash flow, results of operations and financial condition. 
  
Climate change may negatively affect the Company’s business, results of operations, cash flow and financial condition. 
  
The Company is exposed to risks associated with climate change. The adverse impacts of climate change include the 
increased frequency and severity of natural disasters and extreme weather events, including hurricanes, tornados, wildfires, 
extreme heat, rising sea levels and inland flooding. The occurrence of one or more of these events pose a physical risk to the 
Company’s facilities, as well as those of its customers, suppliers and employees, the likelihood of a loss of the Company’s 
inventory and an overall disruption to the Company’s operations. Climate change has the potential to result in a material 
adverse effect on the Company’s business, cash flow, results of operations and financial condition. 

8 
The Company’s inability to anticipate and respond to consumers’ tastes and preferences could adversely affect the 
Company’s revenues. 
  
Sales are driven by consumer demand for the Company’s products. There can be no assurance that the demand for 
the Company’s products will not decline or that the Company will be able to anticipate and respond to changes in demand 
related to consumers’ tastes and preferences. The infant and toddler consumer products industry is characterized by the 
continual development of cutting-edge new products to meet the high standards of parents. Also, the development of social 
media has resulted in a monumental shift in the modern shopping experience. The Company’s failure to adapt to these changes, 
develop new products or reach consumers where they are could lead to lower sales and excess inventory, which could have a 
material adverse effect on the Company’s financial condition and operating results. 
  
The Company’s sourcing and marketing operations in foreign countries are subject to anti-corruption laws. 
  
The Company’s foreign operations are subject to laws prohibiting improper payments and bribery, including the U.S. 
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and similar laws and regulations in foreign jurisdictions, which apply to the Company’s directors, 
officers, employees and agents acting on behalf of the Company. Failure to comply with these laws could result in damage to 
the Company’s reputation, a diversion of management’s attention from its business, increased legal and investigative costs, 
and civil and criminal penalties, any or all of which could adversely affect the Company’s operating results. 
  
The Company’s business is impacted by general economic conditions and related uncertainties, including a declining 
birthrate, affecting markets in which the Company operates. 
  
The Company’s growth is largely influenced by the birthrate, and in particular, the rate of first births. Geopolitical risks 
and economic conditions, including the real and perceived threat of wars, terrorism, tension among nations, rising prices or 
unemployment, could lead individuals to decide to forgo or delay having children. Even under optimal conditions, shifts in 
demographic trends and preferences could have the consequence of individuals starting to have children later in life and/or 
having fewer children. 
  
In recent years, the birthrate in the United States has steadily declined. These conditions could result in reduced 
demand for some of the Company’s products, increased order cancellations and returns, an increased risk of excess and 
obsolete inventories and increased pressure on the prices of the Company’s products.  Also, although the Company’s use of a 
commercial factor significantly reduces the risk associated with collecting accounts receivable, such factor may at any time 
terminate or limit its approval of shipments to a particular customer. The bankruptcy of a customer, the perceived pending 
threat of a bankruptcy of a customer, or an adverse change in overall economic conditions are among the events that would 
increase the likelihood that the factor would terminate or limit its approval of shipments to customers.  Such an action by the 
factor could result in the loss of future sales to such affected customers. 
  
Economic conditions could result in an increase in the amounts paid for the Company’s products. 
  
Significant increases in freight costs and the price of raw materials that are components of the Company’s products, 
including cotton, oil and labor, could adversely affect the amounts that the Company must pay its suppliers for its finished 
goods. If the Company is unable to pass these cost increases along to its customers, its profitability could be adversely affected. 
  
The Company could experience losses associated with its intellectual property. 
  
The Company relies upon the fair interpretation and enforcement of patent, copyright, trademark and trade secret 
laws in the U.S., similar laws in other countries, and agreements with employees, customers, suppliers, licensors and other 
parties. Such reliance serves to establish and maintain the intellectual property rights associated with the products that the 
Company develops and sells. However, the laws and courts of certain countries at times do not protect intellectual property 
rights or respect contractual agreements to the same extent as the laws of the U.S. Therefore, in certain jurisdictions the 
Company may not be able to protect its intellectual property rights against counterfeiting or enforce its contractual agreements 
with other parties. Finally, a party could claim that the Company is infringing upon such party’s intellectual property rights, and 
claims of this type could lead to a civil complaint. An unfavorable outcome in litigation involving intellectual property could 
result in any or all of the following: (i) civil judgments against the Company, which could require the payment of royalties on 
both past and future sales of certain products, as well as plaintiff’s attorneys’ fees and other litigation costs; (ii) impairment 
charges of up to the carrying value of the Company’s intellectual property rights; (iii) restrictions on the ability of the Company 
to sell certain of its products; (iv) legal and other costs associated with investigations and litigation; and (v) adverse effects on 
the Company’s competitive position. 
  

9 
Widespread outbreaks of contagious disease may adversely affect the Company’s business operations, employee 
availability, financial condition, liquidity and cash flow. 
  
Significant outbreaks of contagious diseases could have adverse effects on the overall economy and impact the 
Company’s supply chain, manufacturing and distribution operations, transportation services, customers and employees, as well 
as consumer sentiment in general and traffic within the retail stores that carry the Company’s products. A pandemic could 
adversely affect the Company’s revenues, earnings, liquidity and cash flows and require significant actions in response, 
including employee furloughs, closings of Company facilities, expense reductions or discounts of the pricing of the Company’s 
products, all in an effort to mitigate such effects. 
  
During fiscal years 2022 and 2021, the COVID-19 pandemic led global government authorities to implement numerous 
public health measures, including quarantines, business closures, travel bans and lockdowns to confront the pandemic. China’s 
efforts to control the spread of the COVID-19 virus by locking down its largest cities placed a strain on already-stressed global 
supply chains. Several of the Company’s customers experienced financial difficulties as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. 
  
A resurgence of the COVID-19 pandemic, or any other outbreak of a contagious disease, could adversely affect the 
Company’s revenues, earnings, liquidity and cash flows and may require significant actions in response, including employee 
furloughs, closings of Company facilities, expense reductions or discounts of the pricing of the Company’s products, all in an 
effort to mitigate such effects. 
  
The strength of the Company’s competitors may impact the Company’s ability to maintain and grow its sales, which 
could decrease the Company’s revenues. 
  
The infant and toddler consumer products industry is highly competitive. The Company competes with a variety of 
distributors and manufacturers, both branded and private label. The Company’s ability to compete successfully depends 
principally on styling, price, service to the retailer and continued high regard for the Company’s products and trade names. 
Several of these competitors are larger than the Company and have greater financial resources than the Company, and some 
have experienced financial challenges from time to time, including servicing significant levels of debt. Those facing financial 
pressures could choose to make particularly aggressive pricing decisions in an attempt to increase revenue. Competitors based 
in China have begun to sell and ship directly to customers without having to rely on distributors in the destination country, 
making their products more affordable. The effects of increased competition could result in a material decrease in the 
Company’s revenues. 
  
The Company’s success is dependent upon retaining key management personnel. 
  
Certain of the Company’s executive management and other key personnel have been integral to the Company’s 
operations and the execution of its growth strategy. The departure from the Company of one or more of these individuals, 
along with the inability of the Company to attract qualified and suitable individuals to fill the Company’s open positions, could 
adversely impact the Company’s growth and operating results. 
  
The Company may need to write down or write off inventory. 
  
If product programs end before the inventory is completely sold, then the remaining inventory may have to be sold 
at less than carrying value. The market value of certain inventory items could drop to below carrying value after a decline in 
sales, at the end of programs, or when management makes the decision to exit a product group. Such inventory would then 
need to be written down to the lower of carrying or market value, or possibly completely written off, which would adversely 
affect the Company’s operating results. 
  
Recalls or product liability claims could increase costs or reduce sales.  
  
The Company must comply with the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, which imposes strict standards to 
protect children from potentially harmful products and which requires that the Company’s products be tested to ensure that 
they are within acceptable levels for lead and phthalates. The Company must also comply with related regulations developed 
by the Consumer Product Safety Commission and similar state regulatory authorities. The Company’s products could be subject 
to involuntary recalls and other actions by these authorities, and concerns about product safety may lead the Company to 
voluntarily recall, accept returns or discontinue the sale of select products. Product liability claims could exceed or fall outside 
the scope of the Company’s insurance coverage. Recalls or product liability claims could result in decreased consumer demand 
for the Company’s products, damage to the Company’s reputation, a diversion of management’s attention from its business 
and increased customer service and support costs, any or all of which could adversely affect the Company’s operating results. 
  

10 
The Company could experience adjustments to its effective tax rate or its prior tax obligations, either of which could 
adversely affect its results of operations. 
  
The Company is subject to income taxes in the many jurisdictions in which it operates, including the U.S., several U.S. 
states and China. At any particular point in time, several tax years are subject to general examination or other adjustment by 
these various jurisdictions. Although the Company believes that the calculations and positions taken on its filed income tax 
returns are reasonable and justifiable, administrative or legal proceedings leading to the outcome of any examination could 
result in an adjustment to the position that the Company has taken. Such adjustment could result in further adjustment to one 
or more income tax returns for other jurisdictions, or to income tax returns for prior or subsequent tax years, or both. To the 
extent that the Company’s reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities is not adequate to support the cumulative effect of such 
adjustments, the Company could experience a material adverse impact on operating results. 
  
The Company’s provision for income taxes is based on its effective tax rate, which in any given financial statement 
period could fluctuate based on changes in tax laws or regulations, changes in the mix and level of earnings by taxing 
jurisdiction, changes in the amount of certain expenses within the consolidated statements of income that will never be 
deductible on the Company’s income tax returns and certain charges deducted on the Company’s income tax returns that are 
not included within the consolidated statements of income. These changes could cause fluctuations in the Company’s effective 
tax rate either on an absolute basis, or in relation to varying levels of the Company’s pre-tax income. Such fluctuations in the 
Company’s effective tax rate could adversely affect its results of operations. 
  
Changes in international trade regulations and other risks associated with foreign trade could adversely affect the 
Company’s sourcing. 
  
The Company sources its products primarily from foreign contract manufacturers, with the largest concentration 
being in China. Difficulties encountered by these suppliers, such as fires, accidents, natural disasters, outbreaks of infectious 
diseases (including the COVID-19 pandemic) and the instability inherent in operating within an authoritarian political structure, 
could halt or disrupt production and shipment of the Company’s products. The Chinese government could make allegations 
against the Company of corruption or antitrust violations, or could adopt regulations related to the manufacture of products 
within China, including quotas, duties, taxes and other charges or restrictions on the exportation of goods produced in China. 
  
In response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the U.S. government and other allied countries across the world have levied 
coordinated and wide-ranging economic sanctions against Russia. If China were to escalate its aggression towards Taiwan, 
similar sanctions could be levied against China, up to and including increased tariffs or a complete ban on the importation of 
goods manufactured in China, then the Company could be forced to source its products from suppliers in other countries. 
  
The Company’s products are primarily shipped by merchant vessels across the world’s oceans. The intrinsic nature of 
such shipping includes the risk of intentional or unintentional impediments at the world’s global marine chokepoints, including 
various straits and the Panama and Suez canals. The recent firing on merchant vessels in the Red Sea by militants of Yemen’s 
Houthi movement has resulted in the shipment of the Company’s products from China to Europe to be routed around Africa, 
just as the Company has been benefitting from increased sales in Europe. These and any other events causing a disruption of 
the flow of the Company’s products, whether within the Chinese interior, at the port of embarkation, on global waters, or at the 
destination port, could result in delays in shipping. 
  
Most of the Company’s products are imported from China into the Port of Long Beach in Southern California and the 
Port of Prince Rupert in British Columbia. There are many links in the distribution chain, including the availability of ocean 
freight, cranes, dockworkers, containers, tractors, chassis and drivers. The timely receipt of the Company’s products is 
dependent upon efficient operations at these ports. Any shortages in the availability of any of these links or disruptions in port 
operations, including strikes, lockouts or other work stoppages or slowdowns, could cause bottlenecks and other congestion 
in the distribution network, which could adversely impact the Company’s ability to obtain adequate inventory on a timely basis 
and result in lost sales, increased transportation costs and an overall decrease of the Company’s profits. 
  
Any of these actions could result in lost sales, increased transportation costs and ultimately the inability of the 
Company to maintain the current sourcing of its products. Also, an arbitrary strengthening of the Chinese currency versus the 
U.S. Dollar could increase the prices at which the Company purchases finished goods. In addition, changes in U.S. customs 
procedures or delays in the clearance of goods through customs could result in the Company being unable to deliver goods to 
customers in a timely manner or the potential loss of sales altogether. The occurrence of any of these events could adversely 
affect the Company’s profitability. 
   
 
 

11 
Disruptions to the Company’s information technology systems could negatively affect the Company’s results of 
operations. 
  
The Company’s operations are highly dependent upon computer hardware and software systems, including 
customized information technology systems and cloud-based applications. The Company also employs third-party systems and 
software that are integral to its operations. These systems are vulnerable to cybersecurity incidents, including disruptions and 
security breaches, which can result from unintentional events or deliberate attacks by insiders or third parties, such as 
cybercriminals, competitors, nation-states, computer hackers and other cyber terrorists. The Company faces an evolving 
landscape of cybersecurity threats in which evildoers use a complex array of means to perpetrate attacks, including the use of 
stolen access credentials, malware, ransomware, phishing, structured query language injection attacks and distributed denial-
of-service attacks. 
  
The Company has implemented both passive and active cybersecurity measures to securely maintain confidential and 
proprietary information stored on the Company’s information systems and continually invests in maintaining and upgrading 
the systems and applications to mitigate these risks. In addition to firewalls, antivirus software and intrusion detection, the 
Company’s passive cybersecurity measures include multifactor authentication for external access to the Company’s cyber 
networks. The Company’s active cybersecurity measures are designed to detect and prevent live ransomware attacks, insider 
threats and data breaches. There is no assurance that these measures and technology will adequately prevent an intrusion or 
that a third party that is relied upon by the Company will not suffer an intrusion, that unauthorized individuals will not gain 
access to confidential or proprietary information or that any such incident will be timely detected and effectively countered. A 
significant data security breach could result in negative consequences, including a disruption to the Company’s operations and 
substantial remediation costs, such as liability for stolen assets or information, repairs of system damage, and incentives to 
customers or other business partners in an effort to maintain relationships after an attack. An assault against the Company’s 
information technology infrastructure could also lead to other adverse impacts to its results of operations such as increased 
future cybersecurity protection costs, which may include making organizational changes, deploying additional personnel and 
protection technologies, and engaging third-party experts and consultants. 
  
Customer pricing pressures could result in lower selling prices, which could negatively affect the Company’s operating 
results. 
  
The Company’s customers could place pressure on the Company to reduce the prices of its products. The Company 
continuously strives to stay ahead of its competition in sourcing, which allows the Company to obtain lower cost products while 
maintaining high standards for quality. There can be no assurance that the Company could respond to a decrease in sales prices 
by proportionately reducing its costs, which could adversely affect the Company’s operating results. 
  
General Risk Factors 
  
The Company’s ability to successfully identify, consummate and integrate acquisitions, divestitures and other 
significant transactions could have an adverse impact on the Company’s business and financial results. 
  
As part of its business strategy, the Company has made acquisitions of businesses, divestitures of businesses and 
assets, and has entered into other transactions to further the interests of the Company’s business and its stockholders. Risks 
associated with such activities include the following, any of which could adversely affect the Company’s financial results: 
  
  
● 
The active management of acquisitions, divestitures and other significant transactions requires varying levels of
Company resources, including the efforts of the Company’s key management personnel, which could divert
attention from the Company’s ongoing business operations. 
  
● 
The Company may not fully realize the anticipated benefits and expected synergies of any particular acquisition
or investment, or may experience a prolonged timeframe for realizing such benefits and synergies. 
  
● 
Increased or unexpected costs, unanticipated delays or failure to meet contractual obligations could make
acquisitions and investments less profitable or unprofitable. 
  
● 
The failure to retain executive management members and other key personnel of the acquired business that may
have been integral to the operations and the execution of the growth strategy of the acquired business. 
  
The Company’s debt covenants may affect its liquidity or limit its ability to pursue acquisitions, incur debt, make 
investments, sell assets or complete other significant transactions. 
  
The Company’s credit facility contains usual and customary covenants regarding significant transactions, including 
restrictions on other indebtedness, liens, investments and acquisitions, merger or consolidation transactions, transactions with 
affiliates and changes in or amendments to the organizational documents for the Company and its subsidiaries. Unless waived 

12 
by the Company’s lender, these covenants could limit the Company’s ability to pursue opportunities to expand its business 
operations, respond to changes in business and economic conditions and obtain additional financing, or otherwise engage in 
transactions that the Company considers beneficial. 
   
The Company’s ability to comply with its credit facility is subject to future performance and other factors. 
  
The Company’s ability to make required payments of principal and interest on its debts, to refinance its maturing 
indebtedness, to fund capital expenditures or to comply with its debt covenants will depend upon future performance. The 
Company’s future performance is, to a certain extent, subject to general economic, financial, competitive, legislative, regulatory 
and other factors beyond its control. The breach of any of the debt covenants could result in a default under the Company’s 
credit facility. Upon the occurrence of an event of default, the Company’s lender could make an immediate demand of the 
amount outstanding under the credit facility. If a default was to occur and such a demand was to be made, there can be no 
assurance that the Company’s assets would be sufficient to repay the indebtedness in full. 
  
A stockholder could lose all or a portion of his or her investment in the Company. 
  
The Company’s common stock has historically experienced a degree of price variability, and the price could be subject 
to rapid and substantial fluctuations. The Company’s common stock has also historically been thinly traded, a circumstance 
that exists when there is a relatively small volume of buy and sell orders for the Company’s common stock at any given point in 
time. In such situations, a stockholder may be unable to liquidate his or her position in the Company’s common stock at the 
desired price. Also, as an equity investment, a stockholder’s investment in the Company is subordinate to the interests of the 
Company’s creditors, and a stockholder could lose all or a substantial portion of his or her investment in the Company in the 
event of a bankruptcy filing or liquidation. 
  
ITEM 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments 
  
None. 
  
ITEM 1C. Cybersecurity 
  
Cybersecurity Risk Management and Strategy  
  
The Company’s cybersecurity measures are primarily focused on ensuring the security and protection of its 
information technology systems and data. The Company recognizes the increasing volume and sophistication of cybersecurity 
threats and takes seriously its responsibility to protect these information technology systems and data. The Company considers 
risks associated with cybersecurity alongside the Company’s other risks as part of its overall risk assessment process. The 
Company’s Vice President of Information Technology and his staff monitor the Company’s information systems to provide a 
comprehensive approach to assess, identify, manage, mitigate, and respond to cybersecurity threats. 
  
The Company uses cost-effective controls that are commensurate with the risk and sensitivity of its specific 
information systems, control systems and enterprise data. The Company’s cybersecurity program incorporates best practices 
and industry standards from multiple sources and includes, but is not limited to, risk assessment, policies and procedures, 
training and awareness, auditing, log collection and analysis, threat hunting and intelligence surveillance, compliance 
monitoring and testing, and incident response. 
  
When necessary, the Company’s Vice President of Information Technology and his staff collaborate with external third-
party subject matter specialists. The Company has processes in place to oversee and identify material risks from cybersecurity 
threats associated with its use of these providers. All third parties engaged for such matters are subjected to scrutiny to ensure 
they satisfy the Company’s security standards. The Company periodically reviews its third-party engagements to ensure that 
the providers maintain the necessary levels of protection and competency, as well as to oversee and identify potential 
cybersecurity risks and threats from such engagements. 
  
As of May 31, 2024, the Company has not identified any risks from known cybersecurity threats, including as a result 
of any previous cybersecurity incidents, that have materially affected or are reasonably likely to materially affect the Company, 
including its business strategy, results of operation or financial condition. The Company has further disclosed how risks from 
cybersecurity threats could potentially have a material impact on the Company, including its business strategy, results of 
operations, or financial condition, in Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” of this Annual Report. 
   
 
 

13 
Cybersecurity Governance  
  
Cybersecurity, as an important part of the Company’s risk management processes, is a critical area of focus for the 
Company’s Board of Directors (the “Board”), which is responsible for oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity risk, including 
the effectiveness of cybersecurity risk management policies and protocols. As part of the Board’s oversight, the Board receives 
a report at least annually from the Company’s Vice President of Information Technology and other members of the Company’s 
executive management team. These reports include updates on the Company’s cybersecurity risks and threats, the status of 
projects intended to strengthen its information security systems, assessments of the cybersecurity program, and the emerging 
threat landscape. 
  
In the event of a cybersecurity incident, the Company has processes by which the incident would be escalated 
internally and, when appropriate, reported to the Board or an appropriate committee of the Board, as well as for updating the 
Board regarding the incident until it has been resolved. 
  
The Company’s Vice President of Information Technology is responsible for the Company’s cybersecurity strategy and 
execution. He has more than 30 years of experience in technology and information systems leadership and reports directly to 
the Company’s Chief Executive Officer. 
  
  
ITEM 2. Properties 
  
Each of the Company’s facilities are rented under leases that expire on various dates through fiscal year 2029, including 
157,400 square feet at a warehouse and distribution facility located in Compton, California under a lease that expires May 31, 
2028, 128,074 square feet at a warehouse and distribution facility located in Eden Valley, Minnesota under a lease that expires 
June 30, 2026, 16,837 square feet at Manhattan’s headquarters facility located in Minneapolis, Minnesota under a lease that 
expires March 31, 2027 and 15,598 square feet at the Company’s headquarters facility located in Gonzales, Louisiana under a 
lease that expires January 31, 2026. In addition, several employees of the Company perform their respective job functions from 
remote locations for which no rent is paid. Management believes that its properties are suitable for the purposes for which they 
are used, are in generally good condition and provide adequate capacity for current and anticipated future operations. The 
table below sets forth certain information regarding the Company's principal real property as of the close of business on May 
31, 2024. 
  
        Location 
Use 
Approximate 
Square Feet 
Owned/ 
Leased 
Gonzales, Louisiana ......................................................  Administrative and sales office................................. 
15,598 
Leased 
Compton, California .....................................................  Offices, warehouse and distribution center ......... 
157,400 
Leased 
Minneapolis, Minnesota .............................................  Product design and sales office ................................ 
16,837 
Leased 
Eden Valley, Minnesota ...............................................  Warehouse and distribution center ........................ 
128,074 
Leased 
Grand Rapids, Michigan ..............................................  Product design office ................................................... 
5,711 
Leased 
London, United Kingdom ..........................................  Sales office ....................................................................... 
1,800 
Leased 
Shanghai, People’s Republic of China ...................  Office .................................................................................. 
1,912 
Leased 
  
ITEM 3. Legal Proceedings 
  
The Company is, from time to time, involved in various legal proceedings relating to claims arising in the ordinary 
course of its business. Neither the Company nor any of its subsidiaries is a party to any such legal proceeding the outcome of 
which, individually or in the aggregate, is expected to have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial position, results 
of operations or cash flows. 
  
ITEM 4. Mine Safety Disclosures 
  
Not applicable. 
  
  
 
 

14 
PART II 
  
ITEM 5. Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities 
  
The Company's common stock is traded on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the symbol “CRWS”. As of May 31, 2024, 
there were 155 record holders of the Company’s common stock. 
  
The Company has historically paid cash dividends. The Company’s payment of dividends is and will continue to be 
restricted by or subject to, among other limitations, applicable provisions of federal and state laws, the Company’s earnings 
and various business considerations, including the Company’s financial condition, results of operations, cash flow, level of 
capital expenditures, future business prospects and such other matters as the Board and its Capital Committee deem relevant. 
The Company’s credit facility permits the Company to pay cash dividends on its common stock without limitation, provided 
there is no default under the credit facility before or as a result of the payment of such dividends. 
  
For information regarding securities of the Company that have been authorized for issuance under equity 
compensation plans, refer to “Securities Authorized for Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans” in Item 12, Part III. of this 
Annual Report. 
  
ITEM 6. Reserved 
  
ITEM 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 
  
Objective 
  
The following discussion and analysis is intended to provide material information relevant to an assessment of the 
Company’s financial condition and results of operations, as well as an evaluation of the amounts and certainty of cash flows 
from operations and from outside sources. This discussion and analysis is further intended to provide details concerning 
material events and uncertainties known to management that are reasonably likely to cause reported financial information to 
not be necessarily indicative of future operating results or future financial condition. This data includes descriptions and 
amounts of matters that have had a material impact on reported operations, as well as matters that management has assessed 
to be reasonably likely to have a material impact on future operations. Management expects that this discussion and analysis 
will enhance a reader’s understanding of the Company’s financial condition, results of operations, cash flows, liquidity and 
capital resources. This discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and 
notes thereto included elsewhere in this Annual Report. 
  
Results of Operations 
  
The following table contains results of operations for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 and the 
dollar and percentage changes for those periods (in thousands, except percentages). 
  
  
    
  
      
  
    
Change  
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
    
$ 
    
% 
  
Net sales by category: 
      
        
        
        
  
Bedding, blankets and accessories ................................   $ 
32,036     $ 
36,747     $ 
(4,711 )     
-12.8 % 
Bibs, toys and disposable products ...............................     
55,596       
38,306       
17,290       
45.1 % 
Total net sales.............................................................................     
87,632       
75,053       
12,579       
16.8 % 
Cost of products sold ...............................................................     
64,632       
55,225       
9,407       
17.0 % 
Gross profit ..................................................................................     
23,000       
19,828       
3,172       
16.0 % 
% of net sales ...............................................................................     
26.2 %     
26.4 %     
        
    
Marketing and administrative expenses ..........................     
16,105       
12,655       
3,450       
27.3 % 
% of net sales ...............................................................................     
18.4 %     
16.9 %     
        
    
Interest (expense) income - net ...........................................     
(734 )     
81       
(815 )     
-1006.2 % 
Other (expense) income - net ...............................................     
67       
172       
(105 )     
-61.0 % 
Income tax expense .................................................................     
1,334       
1,776       
(442 )     
-24.9 % 
Net income ..................................................................................     
4,894       
5,650       
(756 )     
-13.4 % 
% of net sales ...............................................................................     
5.6 %     
7.5 %     
        
    
 
 
 

15 
Net Sales: 
  
Sales increased to $87.6 million for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024, compared with $75.1 million in the fiscal year 
ended April 2, 2023, an increase of $12.6 million, or 16.8%. Sales of bedding, blankets and accessories decreased by $4.7 million, 
and sales of bibs, toys and disposable products increased by $17.3 million. Although Manhattan generated net sales of $18.5 
million of developmental toy, feeding and baby care products during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024, sales of bedding, 
blankets and accessories were lower due to the continued overall softness of that market, the impact of retailers that have been 
managing inventory levels and consumers that have lowered their spending due to inflationary pressures. 
  
Gross Profit: 
  
Gross profit increased by $3.2 million and decreased from 26.4% of net sales for the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023 to 
26.2% of net sales for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. The gross profit from Manhattan was $4.3 million in the current year, 
which was $4.1 million higher than the prior year. This increase in the gross profit amount for the current year was partially 
offset by an increase in operating lease costs in the current year, which were $2.5 million higher than the prior year, and which 
included $615,000 in higher operating lease costs of Manhattan. 
  
Marketing and Administrative Expenses: 
  
Marketing and administrative expenses increased by $3.5 million and increased from 16.9% of net sales for fiscal year 
2023 to 18.4% of net sales for fiscal year 2024. The increase in the current year was primarily due to costs incurred by Manhattan 
and MTE, which were $3.9 million higher than the prior year, and which included credit losses and advertising costs that were 
$360,000 and $213,000 higher than the prior year, respectively. 
  
Income Tax Expense: 
  
The Company’s provision for income taxes is based upon an annual effective tax rate (“ETR”) on continuing operations, 
which was 21.4% and 23.2% for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. The ETR on continuing 
operations combined with certain discrete income tax charges and benefits resulted in an overall provision for income taxes of 
21.4% and 23.9% for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. 
  
Known Trends and Uncertainties 
  
The Company’s financial results are closely tied to sales to the Company’s top two customers, which represented 
approximately 61% of the Company’s gross sales in fiscal year 2024. A significant downturn experienced by either or both of 
these customers could lead to decreased sales. 
  
During fiscal year 2024, consumers responded to macroeconomic conditions by trading down to lower priced items, 
buying fewer items, or foregoing some items altogether due to inflationary concerns. The Company monitors the impact of 
inflation on its operations on an ongoing basis and may need to adjust its prices to mitigate the impact of changes to the rate 
of inflation in future periods. Future volatility of prices could affect consumer purchases of our products. Additionally, the 
impact of inflation on input and other operational costs could adversely affect the Company's financial results. 
  
Significant outbreaks of contagious diseases have had adverse effects on the overall economy and impact the 
Company’s supply chain, manufacturing and distribution operations, transportation services, customers and employees, as well 
as consumer sentiment in general and traffic within the retail stores that carry the Company’s products. Specifically, the COVID-
19 pandemic led global government authorities to implement numerous public health measures, including quarantines, 
business closures and lockdowns to confront the pandemic. China’s efforts to control the spread of the COVID-19 virus by 
locking down its largest cities placed a strain on already-stressed global supply chains. Several of the Company’s customers 
experienced financial difficulties as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. 
  
A resurgence of the COVID-19 pandemic, or any other outbreak of a contagious disease, could adversely affect the 
Company’s revenues, earnings, liquidity and cash flows and may require significant actions in response, including employee 
furloughs, closings of Company facilities, expense reductions or discounts of the pricing of the Company’s products, all in an 
effort to mitigate such effects. 
  
For an additional discussion of trends, uncertainties and other factors that could impact the Company’s operating 
results, refer to “Risk Factors” in Item 1A, Part I. of this Annual Report. 
 
 

16 
Financial Position, Liquidity and Capital Resources 
  
Net cash provided by operating activities decreased from $7.7 million for the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023 to $7.1 
million for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. The Company in the current year experienced a decrease in its accounts 
receivable balances that was $3.1 million lower than the decrease in the prior year, and the Company in the current year 
experienced a decrease in its accounts payable balances that was $2.3 million higher than the decrease in the prior year. 
Offsetting these decreases in cash provided by operating activities was a decrease in inventory in the current year that was $4.6 
million higher than the increase in the prior year. 
  
Net cash used in investing activities was $193,000 in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024 compared with $16.9 million 
in the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. The decrease in the current year was primarily due to the $16.1 million payment that was 
made in the prior year to complete the Manhattan Acquisition, net of cash acquired of $1.3 million. 
  
Net cash used in financing activities was $7.8 million in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024 compared with $9.3 
million in cash provided by financing activities in the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. The Company incurred net borrowings 
under its revolving line of credit of $12.7 million in the prior year, such borrowings primarily being required to fund the 
Manhattan Acquisition, compared with $4.6 million in net repayments under its revolving line of credit in the current year. 
  
The Company’s future performance is, to a certain extent, subject to general economic, financial, competitive, 
legislative, regulatory and other factors beyond its control. Based upon the current level of operations, the Company believes 
that its cash flow from operations and the availability on its revolving line of credit will be adequate to meet its liquidity needs. 
  
The Company’s credit facility at March 31, 2024 consisted of a revolving line of credit under a financing agreement 
with CIT of up to $35.0 million, which includes a $1.5 million sub-limit for letters of credit. The financing agreement matures on 
July 11, 2028, bears interest at the rate of prime minus 0.5% or the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) plus 1.6%, and 
which is secured by a first lien on all assets of the Company. At March 31, 2024, the Company had elected to pay interest on 
balances owed under the revolving line of credit, if any, under the SOFR option, which was 6.9%. The financing agreement also 
provides for the payment by CIT to the Company of interest on daily negative balances, if any, held by CIT at the rate of prime 
as of the beginning of the calendar month minus 2.0%. 
  
As of March 31, 2024, there was a balance of $8.1 million owed on the revolving line of credit, there was no letter of 
credit outstanding and $19.2 million was available under the revolving line of credit based on the Company’s eligible accounts 
receivable and inventory balances. As of April 2, 2023, there was a balance of $12.7 million owed on the revolving line of credit, 
there was no letter of credit outstanding and $20.0 million was available under the revolving line of credit based on the 
Company’s eligible accounts receivable and inventory balances. 
  
The financing agreement contains usual and customary covenants for agreements of that type, including limitations 
on other indebtedness, liens, transfers of assets, investments and acquisitions, merger or consolidation transactions, 
transactions with affiliates, and changes in or amendments to the organizational documents for the Company and its 
subsidiaries. The Company believes it was in compliance with these covenants as of March 31, 2024. 
  
To reduce its exposure to credit losses, the Company assigns substantially all of its trade accounts receivable to CIT 
pursuant to factoring agreements, which have expiration dates that are coterminous with that of the financing agreement 
described below. Under the terms of the factoring agreements, CIT remits customer payments to the Company as such 
payments are received by CIT. 
  
CIT bears credit losses with respect to assigned accounts receivable from approved shipments, while the Company 
bears the responsibility for adjustments from customers related to returns, allowances, claims and discounts. CIT may at any 
time terminate or limit its approval of shipments to a particular customer. If such a termination or limitation occurs, the 
Company either assumes (and may seek to mitigate) the credit risk for shipments to the customer after the date of such 
termination or limitation or discontinues shipments to the customer. Factoring fees, which are included in marketing and 
administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated statements of income, were $353,000 and $287,000 during fiscal 
years 2024 and 2023, respectively. 
  
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates 
  
The Company prepares its financial statements to conform with accounting principles generally accepted in the U.S. 
(“GAAP”) as promulgated by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”). References herein to GAAP are to topics within 
the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (the “FASB ASC”), which the FASB periodically revises through the issuance of an 

17 
Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) and which has been established by the FASB as the authoritative source for GAAP 
recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental entities. 
   
Use of Estimates: The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make 
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and 
liabilities at the date of the consolidated balance sheets and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the 
reporting period. The listing below, while not inclusive of all of the Company's accounting policies, sets forth those accounting 
policies which the Company's management believes embody the most significant judgments due to the uncertainties affecting 
their application and the likelihood that materially different amounts would be reported under different conditions or using 
different assumptions. 
  
Revenue Recognition: Revenue is recognized upon the satisfaction of all contractual performance obligations and the 
transfer of control of the products sold to the customer. The majority of the Company’s sales consists of single performance 
obligation arrangements for which the transaction price for a given product sold is equivalent to the price quoted for the 
product, net of any stated discounts applicable at a point in time. Each sales transaction results in an implicit contract with the 
customer to deliver a product as directed by the customer. Shipping and handling costs that are charged to customers are 
included in net sales, and the Company’s costs associated with shipping and handling activities are included in cost of products 
sold. 
  
Revenue from sales made directly to consumers is recorded when the shipped products have been received by 
customers, and excludes sales taxes collected on behalf of governmental entities. Revenue from sales made to retailers is 
recorded when legal title has been passed to the customer based upon the terms of the customer’s purchase order, the 
Company’s sales invoice, or other associated relevant documents. Such terms usually stipulate that legal title will pass when 
the shipped products are no longer under the control of the Company, such as when the products are picked up at the 
Company’s facility by the customer or by a common carrier. Payment terms can vary from prepayment for sales made directly 
to consumers to payment due in arrears (generally, 60 days of being invoiced) for sales made to retailers. 
  
Allowances Against Accounts Receivable: The Company estimates certain allowances from revenues recognized 
through sales made to its customers. These allowances include anticipated returns and claims, expected credit losses, 
chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts, cooperative advertising allowances, warehouse allowances, 
placement fees, volume rebates, coupons, discounts and other allowances. 
  
The allowance for anticipated returns and claims is estimated based upon the Company’s historical experience with 
actual returns and claims, combined with the consideration of events that could result in a change from historical rates on a 
per-customer basis. The allowance for anticipated returns and claims is recorded as a reduction of net sales in the reporting 
period within which the related sales are recorded. 
  
To reduce the Company’s exposure to expected credit losses, and to enhance the predictability of its cash flows, the 
Company assigns substantially all of its receivables under factoring agreements with CIT. In the event that a factored receivable 
becomes uncollectible due to creditworthiness, CIT bears the risk of loss. With respect to the receivables that are not assigned 
under factoring agreements with CIT, the Company addresses this credit risk by establishing an allowance that is intended to 
represent the Company’s best estimate of the expected credit losses for such receivables. In the development of this estimate, 
the Company makes a number of judgements utilizing the Current Expected Credit Losses (“CECL”) methodology, which 
requires the Company to estimate lifetime expected credit losses by specifically analyzing the receivables. This analysis 
incorporates an aging of the receivables, relevant payment history and historical loss experience, as well as the consideration 
of customer concentrations, customer creditworthiness, negotiated changes to the payment terms of customers, recent 
economic trends, and expectations regarding economic conditions over a reasonable and supportable future period. The 
allowance for expected credit losses is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated 
statements of income. 
  
The allowance for chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts, cooperative advertising, 
warehouse allowances, placement fees, volume rebates, coupons, discounts and other allowances is recorded commensurate 
with sales activity or using the straight-line method, as appropriate. The majority of the Company’s allowances for such 
chargebacks occurs on a per-invoice basis. When a customer requests to have an agreed-upon deduction applied against the 
customer’s outstanding balance due to the Company, the allowances are correspondingly reduced to reflect such payments or 
credits issued against the customer’s account balance. The Company analyzes the components of the allowances for customer 
chargebacks monthly and adjusts the allowances to appropriate levels. Since allowances associated with cooperative 
advertising are accrued commensurate with sales activity or using the straight-line method, as appropriate, the timing of 
funding requests for cooperative advertising may result in fluctuations in the allowance from period to period, although such 
timing should not have a material impact on the consolidated statements of income. The allowance for cooperative advertising 

18 
is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of income. All other allowances for 
chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts, warehouse allowances, placement fees, volume rebates, 
coupons and discounts are recorded as a reduction of net sales in the reporting period within which the related sales are 
recorded. 
   
The Company’s actual experience associated with its allowances against accounts receivable in a future period may 
differ from the judgements, estimates, analysis and considerations employed in the development of these allowances. Thus, 
the Company’s allowances against accounts receivable at any point in time may be over-funded or under-funded. 
  
Inventory Valuation: On a periodic basis, management reviews its inventory quantities on hand for obsolescence, 
physical deterioration, changes in price levels and the existence of quantities on hand which may not reasonably be expected 
to be sold within the Company’s normal operating cycle. To the extent that any of these conditions is believed to exist or the 
market value of the inventory expected to be realized in the ordinary course of business is otherwise no longer as great as its 
carrying value, an allowance against the inventory value is established. To the extent that this allowance is established or 
increased during an accounting period, an expense is recorded in cost of products sold in the Company's consolidated 
statements of income. Only when inventory for which an allowance has been established is later sold or is otherwise disposed 
is the allowance reduced accordingly. Significant management judgment is required in determining the amount and adequacy 
of this allowance. In the event that actual results differ from management's estimates or these estimates and judgments are 
revised in future periods, the Company may not fully realize the carrying value of its inventory or may need to establish 
additional allowances, either of which could materially impact the Company's financial position and results of operations. 
  
Valuation of Long-Lived Assets and Identifiable Intangible Assets: In addition to the systematic annual depreciation and 
amortization of the Company’s fixed assets and identifiable intangible assets, the Company reviews for impairment long-lived 
assets and identifiable intangible assets whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of any 
asset may not be recoverable. An impairment loss must be recognized if the carrying amount of a long-lived asset group is not 
recoverable and exceeds its fair value. Assets to be disposed of, if any, are recorded at the lower of net book value or fair market 
value, less estimated costs to sell at the date management commits to a plan of disposal, and are classified as assets held for 
sale on the consolidated balance sheets. Actual results could differ materially from those estimates. 
  
Business Combinations: The Company accounts for acquisitions using the acquisition method of accounting in 
accordance with FASB ASC Topic 805, Business Combinations. An acquisition is accounted for as a purchase and the appropriate 
account balances and operating activities are recorded in the Company’s consolidated financial statements as of the acquisition 
date and thereafter. Assets acquired, liabilities assumed and noncontrolling interests, if any, are measured at fair value as of the 
acquisition date using the appropriate valuation method. The Company may engage an independent third party to assist with 
these measurements. Goodwill resulting from an acquisition is recognized for the excess of the purchase price over the fair 
value of the tangible and identifiable intangible assets, less the liabilities assumed. In determining the fair value of the 
identifiable intangible assets and any noncontrolling interests, the Company uses various valuation techniques, including the 
income approach, the cost approach and the market approach. These valuation methods require significant management 
judgement to make estimates and assumptions surrounding projected revenues and costs, growth rates and discount rates. In 
the event that actual results differ from management’s estimates, the Company may need to recognize an impairment to all or 
a portion of the carrying value of these assets in a future period, which could materially impact the Company’s financial position 
and results of operations. 
  
ITEM 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk 
  
For a detailed discussion of market risk and other factors that could impact the Company’s operating results, refer to 
“Risk Factors” in Item 1A. of Part I. of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 
  
Interest Rate Risk 
  
As of March 31, 2024, the Company had $8.1 million of indebtedness that bears interest at a variable rate, comprised 
of borrowings under the revolving line of credit. Based upon this level of outstanding debt, the Company’s annual net income 
would decrease by approximately $64,000 for each increase of one percentage point in the interest rate applicable to the debt. 
  
Commodity Rate Risk 
  
The Company sources its products primarily from foreign contract manufacturers, with the largest concentration 
being in China. The Company’s exposure to commodity price risk primarily relates to changes in the prices in China of cotton, 
oil and labor, which are the principal inputs used in a substantial number of the Company’s products. In addition, although the 
Company pays its Chinese suppliers in U.S. dollars, a strengthening of the rate of the Chinese currency versus the U.S. dollar 

19 
could result in an increase in the cost of the Company’s finished goods. There is no assurance that the Company could timely 
respond to such increases by proportionately increasing the prices at which its products are sold to the Company’s customers. 
   
Market Concentration Risk 
  
The Company’s financial results are closely tied to sales to its top two customers, which represented approximately 
61% of the Company’s gross sales in fiscal year 2024. In addition, 40% of the Company’s gross sales in fiscal year 2024 consisted 
of licensed products, which included 24% of sales associated with the Company’s license agreements with affiliated companies 
of Disney. The Company’s results could be materially impacted by the loss of one or more of these licenses. 
  
ITEM 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data 
  
See pages 23 and F-1 through F-22 of this Annual Report. 
  
ITEM 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure 
  
Not applicable. 
  
ITEM 9A. Controls and Procedures 
  
Disclosure Controls and Procedures 
  
Disclosure controls and procedures are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports 
filed or submitted under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time period specified 
in the SEC’s rules and forms. Disclosure controls and procedures include, without limitation, controls and procedures designed 
to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports filed under the Exchange Act is accumulated and 
communicated to management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely 
decisions regarding required disclosure. As of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report, the Company carried out 
an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Chief Executive 
Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company’s disclosure controls and 
procedures. Based upon and as of the date of that evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded 
that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective. 
  
Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting 
  
The Company’s management is responsible for establishing and maintaining for the Company adequate internal 
control over financial reporting, as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act (“ICFR”). With 
the participation of the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer, management conducted an evaluation of the 
effectiveness of ICFR based on the framework and the criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework (2013) 
issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on this evaluation, management 
has concluded that ICFR was effective as of March 31, 2024. 
  
The Company’s internal control system has been designed to provide reasonable assurance to the Company’s 
management and the Board regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation and fair presentation of financial 
statements in accordance with GAAP. All internal control systems, no matter how well designed, have inherent limitations. 
Therefore, even those systems determined to be effective can provide only a reasonable, rather than absolute, assurance that 
the Company’s financial statements are free of any material misstatement, whether caused by error or fraud. 
  
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting 
  
The Company’s management, with the participation of the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial 
Officer, conducted an evaluation of the Company’s ICFR as required by Rule 13a-15(d) under the Exchange Act and, in 
connection with such evaluation, determined that no changes occurred during the Company’s fiscal quarter ended March 31, 
2024 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s ICFR. 
  
ITEM 9B. Other Information 
  
During the quarter ended March 31, 2024, none of the Company’s directors or officers informed the Company of the 
adoption, modification or termination of a “Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement” or “non-Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement,” as 
those terms are defined in Item 408(a) of Regulation S-K. 

20 
ITEM 9C. Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections 
  
Not applicable. 
  
PART III 
  
ITEM 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance 
  
The information required by this item will be set forth in the Company’s Proxy Statement for the Annual Meeting of 
Stockholders to be held in 2024 (the “Proxy Statement”) under the following captions, and the information under such captions 
is incorporated herein by reference: 
  
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board of Directors 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Director Nominees 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Continuing Directors 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Director Qualifications 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Director Independence 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board Committees 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Attendance at Board Committee Meetings and the Annual Meeting
of Stockholders 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Director Nomination Process 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board Diversity 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Code of Business Conduct and Ethics; Code of Conduct for Directors 
  
● 
Proposal 1 – Election of Directors 
  
● 
Director Compensation 
  
● 
Executive Compensation – Executive Officers 
  
● 
Executive Compensation – Compensation Discussion and Analysis – Employment, Severance and Compensation
Arrangements 
  
● 
Report of the Audit Committee 
  
● 
Stock Ownership Information – Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports 
  
● 
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions 
  
ITEM 11. Executive Compensation 
  
The information required by this item will be set forth in the Proxy Statement under the following captions, and the 
information under such captions is incorporated herein by reference: 
  
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board Committees – Compensation Committee 
  
● 
Director Compensation 
  
● 
Executive Compensation (excluding Pay Versus Performance) 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation 
  
ITEM 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters 
  
The information required by this item will be set forth in the Proxy Statement under the following caption, and the 
information under such caption is incorporated herein by reference: 
  
  
● 
Stock Ownership Information – Security Ownership of Directors, Executive Officers and Certain Beneficial Owners 
  
  
 
 

21 
Securities Authorized for Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans 
  
The table below sets forth information regarding shares of the Company’s common stock that may be issued upon 
the exercise of options, warrants and other rights granted to employees, consultants or directors under all of the Company’s 
existing equity compensation plans as of March 31, 2024. 
  
Plan Category 
  
Number of 
securities to be  
issued upon  
exercise of  
outstanding  
options, 
warrants  
and rights 
   
Weighted- 
average 
exercise  
price of  
outstanding  
options, 
warrants and  
rights 
   
Number of  
securities 
remaining  
available for  
future issuance  
under equity  
compensation  
plans 
  
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders: 
     
      
      
  
  
     
      
      
  
2006 Omnibus Incentive Plan ................................................................................    
52,500   $ 
7.90    
0  
  
     
      
      
  
2014 Omnibus Equity Compensation Plan .......................................................    
553,000   $ 
7.46    
0  
  
     
      
      
  
2021 Incentive Plan ...................................................................................................    
290,000   $ 
5.75    
439,027  
  
ITEM 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence 
  
The information required by this item will be set forth in the Proxy Statement under the following captions, and the 
information under such captions is incorporated herein by reference: 
  
  
● 
Introductory Paragraph to Board of Directors and Corporate Governance 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Director Independence 
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board Committees 
  
● 
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions 
  
ITEM 14. Principal Accountant Fees and Services 
  
The information required by this item will be set forth in the Proxy Statement under the following captions, and the 
information under such captions is incorporated herein by reference: 
  
  
● 
Board of Directors and Corporate Governance – Board Committees – Audit Committee 
  
● 
Proposal 2 – Ratification of Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
  
  
 
 

22 
PART IV 
  
ITEM 15. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules 
  
(a)(1). Financial Statements 
  
The following consolidated financial statements of the Company are included in Part II, Item 8. of this Annual Report: 
  
- Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
- Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 
- Consolidated Statements of Income for the Fiscal Years Ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 
- Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders' Equity for the Fiscal Years Ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 
- Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Fiscal Years Ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 
- Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
  
(a)(2). Financial Statement Schedule 
  
The following financial statement schedule of the Company is included with this Annual Report: 
  
Schedule II — Valuation and Qualifying Accounts ..............................................................................................................................  
Page 23 
  
All other schedules not listed above have been omitted because they are not applicable or the required information 
is included in the financial statements or notes thereto. 
  
  
 
 

23 
SCHEDULE II 
  
CROWN CRAFTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES 
  
ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K 
  
  
  
Valuation and Qualifying Accounts 
  
Column A 
  Column B     Column C     Column D     Column E   
  
  Balance at        
  
      
  
    Balance at   
  
  Beginning     Charged to       
  
    
End of 
  
  
  of Period     Expenses     Deductions    
Period 
  
  
  
(in thousands) 
  
Accounts Receivable Valuation Accounts: 
      
        
        
        
  
  
      
        
        
        
  
Year Ended April 2, 2023 
      
        
        
        
  
Allowance for customer deductions ..........................................................   $ 
945    $ 
5,746    $ 
5,217    $ 
1,474  
  
    
       
       
       
   
Year Ended March 31, 2024 
      
        
        
        
  
Allowance for customer deductions ..........................................................   $ 
1,474    $ 
6,139    $ 
6,443    $ 
1,170  
Allowance for expected credit losses .........................................................   $ 
0    $ 
316    $ 
0    $ 
316  
  
  
  
  
 
 

24 
(a)(3). Exhibits 
  
Exhibits required to be filed by Item 601 of SEC Regulation S-K are included as Exhibits to this Annual Report and listed 
below. 
  
In reviewing the agreements included as exhibits to this Annual Report, investors are reminded that the agreements 
are included to provide information regarding their terms and are not intended to provide any other factual or disclosure 
information about the Company or the other parties to the agreements. Some of the agreements contain representations and 
warranties made by each of the parties to the applicable agreement. These representations and warranties have been made 
solely for the benefit of the other parties to the applicable agreement and: 
  
  
● 
Should not in all instances be treated as categorical statements of fact, but rather as a way of allocating the risk to one
of the parties if those statements prove to be inaccurate; 
  
  
● 
Have been qualified by the disclosures that were made to the other party in connection with the negotiation of the
applicable agreement, which disclosures are not necessarily reflected in the agreement; 
  
  
● 
May apply standards of materiality in a way that is different from what may be viewed as material to you or other
investors; and 
  
  
● 
Were made only as of the date of the applicable agreement or such other date or dates may be specified in the
agreement and are subject to more recent developments. 
  
Accordingly, the representations and warranties may not describe the actual state of affairs as of the date they were 
made or at any other time. Additional information about the Company may be found elsewhere in this Annual Report and the 
Company’s other public filings with the SEC. 
  
Exhibit 
  
  
Number   
Description of Exhibits 
2.1 
— Equity Purchase Agreement, dated as of March 17, 2023, between the Company and H Enterprises International, 
LLC (“HEI”). (31)  
2.2 
— Letter Agreement dated as of July 28, 2023 between the Company and HEI. (33)  
2.3 
— Letter Agreement dated as of September 15, 2023 between the Company and HEI. (34)  
2.4 
— Letter Agreement dated as of September 29, 2023 between the Company and HEI. (35)  
3.1 
— Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company. (1)  
3.2 
— Certificate of Amendment to the Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company. (10)  
3.3 
— Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Company, effective as of November 14, 2023. (36)  
4.1* 
— Crown Crafts, Inc. 2006 Omnibus Incentive Plan (As Amended August 14, 2012). (12)  
4.2* 
— Form of Non-Qualified Stock Option Agreement (Employees). (4)  
4.3* 
— Crown Crafts, Inc. 2014 Omnibus Equity Compensation Plan. (14)  
4.4* 
— Form of Non-Qualified Stock Option Grant Agreement. (15)  
4.5* 
— Form of Restricted Stock Grant Agreement. (15)  
4.6* 
— Crown Crafts, Inc. 2021 Incentive Plan. (26)  
4.7* 
— Form of Incentive Stock Option Grant Agreement. (27)  
4.8* 
— Form of Nonstatutory Stock Option Grant Agreement. (27)  
4.9* 
— Form of Restricted Stock Grant Agreement. (27)  
4.10* 
— Form of Performance Share Grant Agreement (effective February 23, 2022). (28) 
4.11 
— Description of Capital Stock (37) 
10.1 
— Financing Agreement dated as of July 11, 2006 by and among the Company, Churchill Weavers, Inc., Hamco, Inc., 
Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (3) 
10.2 
— Stock Pledge Agreement dated as of July 11, 2006 by and among the Company, Churchill Weavers, Inc., Hamco, 
Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (3) 
   
 
 

25 
10.3 
— First Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of November 5, 2007 by and among the Company, Churchill 
Weavers, Inc., Hamco, Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (5)  
10.4* 
— Employment Agreement dated November 6, 2008 by and between the Company and Olivia W. Elliott (6)  
10.5 
— Third Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of July 2, 2009 by and among the Company, Churchill Weavers, 
Inc., Hamco, Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (7)  
10.6 
— Sixth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of March 5, 2010 by and among the Company, Churchill 
Weavers, Inc., Hamco, Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (8)  
10.7 
— Seventh Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of May 27, 2010 by and among the Company, Churchill 
Weavers, Inc., Hamco, Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (9)  
10.8 
— Eighth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of March 26, 2012 by and among the Company, Churchill 
Weavers, Inc., Hamco, Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (11)  
10.9 
— Ninth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated May 21, 2013 by and among the Company, Hamco, Inc., Crown 
Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (13) 
10.10 
— Tenth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of December 28, 2015 by and among the Company, Hamco, 
Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (16)  
10.11 
— Eleventh Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of March 31, 2016 by and among the Company, Hamco, 
Inc., Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (17)  
10.12* — Amendment No. 1 to the Crown Crafts, Inc. 2014 Omnibus Equity Compensation Plan. (18)  
10.13* — Form of Incentive Stock Option Grant Agreement (effective November 2016). (18)  
10.14* — Form of Nonqualified Stock Option Grant Agreement (effective November 2016). (18) 
10.15* — Form of Restricted Stock Grant Agreement (effective November 2016). (18)  
10.16 
— Joinder Agreement dated as of August 4, 2017 by and among the Company, Hamco, Inc., Crown Crafts Infant 
Products, Inc., Carousel Acquisition, LLC and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (19)  
10.17 
— Twelfth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of December 15, 2017 by and among the Company, Hamco, 
Inc., Carousel Designs, LLC, Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (20) 
10.18 
— Thirteenth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of August 7, 2018 by and among the Company, Hamco, 
Inc., Carousel Designs, LLC, Crown Crafts Infant Products, Inc. and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (21) 
10.19* — Employment Agreement dated January 18, 2019 by and between NoJo Baby & Kids, Inc. and Donna Sheridan. (22)  
10.20* — Amendment to Amended and Restated Employment and Severance Protection Agreement dated as of April 14, 
2022 by and between the Company and E. Randall Chestnut. (29)  
10.21* — Employment Agreement dated February 22, 2021 by and between the Company and Craig Demarest. (23)  
10.22* — Letter Agreement regarding Employment Agreement dated February 22, 2021 by and between the Company and 
Craig Demarest. (25)  
10.23 
— Fourteenth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of May 31, 2021, by and among the Company, NoJo 
Baby & Kids, Inc., Sassy Baby, Inc., Carousel Designs, LLC and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (24)  
10.24* — Performance Share Award Certificate, dated March 1, 2022, between the Company and Olivia W. Elliott. (28)  
10.25* — Performance Share Award Certificate, dated March 1, 2022, between the Company and Donna E. Sheridan. (28)  
10.26* — Amendment to Employment Agreement dated June 7, 2022 by and between the Company and Olivia W. Elliott. 
(30) 
  
  
 
 

26 
10.27 
— Fifteenth Amendment to Financing Agreement dated as of June 2, 2022, by and among the Company, NoJo Baby 
& Kids, Inc., Sassy Baby, Inc., Carousel Designs, LLC and The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (30)  
10.28 
— Sixteenth Amendment to Financing Agreement, dated as of March 17, 2023, by and among the Company, NoJo 
Baby & Kids, Inc., Sassy Baby, Inc., Manhattan Group, LLC, Manhattan Toy Europe Limited and the CIT 
Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (31)  
10.29* — Amended and Restated Employment Agreement dated June 13, 2023 by and between the Company and Olivia W. 
Elliott. (32)  
14.1 
— Code of Ethics. (2) 
21.1 
— Subsidiaries of the Company. (37) 
23.1 
— Consent of KPMG LLP. (37)  
31.1 
— Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification by the Company’s Chief Executive Officer. (37) 
31.2 
— Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification by the Company’s Chief Financial Officer. (37)  
32.1 
— Section 1350 Certification by the Company’s Chief Executive Officer. (38) 
32.2 
— Section 1350 Certification by the Company’s Chief Financial Officer. (38)  
97.1 
— Crown Crafts, Inc. Policy for the Recovery of Erroneously Awarded Compensation, Effective as of October 2, 2023. 
(37) 
101 
— The following information from the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 31, 
2024, formatted as interactive data files in iXBRL (Inline eXtensible Business Reporting Language): 
(i)     Consolidated Statements of Income; 
(ii)    Consolidated Balance Sheets; 
(iii)   Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity; 
(iv) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows; and 
(v)  Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. 
  
  
  
104 
  
Interactive Data File (embedded within the Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101) 
                   
  
* 
Management contract or a compensatory plan or arrangement. 
  
  
(1) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended December 28,
2003. 
  
(2) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 28, 2004.
  
(3) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated July 17, 2006. 
  
(4) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-8 dated August 24, 2006. 
  
(5) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated November 9, 2007. 
  
(6) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K/A dated November 7, 2008. 
  
(7) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated July 6, 2009. 
  
(8) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated March 8, 2010. 
  
(9) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated May 27, 2010. 
  
(10) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated August 9, 2011. 
  
(11) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated March 27, 2012. 
  
(12) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-8 dated August 14, 2012. 
  
(13) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated May 21, 2013. 
  
(14) Incorporated herein by reference to Appendix A to the Registrant’s Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A filed
on June 27, 2014. 
  
(15) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-8 dated November 10, 2014. 
  
(16) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated December 28, 2015. 
  
(17) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated April 4, 2016. 
  
(18) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended October 2,
2016. 
  
(19) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated August 7, 2017. 
  
(20) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated December 18, 2017. 
  
(21) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended July 1, 2018. 
  
(22) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated January 22, 2019. 
  
(23) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated February 22, 2021. 
  
(24) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated June 3, 2021. 
  
(25) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 28, 2021.
   

27 
  
(26) Incorporated herein by reference to Appendix A to the Registrant’s Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A filed
on June 28, 2021. 
  
(27) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated August 11, 2021. 
  
(28) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K/A dated March 1, 2022. 
  
(29) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated April 15, 2022. 
  
(30) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended April 3, 2022. 
  
(31) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated March 20, 2023. 
  
(32) Incorporated herein by reference to Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated June 15, 2023. 
  
(33) Incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter 
ended October 1, 2023. 
  
(34) Incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.2 to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter 
ended October 1, 2023. 
  
(35) Incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.3 to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter 
ended October 1, 2023. 
  
(36) Incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 3.3 to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter 
ended October 1, 2023. 
  
(37) Filed herewith. 
  
(38) Furnished herewith. 
  
ITEM 16. Form 10-K Summary 
  
Not applicable. 
  
  
  
 
 

28 
ITEM 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data 
  
INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 
  
  
Page 
Audited Financial Statements: 
  
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (KPMG LLP, Baton Rouge, LA, Auditor Firm ID: 185) ............ 
F-1 
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 ............................................................................................... 
F-3 
Consolidated Statements of Income for the Fiscal Years Ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 ........................................ 
F-4 
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders' Equity for the Fiscal Years Ended March 31, 2024 and  
April 2, 2023........................................................................................................................................................................................................ 
F-5 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Fiscal Years Ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 ................................ 
F-6 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements .............................................................................................................................................. 
F-7 
  
  
  

F-1 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
  
  
To the Shareholders and Board of Directors 
Crown Crafts, Inc.: 
  
Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements 
  
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Crown Crafts, Inc. and subsidiaries (the Company) as of 
March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the related consolidated statements of income, changes in shareholders’ equity, and cash 
flows for each of the years in the two-year period ended March 31, 2024, and the related notes and financial statement schedule 
II (collectively, the consolidated financial statements). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all 
material respects, the financial position of the Company as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, and the results of its operations 
and its cash flows for each of the years in the two-year period ended March 31, 2024, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted 
accounting principles. 
  
Basis for Opinion 
  
These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express 
an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the 
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the 
Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and 
Exchange Commission and the PCAOB. 
  
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material 
misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit 
of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits, we are required to obtain an understanding of internal 
control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal 
control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. 
  
Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial 
statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included 
examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audits 
also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating 
the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our 
opinion. 
  
Critical Audit Matter 
  
The critical audit matter communicated below is a matter arising from the current period audit of the consolidated financial 
statements that was communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that: (1) relates to accounts 
or disclosures that are material to the consolidated financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging, subjective, 
or complex judgments. The communication of a critical audit matter does not alter in any way our opinion on the consolidated 
financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matter below, providing a separate 
opinion on the critical audit matter or on the accounts or disclosures to which it relates. 
  
Evaluation of certain anticipated returns and claims, expected credit losses, and chargebacks 
  
As discussed in Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company estimates a provision for certain allowances 
from revenues recognized through sales made to its customers. These allowances include anticipated returns and claims, 
expected credit losses, and chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts.  These allowances are 
estimated using the Company’s historical experience with actual returns, claims, payments, credit losses, and chargebacks 
considering events that could result in a change from historical experience on a per-customer basis. 
  
We identified the evaluation of certain anticipated returns and claims, expected credit losses, and chargebacks as a critical 
audit matter. Subjective auditor judgment was required to assess the relevance of historical experience used in estimating 
these allowances by determining if historical experience is indicative of future experience. 
  
  

F-2 
The following are the primary procedures we performed to address this critical audit matter. We assessed the relevance of 
historical experience used in estimating these allowances by 1) evaluating the Company’s assessment of current business 
and economic conditions, including comparing to relevant industry data and 2) analyzing certain allowances by customer 
to identify unusual trends. We evaluated the Company’s assessment of the relevance of historical experience for certain 
anticipated returns and claims, and chargebacks by comparing a sample of actual returns and claims, and chargebacks to 
the allowance previously recorded. We also performed sensitivity analyses over the historical credit loss experience to 
assess the impact of possible changes in the historical experience on the allowance for expected credit losses. 
  
/s/ KPMG LLP 
  
We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2009. 
  
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 
June 28, 2024 
  
 
  
  
 
 

F-3 
CROWN CRAFTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES 
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS 
MARCH 31, 2024 AND APRIL 2, 2023 
(amounts in thousands, except share and per share amounts) 
  
  
  
March 31, 2024     
April 2, 2023 
  
  
      
        
  
ASSETS 
  
Current assets: 
      
        
  
Cash and cash equivalents ..........................................................................................................................................................  $ 
829    $ 
1,742  
Accounts receivable (net of allowances of $1,486 at March 31, 2024 and $1,474 at April 2, 2023): 
      
        
  
Due from factor ....................................................................................................................................................................    
18,584      
20,740  
Other ........................................................................................................................................................................................    
3,819      
2,068  
Inventories ........................................................................................................................................................................................    
29,709      
34,211  
Prepaid expenses ...........................................................................................................................................................................    
1,883      
1,614  
Total current assets .....................................................................................................................................................    
54,824      
60,375  
  
      
        
  
Operating lease right of use assets ......................................................................................................................................    
14,949      
17,305  
  
      
        
  
Property, plant and equipment - at cost: 
      
        
  
Vehicles ..............................................................................................................................................................................................    
-      
182  
Leasehold improvements ............................................................................................................................................................    
493      
473  
Machinery and equipment ..........................................................................................................................................................    
5,062      
4,333  
Furniture and fixtures ...................................................................................................................................................................    
477      
408  
Property, plant and equipment - gross ..............................................................................................................................    
6,032      
5,396  
Less accumulated depreciation .................................................................................................................................................    
4,376      
3,677  
Property, plant and equipment - net ..................................................................................................................    
1,656      
1,719  
  
      
        
  
Finite-lived intangible assets - at cost: 
      
        
  
Customer relationships ................................................................................................................................................................    
8,174      
8,174  
Other finite-lived intangible assets ..........................................................................................................................................    
4,766      
4,766  
Finite-lived intangible assets - gross ..................................................................................................................................    
12,940      
12,940  
Less accumulated amortization .................................................................................................................................................    
10,068      
9,467  
Finite-lived intangible assets - net .......................................................................................................................    
2,872      
3,473  
  
      
        
  
Goodwill ............................................................................................................................................................................................    
7,926      
7,912  
Deferred income taxes .................................................................................................................................................................    
277      
-  
Other ...................................................................................................................................................................................................    
202      
188  
Total Assets ..........................................................................................................................................................................  $ 
82,706    $ 
90,972  
  
      
        
  
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY 
  
Current liabilities: 
      
        
  
Accounts payable ...........................................................................................................................................................................  $ 
4,502    $ 
7,548  
Accrued wages and benefits ......................................................................................................................................................    
813      
1,087  
Accrued royalties ............................................................................................................................................................................    
290      
614  
Dividends payable .........................................................................................................................................................................    
843      
815  
Operating lease liabilities, current ............................................................................................................................................    
3,587      
2,427  
Other accrued liabilities ...............................................................................................................................................................    
426      
566  
Total current liabilities ..............................................................................................................................................    
10,461      
13,057  
  
      
        
  
Non-current liabilities: 
      
        
  
Long-term debt ...............................................................................................................................................................................    
8,112      
12,674  
Deferred income taxes .................................................................................................................................................................    
-      
815  
Operating lease liabilities, noncurrent ....................................................................................................................................    
12,138      
14,889  
Reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities ..................................................................................................................................    
394      
323  
Total non-current liabilities ....................................................................................................................................    
20,644      
28,701  
  
      
        
  
Shareholders' equity: 
      
        
  
Common stock - $0.01 par value per share; Authorized 40,000,000 shares at March 31, 2024 and April 2, 
2023; Issued 13,208,226 shares at March 31, 2024 and 13,051,814 shares at April 2, 2023 .............................    
132      
131  
Additional paid-in capital ............................................................................................................................................................    
57,888      
57,126  
Treasury stock - at cost - 2,897,507 shares at March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 .......................................................    
(15,821 )     
(15,821 ) 
Retained Earnings ..........................................................................................................................................................................    
9,402      
7,778  
Total shareholders' equity .......................................................................................................................................    
51,601      
49,214  
Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity .............................................................................................................  $ 
82,706    $ 
90,972  
  
See notes to consolidated financial statements. 
  

F-4 
CROWN CRAFTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME 
FISCAL YEARS ENDED MARCH 31, 2024 AND APRIL 2, 2023 
(amounts in thousands, except per share amounts) 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
  
      
        
  
Net sales .............................................................................................................................................................   $ 
87,632    $ 
75,053  
Cost of products sold ....................................................................................................................................     
64,632      
55,225  
Gross profit .......................................................................................................................................................     
23,000      
19,828  
Marketing and administrative expenses ................................................................................................     
16,105      
12,655  
Income from operations ..............................................................................................................................     
6,895      
7,173  
Other (expense) income: 
      
        
  
Interest (expense) income - net of interest income ..................................................................     
(734 )     
81  
Gain on insurance proceeds received for damage to equipment .......................................     
-      
34  
Gain on sale of property, plant and equipment .........................................................................     
58      
2  
Other income - net ................................................................................................................................     
9      
136  
Income before income tax expense ........................................................................................................     
6,228      
7,426  
Income tax expense .......................................................................................................................................     
1,334      
1,776  
Net income .......................................................................................................................................................   $ 
4,894    $ 
5,650  
  
      
        
  
Weighted average shares outstanding: 
      
        
  
Basic ................................................................................................................................................................     
10,210      
10,102  
Effect of dilutive securities ......................................................................................................................     
4      
18  
Diluted ...........................................................................................................................................................     
10,214      
10,120  
  
      
        
  
Earnings per share - basic and diluted ....................................................................................................   $ 
0.48    $ 
0.56  
  
See notes to consolidated financial statements. 
  
  
 
 

F-5 
CROWN CRAFTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY 
FISCAL YEARS ENDED MARCH 31, 2024 AND APRIL 2, 2023 
  
  
  
Common Shares 
    
Treasury Shares 
    Additional      
  
    
Total 
  
  
  Number of       
  
    Number of       
  
    Paid-in     Retained     Shareholders'  
  
  
Shares 
    Amount     
Shares 
    Amount     Capital     Earnings     
Equity 
  
  
  
(Dollar amounts in thousands) 
  
  
      
        
        
        
        
        
        
  
Balances - April 3, 2022 ........................    12,944,918    $ 
129      (2,864,698)  $ (15,614)  $ 
55,925    $ 
5,361    $ 
45,801  
  
      
        
        
        
        
        
        
  
Issuance of shares .....................................    
106,896      
2      
-      
-      
96      
-      
98  
Stock-based compensation ...................    
-      
-      
-      
-      
1,105      
-      
1,105  
Acquisition of treasury stock .................    
-      
-      
(32,809)    
(207)    
-      
-      
(207) 
Net income ..................................................    
-      
-      
-      
-      
-      
5,650      
5,650  
Dividend declared on common  
stock - $0.32 per share ........................    
-      
-      
-      
-      
-      
(3,233)    
(3,233) 
  
      
        
        
        
        
        
        
  
Balances - April 2, 2023 ........................    13,051,814    $ 
131      (2,897,507)  $ (15,821)  $ 
57,126    $ 
7,778    $ 
49,214  
  
      
        
        
        
        
        
        
  
Issuance of shares .....................................    
156,412      
1      
-      
-      
(1)    
-      
-  
Stock-based compensation ...................    
-      
-      
-      
-      
763      
-      
763  
Net income ..................................................    
-      
-      
-      
-      
-      
4,894      
4,894  
Dividends declared on common 
stock - $0.32 per share ........................    
-      
-      
-      
-      
-      
(3,270)    
(3,270) 
  
      
        
        
        
        
        
        
  
Balances - March 31, 2024...................    13,208,226    $ 
132      (2,897,507)  $ (15,821)  $ 
57,888    $ 
9,402    $ 
51,601  
  
See notes to consolidated financial statements. 
  
  
 
 

F-6 
CROWN CRAFTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS 
FISCAL YEARS ENDED MARCH 31, 2024 AND APRIL 2, 2023 
(amounts in thousands) 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
Operating activities: 
      
        
  
Net income .......................................................................................................................................................   $ 
4,894    $ 
5,650  
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities: 
      
        
  
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment .......................................................................     
835      
688  
Amortization of intangibles ...............................................................................................................     
601      
481  
Amortization of right of use assets .................................................................................................     
4,344      
2,121  
Deferred income taxes ........................................................................................................................     
(1,092 )     
(205 ) 
Gain on insurance proceeds received for damage to equipment .......................................     
-      
(34 ) 
Gain on sale of property, plant and equipment .........................................................................     
(58 )     
(2 ) 
Reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities .........................................................................................     
71      
(416 ) 
Stock-based compensation ...............................................................................................................     
763      
1,105  
Changes in assets and liabilities: 
      
        
  
Accounts receivable .........................................................................................................................     
453      
3,530  
Inventories ..........................................................................................................................................     
4,016      
(593 ) 
Prepaid expenses ..............................................................................................................................     
(269 )     
(233 ) 
Other assets ........................................................................................................................................     
(14 )     
(9 ) 
Lease liabilities ...................................................................................................................................     
(3,580 )     
(2,265 ) 
Accounts payable .............................................................................................................................     
(3,142 )     
(854 ) 
Accrued liabilities..............................................................................................................................     
(738 )     
(1,226 ) 
Net cash provided by operating activities .......................................................................................     
7,084      
7,738  
Cash used in investing activities: 
      
        
  
Capital expenditures for property, plant and equipment ................................................................     
(786 )     
(813 ) 
Insurance proceeds received for damage to equipment .................................................................     
-      
34  
Proceeds from sale of property, plant and equipment .....................................................................     
105      
2  
Payment to acquire Manhattan and MTE, net of cash acquired ....................................................     
-      
(16,136 ) 
Aggregate adjustment from the Manhattan and MTE acquisition ...............................................     
488      
-  
Net cash used in investing activities ...................................................................................................     
(193 )     
(16,913 ) 
Financing activities: 
      
        
  
Repayments under revolving line of credit ...........................................................................................     
(75,274 )     
(1,746 ) 
Borrowings under revolving line of credit .............................................................................................     
70,712      
14,420  
Purchase of treasury stock from related parties ..................................................................................     
-      
(207 ) 
Issuance of common stock ..........................................................................................................................     
-      
98  
Dividends paid ................................................................................................................................................     
(3,242 )     
(3,246 ) 
Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities .....................................................................     
(7,804 )     
9,319  
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents ................................................................     
(913 )     
144  
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period ............................................................................     
1,742      
1,598  
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period ...................................................................................   $ 
829    $ 
1,742  
  
      
        
  
Supplemental cash flow information: 
      
        
  
Income taxes paid ..........................................................................................................................................   $ 
2,747    $ 
1,142  
Interest paid .....................................................................................................................................................     
818      
45  
  
      
        
  
Noncash activities: 
      
        
  
Property, plant and equipment purchased but unpaid ...................................................................     
(32 )     
(43 ) 
Dividends declared but unpaid .................................................................................................................     
(843 )     
(815 ) 
  
See notes to consolidated financial statements. 
  
 
 

F-7 
Crown Crafts, Inc. and Subsidiaries 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
  
Note 1 – Description of Business 
  
Crown Crafts, Inc. (the “Company”) was originally formed as a Georgia corporation in 1957 and was reincorporated as 
a Delaware corporation in 2003. The Company operates indirectly through four of its wholly-owned subsidiaries, NoJo Baby & 
Kids, Inc. (“NoJo”), Sassy Baby, Inc. (“Sassy”), Manhattan Group, LLC (“Manhattan”) and Manhattan Toy Europe Limited (“MTE”) 
in the infant, toddler and juvenile products segment within the consumer products industry. The infant, toddler and juvenile 
products segment consists of infant and toddler bedding and blankets, bibs, soft bath products, disposable products, 
developmental toys and accessories. Most sales of the Company’s products are generally made directly to retailers, such as 
mass merchants, large chain stores, mid-tier retailers, juvenile specialty stores, value channel stores, grocery and drug stores, 
restaurants, wholesale clubs and internet-based retailers. Manhattan also sells direct to consumer through its website, 
www.manhattantoy.com. The Company’s products are marketed under a variety of Company-owned trademarks, under 
trademarks licensed from others and as private label goods. 
  
The Company's fiscal year ends on the Sunday nearest to or on March 31. References herein to “fiscal year 2024” or 
“2024” represent the 52-week period ended March 31, 2024, and references herein to “fiscal year 2023” or “2023” represent the 
52-week period ended April 2, 2023. 
  
Note 2 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies 
  
Basis of Presentation: The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company and 
have been prepared pursuant to accounting principles generally accepted in the U.S. (“GAAP”) as promulgated by the Financial 
Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”). References herein to GAAP are to topics within the FASB Accounting Standards 
Codification (the “FASB ASC”), which the FASB periodically revises through the issuance of an Accounting Standards Update 
(“ASU”) and which has been established by the FASB as the authoritative source for GAAP recognized by the FASB to be applied 
by nongovernmental entities. 
  
Use of Estimates: The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make 
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and 
liabilities as of the date of the consolidated balance sheets and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the 
periods presented on the consolidated statements of income and cash flows. Significant estimates are made with respect to: 
  
  
● 
Allowances related to accounts receivable for expected credit losses and for customer deductions for returns,
allowances and disputes, 
  
● 
Inventory reserves for discontinued finished goods, and 
  
● 
A reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities in respect of the tax impact of state apportionment percentages. 
  
Actual results could differ materially from these estimates. 
  
Cash and Cash Equivalents: The Company’s credit facility consists of a revolving line of credit under a financing 
agreement with The CIT Group/Commercial Services (“CIT”). The Company classifies a negative balance outstanding under this 
revolving line of credit as cash and cash equivalents, as these amounts are legally owed to the Company and are immediately 
available to be drawn upon by the Company. There are no compensating balance requirements or other restrictions on the 
transfer of amounts associated with the Company’s depository accounts. 
  
Financial Instruments: For short-term instruments such as cash and cash equivalents, accounts receivable and accounts 
payable, the Company uses carrying value as a reasonable estimate of fair value. Additionally, the Company’s long-term debt is 
a revolving credit facility whereby the Company uses carrying value as a reasonable estimate of fair value. 
  
Segments and Related Information: The Company operates primarily in one principal segment, infant, toddler and 
juvenile products. These products consist of infant and toddler bedding and blankets, bibs, soft bath products, disposable 
products, developmental and bath toys and accessories. Net sales of bedding, blankets and accessories and net sales of bibs, 
bath and disposable products for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 are as follows (in thousands): 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
Bedding, blankets and accessories .................................................................................   $ 
32,036    $ 
36,747  
Bibs, toys and disposable products ................................................................................     
55,596      
38,306  
Total net sales ...........................................................................................................   $ 
87,632    $ 
75,053  

F-8 
Revenue Recognition: Revenue is recognized upon the satisfaction of all contractual performance obligations and the 
transfer of control of the products sold to the customer. The majority of the Company’s sales consists of single performance 
obligation arrangements for which the transaction price for a given product sold is equivalent to the price quoted for the 
product, net of any stated discounts applicable at a point in time. Each sales transaction results in an implicit contract with the 
customer to deliver a product as directed by the customer. Shipping and handling costs that are charged to customers are 
included in net sales, and the Company’s costs associated with shipping and handling activities are included in cost of products 
sold. 
  
Revenue from sales made directly to consumers is recorded when the shipped products have been received by 
customers, and excludes sales taxes collected on behalf of governmental entities. Revenue from sales made to retailers is 
recorded when legal title has been passed to the customer based upon the terms of the customer’s purchase order, the 
Company’s sales invoice, or other associated relevant documents. Such terms usually stipulate that legal title will pass when 
the shipped products are no longer under the control of the Company, such as when the products are picked up at the 
Company’s facility by the customer or by a common carrier. Payment terms can vary from prepayment for sales made directly 
to consumers to payment due in arrears (generally, 60 days of being invoiced) for sales made to retailers. 
  
Allowances Against Accounts Receivable: The Company estimates certain allowances from revenues recognized 
through sales made to its customers. These allowances include anticipated returns and claims, expected credit losses, 
chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts, cooperative advertising allowances, warehouse allowances, 
placement fees, volume rebates, coupons, discounts and other allowances. 
  
The allowance for anticipated returns and claims is estimated based upon the Company’s historical experience with 
actual returns and claims, combined with the consideration of events that could result in a change from historical rates on a 
per-customer basis. The allowance for anticipated returns and claims is recorded as a reduction of net sales in the reporting 
period within which the related sales are recorded. 
  
To reduce the Company’s exposure to expected credit losses, and to enhance the predictability of its cash flows, the 
Company assigns substantially all of its receivables under factoring agreements with CIT. In the event that a factored receivable 
becomes uncollectible due to creditworthiness, CIT bears the risk of loss. With respect to the receivables that are not assigned 
under factoring agreements with CIT, the Company addresses this credit risk by establishing an allowance that is intended to 
represent the Company’s best estimate of the expected credit losses for such receivables. In the development of this estimate, 
the Company makes a number of judgements utilizing the Current Expected Credit Losses (“CECL”) methodology, which 
requires the Company to estimate lifetime expected credit losses by specifically analyzing the receivables. This analysis 
incorporates an aging of the receivables, relevant payment history and historical loss experience, as well as the consideration 
of customer concentrations, customer creditworthiness, negotiated changes to the payment terms of customers, recent 
economic trends, and expectations regarding economic conditions over a reasonable and supportable future period. The 
allowance for expected credit losses is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated 
statements of income. 
  
The allowance for chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts, cooperative advertising, 
warehouse allowances, placement fees, volume rebates, coupons, discounts and other allowances is recorded commensurate 
with sales activity or using the straight-line method, as appropriate. The majority of the Company’s allowances for such 
chargebacks occurs on a per-invoice basis. When a customer requests to have an agreed-upon deduction applied against the 
customer’s outstanding balance due to the Company, the allowances are correspondingly reduced to reflect such payments or 
credits issued against the customer’s account balance. The Company analyzes the components of the allowances for customer 
chargebacks monthly and adjusts the allowances to appropriate levels. Since allowances associated with cooperative 
advertising are accrued commensurate with sales activity or using the straight-line method, as appropriate, the timing of 
funding requests for cooperative advertising may result in fluctuations in the allowance from period to period, although such 
timing should not have a material impact on the consolidated statements of income. The allowance for cooperative advertising 
is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of income. All other allowances for 
chargebacks related to negotiated customer terms and discounts, warehouse allowances, placement fees, volume rebates, 
coupons and discounts are recorded as a reduction of net sales in the reporting period within which the related sales are 
recorded. 
  
The Company’s actual experience associated with its allowances against accounts receivable in a future period may 
differ from the judgements, estimates, analysis and considerations employed in the development of these allowances. Thus, 
the Company’s allowances against accounts receivable at any point in time may be over-funded or under-funded. 
   
 
 

F-9 
Credit Concentration: The Company’s accounts receivable at March 31, 2024 amounted to $22.4 million, net of 
allowances of $1.5 million. Of this amount, $18.6 million was due from CIT under the factoring agreements, which represents 
the maximum loss that the Company could incur if CIT failed completely to perform its obligations under the factoring 
agreements. The Company’s accounts receivable at April 2, 2023 amounted to $22.8 million, net of allowances of $1.5 million. 
Of this amount, $20.7 million was due from CIT under the factoring agreements, which represents the maximum loss that the 
Company could have incurred if CIT had failed completely to perform its obligations under the factoring agreements. 
  
Inventory Valuation: The preparation of the Company's financial statements requires careful determination of the 
appropriate value of the Company's inventory balances. Such amounts are presented as a current asset in the accompanying 
consolidated balance sheets and are a direct determinant of cost of products sold in the accompanying consolidated 
statements of income and, therefore, have a significant impact on the amount of net income reported in the accounting 
periods. The basis of accounting for inventories is cost, which includes the direct supplier acquisition cost, duties, taxes and 
freight, and the indirect costs to design, develop, source and store the product until it is sold. Once cost has been determined, 
the Company’s inventory is then stated at the lower of cost or net realizable value, with cost determined using the first-in, first-
out (“FIFO”) method, which assumes that inventory quantities are sold in the order in which they are acquired. 
  
The determination of the indirect charges and their allocation to the Company’s finished goods inventories is complex 
and requires significant management judgment and estimates. If management made different judgments or utilized different 
estimates, then differences would result in the valuation of the Company’s inventories and in the amount and timing of the 
Company’s cost of products sold and the resulting net income for the reporting period. 
  
On a periodic basis, management reviews its inventory quantities on hand for obsolescence, physical deterioration, 
changes in price levels and the existence of quantities on hand which may not reasonably be expected to be sold within the 
Company’s normal operating cycle. To the extent that any of these conditions is believed to exist or the market value of the 
inventory expected to be realized in the ordinary course of business is otherwise no longer as great as its carrying value, an 
allowance against the inventory value is established. To the extent that this allowance is established or increased during an 
accounting period, an expense is recorded in cost of products sold in the Company’s consolidated statements of income. Only 
when inventory for which an allowance has been established is later sold or is otherwise disposed is the allowance reduced 
accordingly. Significant management judgment is required in determining the amount and adequacy of this allowance. In the 
event that actual results differ from management’s estimates or these estimates and judgments are revised in future periods, 
the Company may not fully realize the carrying value of its inventory or may need to establish additional allowances, either of 
which could materially impact the Company’s financial position and results of operations. 
  
Leases: The Company capitalizes most of its operating lease obligations as right of use assets and recognizes 
corresponding lease liabilities. The Company elects to use the practical expedient that permits the Company to exclude short-
term agreements of less than 12 months from capitalization. The Company is a party to various operating leases for offices, 
warehousing facilities and certain office equipment. The leases expire at various dates, have varying options to renew and 
cancel, and may contain escalation provisions. The Company recognizes as expense non-variable lease payments ratably over 
the lease term. The key estimates for the Company’s leases include the discount rate used to discount the unpaid lease payment 
to present value and the lease term. The Company’s leases generally do not include a readily determinable implicit rate; 
therefore, management determined the incremental borrowing rate to discount the lease payment based on the information 
available at lease commencement. For purposes of such estimates, a lease term includes the noncancellable period under the 
applicable lease. 
  
Depreciation and Amortization: The accompanying consolidated balance sheets reflect property, plant and equipment, 
and certain intangible assets at cost less accumulated depreciation or amortization. The Company capitalizes additions and 
improvements and expenses maintenance and repairs as incurred. Depreciation and amortization are computed using the 
straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets, which are three to eight years for property, plant and 
equipment, and five to twenty years for intangible assets other than goodwill. The Company amortizes improvements to its 
leased facilities over the term of the lease or the estimated useful life of the asset, whichever is shorter. 
  
Patent Costs: The Company incurs certain legal and related costs in connection with patent applications. The Company 
capitalizes such costs to be amortized over the expected life of the patent to the extent that an economic benefit is anticipated 
from the resulting patent or an alternative future use is available to the Company. The Company also capitalizes legal and other 
costs incurred in the protection or defense of the Company’s patents when it is believed that the future economic benefit of 
the patent will be maintained or increased and a successful defense is probable. Capitalized patent defense costs are amortized 
over the remaining expected life of the related patent. The Company’s evaluation of future economic benefit of its patents 
involves considerable management judgment, and a different conclusion could result in a material impairment charge up to 
the carrying value of these assets. 
  

F-10 
Valuation of Long-Lived Assets and Identifiable Intangible Assets: In addition to the depreciation and amortization 
procedures set forth above, the Company reviews for impairment long-lived asset groups and certain identifiable intangible 
asset groups whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of any asset group may not be 
recoverable. In the event of an impairment, the asset is written down to its fair value. 
  
Royalty Payments: The Company has entered into agreements that provide for royalty payments based on a 
percentage of sales with certain minimum guaranteed amounts. These royalty amounts are accrued based upon historical sales 
rates adjusted for current sales trends by customers. Royalty expense is included in cost of products sold in the accompanying 
consolidated statements of income and amounted to $5.3 million and $5.2 million for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 
and April 2, 2023, respectively. 
  
Provision for Income Taxes: The Company’s provision for income taxes includes all currently payable federal, state, local 
and foreign taxes and is based upon the Company’s effective tax rate, which is based on the Company’s pre-tax income, as 
adjusted for certain expenses within the consolidated statements of income that will never be deductible on the Company’s 
tax returns and certain charges expected to be deducted on the Company’s tax returns that will never be deducted on the 
consolidated statements of income, multiplied by the statutory tax rates for the various jurisdictions in which the Company 
operates and reduced by certain anticipated tax credits. The Company files income tax returns in the many jurisdictions in which 
it operates, including the U.S., several U.S. states and the People’s Republic of China. The statute of limitations varies by 
jurisdiction; taxable years open to examination as of March 31, 2024 were the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024, April 2, 2023, 
April 3, 2022, March 28, 2021, March 29, 2020 and March 31, 2019. 
  
Management evaluates items of income, deductions and credits reported on the Company’s various federal and state 
income tax returns filed and recognizes the effect of positions taken on those income tax returns only if those positions are 
more likely than not to be sustained. The Company applies the provisions of accounting guidelines that require a minimum 
recognition threshold that a tax benefit must meet before being recognized in the financial statements. Recognized income 
tax positions are measured at the largest amount that has a greater than 50% likelihood of being realized. Changes in 
recognition or measurement are reflected in the period in which the change in judgment occurs. 
  
After considering all relevant information regarding the calculation of the state portion of its income tax provision, the 
Company believes that the technical merits of the tax position that the Company has taken with respect to state apportionment 
percentages would more likely than not be sustained. However, the Company also realizes that the ultimate resolution of such 
tax position could result in a tax charge that is more than the amount realized based upon the application of the tax position 
taken. Therefore, the Company’s measurement regarding the tax impact of the revised state apportionment percentages 
resulted in the Company recording discrete reserves for unrecognized tax liabilities during the fiscal years ended March 31, 
2024 and April 2, 2023 of $43,000 and $73,000, respectively, in the accompanying consolidated statements of income. 
  
The Company’s policy is to accrue interest expense and penalties as appropriate on any estimated unrecognized tax 
liabilities as a charge to interest expense in the Company’s consolidated statements of income. During the fiscal years ended 
March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the Company accrued $28,000 and $45,000, respectively, for interest expense and penalties 
on the portion of the unrecognized tax liabilities for which the relevant statute of limitations remained unexpired. 
  
In August 2020, the Company received notification from the Franchise Tax Board of the State of California (the “FTB”) 
of its intention to examine the Company’s California consolidated income tax returns that the Company had filed for the fiscal 
years ended April 2, 2017, April 1, 2018 and March 31, 2019. On May 30, 2023, the Company and the FTB entered into an 
agreement to settle (“Settlement Agreement”) the FTB’s proposed assessment of additional income tax in respect of these 
consolidated income tax returns under examination for the amount of $442,000, payment of which was made by the Company 
to the FTB on May 31, 2023. Because the examination was ongoing as of April 2, 2023, and because the Settlement Agreement 
was entered into prior to the issuance of the accompanying consolidated financial statements for the fiscal year ended April 2, 
2023, the Company recorded the effect of the Settlement Agreement in the accompanying consolidated balance sheet as of 
April 2, 2023 and the consolidated statement of income for the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. The Company’s adjustment to 
its reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities associated with the tax returns under examination resulted in a discrete income tax 
benefit during the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023, net of the impact of federal income tax, of $81,000, and a net decrease to 
interest expense of $86,000. 
  
In February 2021, the Company was notified by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) that it had selected for 
examination the Company’s original and amended federal consolidated income tax returns that the Company had filed for its 
fiscal year ended April 2, 2017. On March 15, 2023, the Company agreed to accept the proposal by the IRS to disallow the 
Company’s claim for refund in the amount of $81,000 that was associated with the Company’s amended federal consolidated 
income tax return for the fiscal year ended April 2, 2017, which amount was recorded as a discrete income tax charge during 
the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. 

F-11 
Although management believes that the calculations and positions taken on its filed income tax returns are 
reasonable and justifiable, the outcome of an examination could result in an adjustment to the position that the Company took 
on such income tax returns. Such adjustment could also lead to adjustments to one or more other state income tax returns, or 
to income tax returns for subsequent fiscal years, or both. To the extent that the Company’s reserve for unrecognized tax 
liabilities is not adequate to support the cumulative effect of such adjustments, the Company could experience a material 
adverse impact on its future results of operations. Conversely, to the extent that the calculations and positions taken by the 
Company on the filed income tax returns under examination are sustained, the reversal of all or a portion of the Company’s 
reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities could result in a favorable impact on its future results of operations. 
  
Advertising Costs: The Company’s advertising costs are primarily associated with cooperative advertising arrangements 
with certain of the Company’s customers and are recognized using the straight-line method based upon aggregate annual 
estimated amounts for these customers, with periodic adjustments to the actual amounts of authorized agreements. 
Advertising expense is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of income and 
amounted to $572,000 and $422,000 for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. 
  
Business Combinations: The Company accounts for acquisitions using the acquisition method of accounting in 
accordance with FASB ASC Topic 805, Business Combinations. An acquisition is accounted for as a purchase and the appropriate 
account balances and operating activities are recorded in the Company’s consolidated financial statements as of the acquisition 
date and thereafter. Assets acquired, liabilities assumed and noncontrolling interests, if any, are measured at fair value as of the 
acquisition date using the appropriate valuation method. The Company may engage an independent third party to assist with 
these measurements. Goodwill resulting from an acquisition is recognized for the excess of the purchase price over the fair 
value of the tangible and identifiable intangible assets, less the liabilities assumed. 
  
Earnings Per Share: The Company calculates basic earnings per share by using a weighted average of the number of 
shares outstanding during the reporting periods. Diluted shares outstanding are calculated in accordance with the treasury 
stock method, which assumes that the proceeds from the exercise of all exercisable options would be used to repurchase shares 
at market value. The net number of shares issued after the exercise proceeds are exhausted represents the potentially dilutive 
effect of the exercisable options, which are added to basic shares to arrive at diluted shares. 
  
Recently-Issued Accounting Standards: In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-13, Financial Instruments – Credit 
Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments, the objective of which is to provide financial statement 
users with more information about the expected credit losses on financial instruments and other commitments to extend credit 
held by an entity. Current GAAP requires an “incurred loss” methodology for recognizing credit losses that delays recognition 
until it is probable that a loss has been incurred. Because this methodology restricted the recognition of credit losses that are 
expected, but did not yet meet the “probable” threshold, ASU No. 2016-13 was issued to require the consideration of a broader 
range of reasonable and supportable information when determining estimates of credit losses. The ASU is to be applied using 
a modified retrospective approach, and the ASU could have been early-adopted in the fiscal year that began after December 
15, 2018. When issued, ASU No. 2016-13 was required to be adopted no later than the fiscal year beginning after December 15, 
2019, but on November 15, 2019, the FASB issued ASU No. 2019-10, Financial Instruments – Credit Losses (Topic 326), Derivatives 
and Hedging (Topic 815), and Leases (Topic 842): Effective Dates, which provided for the deferral of the effective date of ASU No. 
2016-13 for a registrant that is a smaller reporting company to the first interim period of the fiscal year beginning after 
December 15, 2022. Accordingly, the Company adopted ASU No. 2016-13 effective as of April 3, 2023. Because the Company 
assigns substantially all of its trade accounts receivable under factoring agreements with CIT, the adoption of the ASU has not 
had a significant impact on the Company’s financial position, results of operations and related disclosures. 
  
In October 2023, the FASB issued ASU No. 2023-06, Disclosure Improvements – Codification Amendments in Response to 
the SEC’s Disclosure Update and Simplification Initiative, the objective of which is to clarify or improve disclosure and presentation 
requirements and to align the requirements in the FASB ASC with the SEC’s regulations. In August 2018, the SEC issued guidance 
in which the SEC referred certain of its disclosure requirements that overlap with GAAP to the FASB for potential incorporation 
into the FASB ASC. The amendments in ASU No. 2023-06 are the result of the FASB’s decision to incorporate into the FASB ASC 
14 of the 27 disclosures referred by the SEC. The FASB noted that the disclosure requirements in the SEC’s guidance and the 
FASB ASC should not be duplicated in both places. Accordingly, although the ASU was required to be adopted upon issuance, 
each amendment to the FASB ASC included in the ASU will not become effective until the effective date upon which the related 
SEC disclosure is no longer required. The amendments in this ASU are to be applied prospectively, and early application of the 
amendments is prohibited. The Company does not anticipate that the adoption of ASU No. 2023-06 will have a significant 
impact on the Company’s financial position, results of operations and related disclosures. 
   
 
 

F-12 
In November 2023, the FASB issued ASU No. 2023-07, Segment Reporting (Topic 280) – Improvements to Reportable 
Segment Disclosures, the objective of which is to improve the disclosures about a public entity’s reportable segments by 
providing more detailed information about a reportable segment’s expenses. For disclosures associated with annual and 
interim periods, the amendments in ASU No. 2023-07 are required to be adopted for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 
2023 and December 15, 2024, respectively, and early adoption is permitted. Upon adoption, a public entity must apply the 
amendments in ASU No. 2023-07 retrospectively to disclosures of all prior periods presented. The Company intends to adopt 
ASU No. 2023-07 effective as of April 1, 2024 and is evaluating the guidance of the ASU against its existing disclosures related 
to segment reporting. 
  
In December 2023, the FASB issued ASU No. 2023-09, Income Taxes (Topic 740) – Improvements to Income Tax 
Disclosures, the objective of which is to enhance the transparency and decision usefulness of income tax disclosures. The 
amendments in the ASU are required to be adopted for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024 and early adoption is 
permitted. The Company is evaluating the guidance of ASU No. 2023-09 against its existing disclosures related to income tax 
disclosures. 
  
The Company has determined that all other ASU’s issued which had become effective as of March 31, 2024, or which 
will become effective at some future date, are not expected to have a material impact on the Company’s consolidated financial 
statements. 
  
Note 3 – Inventories 
  
As of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the Company’s balances of inventory were $29.7 million and $34.2 million, 
respectively, nearly all of which were finished goods. 
  
Note 4 – Acquisition 
  
On the March 17, 2023 (the “Closing Date”), the Company acquired Manhattan and MTE, Manhattan’s wholly-owned 
subsidiary, from H Enterprises International, LLC (“HEI”) (“the Manhattan Acquisition”), for a purchase price of $17.0 million, 
subject to adjustments for cash as of the Closing Date and to the extent that actual net working capital as of the Closing Date 
differed from target net working capital of $13.75 million (the “Aggregate Adjustment”). The Manhattan Acquisition was funded 
with cash available on the Closing Date and borrowings under the Company’s revolving line of credit with CIT. On September 
29, 2023, the Company and HEI agreed to a settlement of the Aggregate Adjustment, pursuant to which HEI paid $509,000 to 
the Company, which included interest income of $21,000. 
  
The Manhattan Acquisition was accounted for in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 805, Business Combinations. The 
Company determined the allocation of the acquisition cost with the assistance of an independent third party. The identifiable 
assets acquired were recorded at their estimated fair value, which was determined based on available information and the use 
of multiple valuation approaches. The estimated useful lives of the identifiable intangible assets acquired were determined 
based upon the remaining time that these assets are expected to directly or indirectly contribute to the future cash flow of the 
Company. 
  
  
 
 

F-13 
The acquisition cost paid on the Closing Date amounted to $17.4 million, which included an estimate for cash as of 
the Closing Date and an estimate for the net working capital acquired. The settlement of the Aggregate Adjustment resulted in 
a decrease of the acquisition cost to $16.9 million. The following table represents the Company’s allocation of this acquisition 
cost (in thousands) to the identifiable assets acquired and the liabilities assumed based on their respective estimated fair values 
as of the acquisition date. The excess of the acquisition cost over the estimated fair value of the identifiable net assets acquired 
is reflected as goodwill. 
  
Tangible assets: 
      
  
Cash and cash equivalents ...................................................................................................................................  $ 
1,270  
Accounts receivable ...............................................................................................................................................    
3,160  
Inventories .................................................................................................................................................................    
12,479  
Prepaid expenses.....................................................................................................................................................    
350  
Other assets ...............................................................................................................................................................    
91  
Operating lease right of use assets ...................................................................................................................    
1,009  
Property, plant and equipment ..........................................................................................................................    
194  
Total tangible assets ............................................................................................................................................................    
18,553  
Amortizable intangible assets: 
      
  
Tradename .................................................................................................................................................................    
300  
Licensing relationships ..........................................................................................................................................    
200  
Customer relationships .........................................................................................................................................    
800  
Total amortizable intangible assets ................................................................................................................................    
1,300  
Goodwill ...................................................................................................................................................................................    
801  
Total acquired assets ...........................................................................................................................................................    
20,654  
  
      
  
Liabilities assumed: 
      
  
Accounts payable ....................................................................................................................................................    
2,048  
Accrued wages and benefits ...............................................................................................................................    
370  
Operating lease liabilities, current .....................................................................................................................    
226  
Other accrued liabilities ........................................................................................................................................    
308  
Operating lease liabilities, noncurrent .............................................................................................................    
783  
Total liabilities assumed......................................................................................................................................................    
3,735  
Net acquisition cost ................................................................................................................................................  $ 
16,919  
  
Based upon the allocation of the acquisition cost, the Company recognized $787,000 of goodwill as of the Closing 
Date, the entirety of which was assigned to the reporting unit of the Company that produces and markets infant and toddler 
bibs, developmental toys, feeding, bath care and disposable products, and the entirety of which is expected to be deductible 
for income tax purposes. In accordance with FASB ASC Topic 805, The financial statements as of and for the fiscal year ended 
April 2, 2023 were not retrospectively adjusted for any measurement-period adjustments that occurred during the fiscal year 
ended March 31, 2024. Rather, the adjustments to provisional amounts that were identified during the measurement period 
were recorded during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024, which is the reporting period in which the adjustments were 
determined. The Company considers the measurement period to have ended as of March 31, 2024 and further considers all 
measurement period adjustments to be final. The following table represents the adjustments made to the amount of goodwill 
during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. 
  
Amount of goodwill recognized based upon the preliminary allocation of the acquisition cost ......................  $ 
787,000  
Adjustments made during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024: 
      
  
Settlement of the Aggregate Adjustment ....................................................................................................................    
(488,000) 
Increases to pre-acquisition accounts receivable .......................................................................................................    
(48,000) 
Reductions to inventory as of the Closing Date ..........................................................................................................    
486,000  
Increases to pre-acquisition accounts payable ...........................................................................................................    
64,000  
Net adjustments made during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024 ............................................................    
14,000  
  
      
  
Amount of goodwill recognized as of March 31, 2024 ......................................................................................................  $ 
801,000  
  
The Manhattan Acquisition resulted in net sales of $18.5 million and $773,000 of developmental toy, feeding and baby 
care products during the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. Manhattan recorded amortization 
expense associated with the acquired amortizable intangible assets of $120,000 during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024, 
which is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of income. Amortization is 
computed using the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets, which are 15 years for the tradename, 
10 years for the customer and licensing relationships and 11 years on a weighted-average basis for the grouping taken together. 

F-14 
The Company determined, on a pro forma basis, that the combined net sales of the Company and Manhattan, giving 
effect to the Manhattan Acquisition as if it had been completed on March 29, 2021, is $100.8 million for the fiscal year ended 
April 2, 2023, and the combined net income for the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023 is $2.8 million. These amounts combine the 
net sales and net income (or loss, as applicable) from the Company’s consolidated statements of income for the fiscal year 
ended April 2, 2023 with the respective amounts from Manhattan’s consolidated statements of operations for its fiscal year 
ended December 31, 2022. The combined amounts of net income or loss include adjustments related to the amortization of 
the amortizable intangible assets acquired and estimates of the interest expense and income tax expense or benefit that would 
have been incurred, but otherwise do not reflect the costs of any integration activities or benefits that may result from the 
realization of future cost savings from operating efficiencies, or any revenue, tax or other synergies that may result from the 
Manhattan Acquisition. 
  
Note 5 – Financing Arrangements 
  
Factoring Agreements: To reduce its exposure to credit losses, the Company assigns substantially all of its trade 
accounts receivable to CIT pursuant to factoring agreements, which have expiration dates that are coterminous with that of the 
financing agreement described below. Under the terms of the factoring agreements, CIT remits customer payments to the 
Company as such payments are received by CIT. 
  
CIT bears credit losses with respect to assigned accounts receivable from approved shipments, while the Company 
bears the responsibility for adjustments from customers related to returns, allowances, claims and discounts. CIT may at any 
time terminate or limit its approval of shipments to a particular customer. If such a termination or limitation occurs, the 
Company either assumes (and may seek to mitigate) the credit risk for shipments to the customer after the date of such 
termination or limitation or discontinues shipments to the customer. Factoring fees, which are included in marketing and 
administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated statements of income, were $353,000 and $287,000 during the 
fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. There were no advances on the factoring agreements at March 
31, 2024 or April 2, 2023. 
  
Credit Facility: The Company’s credit facility at March 31, 2024 consisted of a revolving line of credit under a financing 
agreement with CIT of up to $35.0 million, which includes a $1.5 million sub-limit for letters of credit. The financing agreement 
matures on July 11, 2028, bears interest at the rate of prime minus 0.5% or the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) plus 
1.6%, and which is secured by a first lien on all assets of the Company. At March 31, 2024, the Company had elected to pay 
interest on balances owed under the revolving line of credit, if any, under the SOFR option, which was 6.9%. The financing 
agreement also provides for the payment by CIT to the Company of interest on daily negative balances, if any, held by CIT at 
the rate of prime as of the beginning of the calendar month minus 2.0%. 
  
As of March 31, 2024, there was a balance of $8.1 million owed on the revolving line of credit, there was no letter of 
credit outstanding and $19.2 million was available under the revolving line of credit based on the Company’s eligible accounts 
receivable and inventory balances. As of April 2, 2023, there was a balance of $12.7 million owed on the revolving line of credit, 
there was no letter of credit outstanding and $20.0 million was available under the revolving line of credit based on the 
Company’s eligible accounts receivable and inventory balances. 
  
The financing agreement contains usual and customary covenants for agreements of that type, including limitations 
on other indebtedness, liens, transfers of assets, investments and acquisitions, merger or consolidation transactions, 
transactions with affiliates, and changes in or amendments to the organizational documents for the Company and its 
subsidiaries. The Company believes it was in material compliance with these covenants as of March 31, 2024. 
  
Note 6 – Retirement Plan 
  
The Company sponsors a defined contribution retirement savings plan with a cash or deferred arrangement (the 
“401(k) Plan”), as provided by Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”). The 401(k) Plan covers substantially all 
employees, who may elect to contribute a portion of their compensation to the 401(k) Plan, subject to maximum amounts and 
percentages as prescribed in the Code. Each calendar year, the Board determines the portion, if any, of employee contributions 
that will be matched by the Company. 
  
For calendar years 2024, 2023 and 2022, the Board established the employer matching contributions at 100% of the 
first 2% of employee contributions and 50% of the next 3% of employee contributions to the 401(k) Plan. If an employee 
separates from the Company prior to the full vesting of the funds in their account, then the unvested portion of the matching 
employer amount in their account is forfeited when the employee receives a distribution from their account. The Company 
utilizes such forfeitures as an offset to the aggregate matching contributions. The Company’s matching contributions to the 
401(k) Plan, net of the utilization of forfeitures, were $320,000 and $293,000 for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 
2, 2023, respectively. 

F-15 
Note 7 – Goodwill, Customer Relationships and Other Intangible Assets 
  
Goodwill: Goodwill represents the excess of the purchase price over the fair value of net identifiable assets acquired in 
business combinations. For the purpose of presenting and measuring for the impairment of goodwill, the Company has two 
reporting units: one that produces and markets infant and toddler bedding, blankets and accessories and another that produces 
and markets infant and toddler bibs, developmental toys, bath care and disposable products. The goodwill of the reporting 
units of the Company as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 amounted to $30.8 million, which is reflected in the accompanying 
consolidated balance sheets net of accumulated impairment charges of $22.9 million, for a net reported balance of $7.9 million. 
  
The Company measures for impairment the goodwill within its reporting units annually as of the first day of the 
Company’s fiscal year. An additional interim measurement for impairment is performed during the year whenever an event or 
change in circumstances occurs that suggests that the fair value of either of the reporting units of the Company has more likely 
than not (defined as having a likelihood of greater than 50%) fallen below its carrying value. The annual or interim measurement 
for impairment is performed by first assessing qualitative factors to determine whether it is more likely than not that the fair 
value of a reporting unit is less than its carrying amount. If such qualitative factors so indicate, then the measurement for 
impairment is continued by calculating an estimate of the fair value of each reporting unit and comparing the estimated fair 
value to the carrying value of the reporting unit. If the carrying value exceeds the estimated fair value of the reporting unit, then 
an impairment charge is calculated as the difference between the carrying value of the reporting unit and its estimated fair 
value, not to exceed the goodwill of the reporting unit. 
  
On April 3, 2023, the Company performed a qualitative assessment to determine if it is more likely than not that the 
fair values of the Company’s reporting units are less than their carrying values by evaluating relevant events and circumstances, 
including financial performance, market conditions and share price. Based on this assessment, the Company concluded that 
the goodwill for each of the Company’s reporting units was not considered at risk of impairment. 
  
Other Intangible Assets: Other intangible assets as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 consisted primarily of the fair 
value of identifiable assets acquired in business combinations other than tangible assets and goodwill. The gross amount and 
accumulated amortization of the Company’s other intangible assets as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the amortization 
expense for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the entirety of which has been included in marketing and 
administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated statements of income, are as follows (in thousands): 
  
  
  
Gross Amount 
    
Accumulated 
Amortization 
    
Amortization Expense 
Fiscal Year Ended 
  
  
  March 31,     
April 2, 
    March 31,     
April 2, 
    March 31,     
April 2, 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
    
2024 
    
2023 
    
2024 
    
2023 
  
Tradename and trademarks .......   $ 
2,867    $ 
2,867    $ 
2,185    $ 
2,025    $ 
160    $ 
140  
Non-compete covenants .............     
98      
98      
98      
98      
-      
-  
Patents ...............................................     
1,601      
1,601      
1,107      
1,055      
52      
52  
Customer relationships ................     
8,174      
8,174      
6,658      
6,289      
369      
289  
Licensing relationships .................     
200      
200      
20      
-      
20      
-  
Total other intangible 
assets .....................................   $ 
12,940    $ 
12,940    $ 
10,068    $ 
9,467    $ 
601    $ 
481  
  
The Company estimates that its amortization expense will be $537,000, $422,000, $395,000, $349,000 and $211,000 in 
fiscal years 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028 and 2029, respectively. 
  
Note 8 – Leases 
  
During the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the Company capitalized operating lease obligations 
as right of use assets and recognized corresponding lease liabilities in the amount of $993,000 and $17.3 million. The Company 
made cash payments related to its recognized operating leases of $3.6 million and $2.3 million during the fiscal years ended 
March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. Such payments reduced the operating lease liabilities and were included in the 
cash flows provided by operating activities in the accompanying consolidated statements of cash flows. The Company 
recognized noncash reductions to its operating right of use assets resulting from reductions to its lease liabilities in the amount 
of $1.0 million and $224,000 during the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. As of March 31, 2024 
and April 2, 2023, the Company’s operating leases had weighted-average discount rates of 6.0% and 5.9%, respectively, and 
weighted-average remaining lease terms of 3.9 years and 5.0 years, respectively. 
   

F-16 
During the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the Company classified its operating lease costs within 
the accompanying consolidated statements of income as follows (in thousands): 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
Cost of products sold ..........................................................................................................................   $ 
3,956    $ 
1,938  
Marketing and administrative expenses ......................................................................................     
388      
183  
Total operating lease costs ..................................................................................................   $ 
4,344    $ 
2,121  
  
The maturities of the Company’s operating lease liabilities as of March 31, 2024 are as follows (in thousands): 
  
Fiscal Year 
      
  
2025 ................................................................................................................................................................................................  $ 
4,428  
2026 ................................................................................................................................................................................................    
4,510  
2027 ................................................................................................................................................................................................    
4,189  
2028 ................................................................................................................................................................................................    
3,952  
2029 ................................................................................................................................................................................................    
663  
Total undiscounted operating lease payments...............................................................................................................    
17,742  
Less imputed interest ...............................................................................................................................................................    
2,017  
Operating lease liabilities - net .........................................................................................................................................  $ 
15,725  
  
Note 9 – Stock-based Compensation 
  
The Company has three incentive stock plans, the 2006 Omnibus Incentive Plan (the “2006 Plan”), the 2014 Omnibus 
Equity Compensation Plan (the “2014 Plan”) and the 2021 Incentive Plan (the “2021 Plan”). As a result of the approval of the 
2014 Plan by the Company’s stockholders at the Company’s 2014 annual meeting, and the 2021 Plan by the Company’s 
stockholders at the Company’s 2021 annual meeting, grants may no longer be issued under either the 2006 Plan or the 2014 
Plan. 
  
The Company believes that awards of long-term, equity-based incentive compensation will attract and retain 
directors, officers and employees of the Company and will encourage these individuals to contribute to the successful 
performance of the Company, which will lead to the achievement of the Company’s overall goal of increasing stockholder value. 
Awards granted under the 2021 Plan may be in the form of incentive stock options, non-qualified stock options, shares of 
restricted or unrestricted stock, stock units, stock appreciation rights, or other stock-based awards. Awards may be granted 
subject to the achievement of performance goals or other conditions, and certain awards may be payable in stock or cash, or a 
combination of the two. The 2021 Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee of the Board, which selects eligible 
employees, non-employee directors and other individuals to participate in the 2021 Plan and determines the type, amount, 
duration (such duration not to exceed a term of ten (10) years for grants of stock options) and other terms of individual awards. 
At March 31, 2024, 439,000 shares of the Company’s common stock were available for future issuance under the 2021 Plan, 
which may be issued from authorized and unissued shares of the Company’s common stock or treasury shares. 
  
Stock-based compensation is calculated according to FASB ASC Topic 718, Compensation – Stock Compensation, which 
requires stock-based compensation to be accounted for using a fair-value-based measurement. During fiscal years 2024 and 
2023, the Company recorded $763,000 and $1.1 million of stock-based compensation, respectively. The Company records the 
compensation expense associated with stock-based awards granted to individuals in the same expense classifications as the 
cash compensation paid to those same individuals. No stock-based compensation costs were capitalized as part of the cost of 
an asset as of March 31, 2024. 
  
Stock Options: The following table represents stock option activity for fiscal years 2024 and 2023: 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
  
  Weighted-       
  
    Weighted-       
  
  
  
  
Average 
    Number of     
Average 
    Number of   
  
  
Exercise 
    
Options 
    
Exercise 
    
Options 
  
  
  
Price 
    Outstanding     
Price 
    Outstanding   
Outstanding at Beginning of Period .................................................  $ 
7.32      
735,500    $ 
7.39      
635,500  
Granted .......................................................................................................    
5.20      
170,000      
6.54      
120,000  
Exercised.....................................................................................................    
-      
-      
4.92      
(20,000) 
Expired ........................................................................................................    
6.14      
(10,000)     
-      
-  
Outstanding at End of Period .............................................................    
6.93      
895,500      
7.32      
735,500  
Exercisable at End of Period ................................................................    
7.41      
665,500      
7.42      
499,000  

F-17 
At March 31, 2024, the intrinsic value of the outstanding and exercisable stock options was $33,000 and $24,000, 
respectively. There were no stock options exercised during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. The intrinsic value of the stock 
options exercised during the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023 was $127,000. The Company did not receive any cash from the 
exercise of stock options during the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. Upon the exercise of stock options, participants may choose 
to surrender to the Company those shares from the option exercise necessary to satisfy the exercise amount and their income 
tax withholding obligations that arise from the option exercise. The effect on the cash flow of the Company from these 
“cashless” option exercises is that the Company remits cash on behalf of the participant to satisfy his or her income tax 
withholding obligations. The Company used cash to remit the required income tax withholding amounts from “cashless” option 
exercises of $10,000 during fiscal year 2023. As of April 2, 2023, the intrinsic value of both the outstanding and exercisable stock 
options was $87,000. 
  
Stock-based compensation is calculated according to FASB ASC Topic 718, Compensation – Stock Compensation, which 
requires stock-based compensation to be accounted for using a fair-value-based measurement. To determine the estimated 
fair value of stock options granted, the Company uses the Black-Scholes-Merton valuation formula, which is a closed-form 
model that uses an equation to estimate fair value. The following table sets forth the assumptions used to determine the fair 
value of the non-qualified stock options awarded to certain employees during fiscal years 2024 and 2023, which options vest 
over a two-year period, assuming continued service. 
  
  
  
Fiscal Year Ended 
  
  
  
March 31, 2024 
    April 2, 2023   
Number of options issued ....................................    
40,000      
10,000      
120,000      
120,000  
Grant date ..................................................................  March 26, 2024    November 14, 2023    
June 21, 2023    
June 7, 2022  
Dividend yield ...........................................................    
6.07%     
7.60%     
6.08 %     
4.89 % 
Expected volatility ...................................................    
20.00%     
20.00%     
25.00 %     
30.00 % 
Risk free interest rate ..............................................    
4.38%     
4.56%     
4.29 %     
2.95 % 
Contractual term (years) .......................................    
10.00      
10.00      
10.00      
10.00  
Expected term (years) ............................................    
3.00      
3.00      
3.00      
4.00  
Forfeiture rate ...........................................................    
5.00%     
5.00%     
5.00 %     
5.00 % 
Exercise price (grant-date closing price)  
per option ..............................................................  $ 
5.27    $ 
4.21    $ 
5.26    $ 
6.54  
Fair value per option ..............................................  $ 
0.32    $ 
0.20    $ 
0.46    $ 
0.90  
  
For the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the Company recognized compensation expense 
associated with stock options as follows (in thousands): 
  
  
  
Fiscal Year Ended March 31, 2024 
  
  
  
Cost of 
    
Marketing & 
      
  
  
  
  
Products 
    
Administrative     
Total 
  
Options Granted in Fiscal Year 
  
Sold 
    
Expenses 
    
Expense 
  
2022 ......................................................................................   $ 
10    $ 
21    $ 
31  
2023 ......................................................................................     
22      
32      
54  
2024 ......................................................................................     
9      
11      
20  
  
      
        
        
  
Total stock option compensation ................................................   $ 
41    $ 
64    $ 
105  
  
  
  
Fiscal Year Ended April 2, 2023 
  
  
  
Cost of 
    
Marketing & 
      
  
  
  
  
Products 
    
Administrative     
Total 
  
Options Granted in Fiscal Year 
  
Sold 
    
Expenses 
    
Expense 
  
2021 ......................................................................................   $ 
4    $ 
41    $ 
45  
2022 ......................................................................................     
40      
86      
126  
2023 ......................................................................................     
17      
24      
41  
  
      
        
        
  
Total stock option compensation ................................................   $ 
61    $ 
151    $ 
212  
  
 
 

F-18 
A summary of stock options outstanding and exercisable as of March 31, 2024 is as follows: 
  
   
      
  
      
  
    
Weighted- 
      
  
    
Weighted- 
  
   
      
  
    
Weighted- 
    
Avg. Exercise 
      
  
    
Avg. Exercise 
  
   
    
Number 
    Avg. Remaining     
Price of 
    
Number 
    
Price of 
  
Exercise 
    
of Options 
    
Contractual 
    
Options 
    
of Options 
    
Options 
  
Price 
    
Outstanding 
    
Life in Years 
    
Outstanding 
    
Exercisable 
    
Exercisable 
  
$4.00
- 4.99       
105,000      
6.09    $ 
4.78      
95,000    $ 
4.84  
$5.00
- 5.99       
180,000      
8.84    $ 
5.33      
20,000    $ 
5.90  
$6.00
- 6.99       
120,000      
8.19    $ 
6.54      
60,000    $ 
6.54  
$7.00
- 7.99       
365,500      
5.22    $ 
7.74      
365,500    $ 
7.74  
$8.00
- 8.99       
55,000      
1.20    $ 
8.38      
55,000    $ 
8.38  
$9.00
- 9.99       
70,000      
2.19    $ 
9.60      
70,000    $ 
9.60  
  
       
895,500      
5.96    $ 
6.93      
665,500    $ 
7.41  
  
As of March 31, 2024, total unrecognized stock-option compensation costs amounted to $63,000, which will be 
recognized as the underlying stock options vest over a weighted-average period of 8.8 months. The amount of future stock-
option compensation expense could be affected by any future stock option grants and by the separation from the Company of 
any employee or director who has stock options that are unvested as of such individual’s separation date. 
  
Non-vested Stock Granted to Directors: The following shares of non-vested stock were granted to the Company’s 
directors: 
  
Number of 
Shares 
    
Fair Value per 
Share 
  
Grant Date 
  
Vesting Period (Years) 
60,412 
      
$4.85 
  
August 15, 2023 
  
One 
46,896 
      
6.65 
  
August 16, 2022 
  
One 
40,165 
      
7.47 
  
August 11, 2021 
  
One 
41,452 
      
5.79 
  
August 12, 2020 
  
Two 
  
The fair value of the non-vested stock granted to the Company’s directors was based on the closing price of the 
Company’s common stock on the date of each grant. 
  
The non-vested stock granted on August 11, 2021 included 8,033 shares granted to E. Randall Chestnut, formerly the 
Company’s Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. On May 1, 2022, upon the resignation of Mr. Chestnut from the 
Board and his retirement from all positions that he held within the Company, the vesting of these 8,033 shares was accelerated, 
with such shares having an aggregate value on such date of $50,000. 
  
The non-vested stock granted on August 16, 2022 included 11,724 shares granted to Sidney Kirschner, a director of 
the Company since 2001. Upon Mr. Kirschner’s death on February 21, 2023, the vesting of these 11,724 shares was accelerated, 
with such shares having an aggregate value on such date of $67,000. 
  
In August 2023 and August 2022, 35,172 shares and 52,856 shares, respectively, that had been granted to the 
Company’s directors vested, having an aggregate value of $168,000 and $331,000, respectively. The remaining shares set forth 
above will vest over the periods indicated, assuming continued service. 
  
Non-vested Stock Granted to Employees: The following shares of non-vested stock were granted to certain of the 
Company’s employees: 
  
Number of 
Shares 
    
Fair Value per 
Share 
  
Grant Date 
  
Vesting Date 
70,000 
      
$5.27 
  March 26, 2024 
  March 26, 2027 
26,000 
      
4.77 
  August 14, 2023 
  August 14, 2024 
40,000 
      
5.85 
  March 21, 2023 
  March 21, 2025 
25,000 
      
7.98 
  June 9, 2021 
  June 9, 2022 
10,000 
      
7.60 
  February 22, 2021 
  February 22, 2023 
20,000 
      
4.92 
  June 10, 2020 
  June 10, 2022 
  
These shares vest on the dates indicated, assuming continued service. In June 2022 and February 2023, 45,000 shares 
and 10,000 shares, respectively, that had been granted to certain of the Company’s employees vested, having an aggregate 
value of $293,000 and $57,000 respectively. 

F-19 
Performance Award Shares: On March 1, 2022, performance awards were granted to certain of the Company’s 
executive officers, consisting of 187,500 shares, of which: (a) 75,000 shares shall be earned if the closing price per share of the 
Company’s common stock equals or exceeds $8.00 on ten trading days within any period of twenty consecutive trading days 
prior to March 1, 2027; and (b) 112,500 shares shall be earned if the closing price per share of the Company’s common stock 
equals or exceeds $9.00 on ten trading days within any period of twenty consecutive trading days prior to March 1, 2027.  Upon 
the achievement of each applicable stock hurdle described above: (i) one-third of the shares that are earned shall vest on the 
later of the date on which the shares are earned and March 1, 2023; (ii) one-third of the shares that are earned shall vest on 
the first anniversary of the date on which the shares are earned; and (iii) one-third shall vest on the second anniversary of the 
date on which the shares are earned. All shares that are non-earned or non-vested will be forfeited upon the termination of 
service. The Company, with the assistance of an independent third party, determined that the grant date fair value of the awards 
amounted to $732,000. 
  
For the fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, the Company recognized compensation expense 
associated with non-vested stock grants, which is included in marketing and administrative expenses in the accompanying 
consolidated statements of income, as follows (in thousands): 
  
Stock Granted in Fiscal Year 
 
2024 
  
2023 
 
2021 .......................................................................................................................... $ 
-  $ 
48 
2022 ..........................................................................................................................   
185    
576 
2023 ..........................................................................................................................   
195    
269 
2024 ..........................................................................................................................   
278    
- 
  
      
        
  
Total stock grant compensation ......................................................................................................... $ 
658  $ 
893 
  
As of March 31, 2024, total unrecognized compensation expense related to the Company’s non-vested stock grants 
was $689,000, which will be recognized over the remaining portion of the respective vesting periods associated with each block 
of grants, such grants having a weighted average vesting term of 10.3 months. The amount of future compensation expense 
related to non-vested stock grants could be affected by any future non-vested stock grants and by the separation from the 
Company of any individual who has unearned or unvested grants as of such individual’s separation date. 
  
Note 10 – Income Taxes 
  
The Company’s income tax provision for fiscal years 2024 and 2023 is summarized below (in thousands): 
  
  
  
Fiscal year ended March 31, 2024 
  
  
  
Current 
    
Deferred 
    
Total 
  
Income tax expense (benefit) on current year income: 
      
        
        
  
Federal .......................................................................................................  $ 
2,065    $ 
(883)   $ 
1,182  
State............................................................................................................    
346      
(209)     
137  
Foreign ......................................................................................................    
14      
-      
14  
Total income tax expense (benefit) on current year income ......    
2,425      
(1,092)     
1,333  
Income tax expense (benefit) - discrete items: 
      
        
        
  
Reserve for unrecognized tax benefits ..........................................    
43      
-      
43  
Adjustment to prior year provision .................................................    
(68)     
-      
(68) 
Tax shortfall related to stock-based compensation ..................    
26      
-      
26  
Income tax expense - discrete items ...................................................    
1      
-      
1  
Total income tax expense (benefit) .....................................................  $ 
2,426    $ 
(1,092)   $ 
1,334  
  
  
  
Fiscal year ended April 2, 2023 
  
  
  
Current 
    
Deferred 
    
Total 
  
Income tax expense (benefit) on current year income: 
      
        
        
  
Federal .......................................................................................................  $ 
1,540    $ 
(169)   $ 
1,371  
State............................................................................................................    
381      
(36)     
345  
Foreign ......................................................................................................    
10      
-      
10  
Total income tax expense (benefit) on current year income ......    
1,931      
(205)     
1,726  
Income tax expense (benefit) - discrete items: 
      
        
        
  
Reserve for unrecognized tax benefits ..........................................    
(7)     
-      
(7) 
Adjustment to prior year provision .................................................    
51      
-      
51  
Tax shortfall related to stock-based compensation ..................    
6      
-      
6  
Income tax expense - discrete items ...................................................    
50      
-      
50  
Total income tax expense (benefit) .....................................................  $ 
1,981    $ 
(205)   $ 
1,776  

F-20 
The tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant portions of the deferred tax assets and deferred 
tax liabilities as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 are as follows (in thousands): 
  
  
  March 31, 2024     
April 2, 2023 
  
Deferred income tax assets: 
      
        
  
Employee wage and benefit accruals .......................................................................................   $ 
148    $ 
186  
Accounts receivable and inventory reserves .........................................................................     
585      
557  
Operating lease liabilities .............................................................................................................     
3,892      
4,286  
Intangible assets ..............................................................................................................................     
243      
224  
State net operating loss carryforwards ....................................................................................     
704      
706  
Accrued interest and penalty on unrecognized tax liabilities .........................................     
18      
54  
Stock-based compensation .........................................................................................................     
469      
378  
Total gross deferred income tax assets ...............................................................................     
6,059      
6,391  
Less valuation allowance ..........................................................................................................     
(704)     
(706) 
Deferred income tax assets after valuation allowance ..................................................     
5,355      
5,685  
  
      
        
  
Deferred income tax liabilities: 
      
        
  
Prepaid expenses .............................................................................................................................     
(552)     
(610) 
Operating lease right of use assets............................................................................................     
(3,700)     
(4,283) 
Intangible assets ..............................................................................................................................     
(666)     
(1,390) 
Property, plant and equipment ..................................................................................................     
(160)     
(217) 
Total deferred income tax liabilities .....................................................................................     
(5,078)     
(6,500) 
Net deferred income tax assets (liabilities) ........................................................................   $ 
277    $ 
(815) 
  
In assessing the probability that the Company’s deferred tax assets will be realized, management of the Company has 
considered whether it is more likely than not that some portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be realized. The ultimate 
realization of deferred tax assets is dependent upon the generation of taxable income during the future periods in which the 
temporary differences giving rise to the deferred tax assets will become deductible. The Company has also considered the 
scheduled inclusion into taxable income in future periods of the temporary differences giving rise to the Company’s deferred 
tax liabilities. The valuation allowance as of March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 was related to state net operating loss 
carryforwards that the Company does not expect to be realized. Based upon the Company’s expectations of the generation of 
sufficient taxable income during future periods, the Company believes that it is more likely than not that the Company will 
realize its deferred tax assets, net of the valuation allowance and the deferred tax liabilities. 
  
The following table sets forth the reconciliation of the beginning and ending amounts of unrecognized tax liabilities 
for fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023 (in thousands): 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
Balance at beginning of period ..................................................................................................   $ 
323    $ 
739  
Additions related to current year positions ...........................................................................     
43      
73  
Additions related to prior year positions ................................................................................     
28      
45  
Revaluations due to change in enacted tax rates ................................................................     
-      
-  
Reductions for tax positions of prior years .............................................................................     
-      
-  
Reductions due to lapses of the statute of limitations ......................................................     
-      
-  
Reductions pursuant to judgements and settlements ......................................................     
-      
(534) 
Balance at end of period ...............................................................................................................   $ 
394    $ 
323  
  
In August 2020, the Company received notification from the FTB of its intention to examine the Company’s California 
consolidated income tax returns that the Company had filed for the fiscal years ended April 2, 2017, April 1, 2018 and March 31, 
2019. On May 30, 2023, the Company and the FTB entered into an agreement to settle (“Settlement Agreement”) the FTB’s 
proposed assessment of additional income tax in respect of these consolidated income tax returns under examination for the 
amount of $442,000, payment of which was made by the Company to the FTB on May 31, 2023. Because the examination was 
ongoing as of April 2, 2023, and because the Settlement Agreement was entered into prior to the issuance of the accompanying 
consolidated financial statements for the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023, the Company recorded the effect of the Settlement 
Agreement in the accompanying consolidated balance sheet as of April 2, 2023 and the consolidated statement of income for 
the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. The Company’s adjustment to its reserve for unrecognized tax liabilities associated with the 
tax returns under examination resulted in a discrete income tax benefit during fiscal year 2023, net of the impact of federal 
income tax, of $81,000, and a net decrease to interest expense of $86,000. 
  

F-21 
In February 2021, the Company was notified by the IRS that it had selected for examination the Company’s original 
and amended federal consolidated income tax returns that the Company had filed for its fiscal year ended April 2, 2017. On 
March 15, 2023, the Company agreed to accept the proposal by the IRS to disallow the Company’s claim for refund in the 
amount of $81,000 that was associated with the Company’s amended federal consolidated income tax return for the fiscal year 
ended April 2, 2017, which amount was recorded as a discrete income tax charge during the fiscal year ended April 2, 2023. 
  
During fiscal years 2024 and 2023, the Company recorded discrete income tax charges of $26,000 and $6,000, 
respectively, to reflect the effect of the tax shortfall arising from the exercise of stock options and the vesting of non-vested 
stock during the periods. 
  
The Company’s provision for income taxes is based upon effective tax rates of 21.4% and 23.9% in the fiscal years 
ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023, respectively. These effective tax rates are the sum of the top U.S. statutory federal 
income tax rate and a composite rate for state income taxes, net of federal tax benefit, in the various states in which the 
Company operates, plus the net effect of various discrete items. 
  
The following table reconciles income tax expense on income from continuing operations at the U.S. federal income 
tax statutory rate to the net income tax provision reported for fiscal years 2024 and 2023 (amounts in thousands): 
  
  
  
Fiscal year ended  
March 31, 2024  
    
Fiscal year ended  
April 2, 2023 
  
  
  
Amount     Percentage    
Amount     Percentage  
Income before income tax expense ...........................................................  $ 
6,228      
100.0%  $ 
7,426      
100.0% 
  
      
        
        
        
  
Tax expense at federal statutory rate .........................................................  $ 
1,308      
21.0%  $ 
1,560      
21.0% 
State income taxes, net of Federal income tax benefit ........................    
108      
1.7%    
272      
3.6% 
Tax credits ............................................................................................................    
(115)     
-1.8%    
(135)     
-1.8% 
Discrete items .....................................................................................................    
1      
0.0%    
50      
0.7% 
Other - net, including foreign .......................................................................    
32      
0.5%    
29      
0.4% 
Income tax expense ..........................................................................................  $ 
1,334      
21.4%  $ 
1,776      
23.9% 
  
State and foreign income taxes consist primarily of amounts paid to the State of California and the People’s Republic 
of China, respectively. 
  
Note 11 – Shareholders’ Equity 
  
Dividends: The holders of shares of the Company’s common stock are entitled to receive dividends when and as 
declared by the Board. Cash dividends of $0.32 per share were declared during each of fiscal years 2024 and 2023, amounting 
to $3.3 million and $3.2 million, respectively. The Company’s financing agreement with CIT permits the payment by the 
Company of cash dividends on its common stock without limitation, provided there is no default before or as a result of the 
payment of such dividends. 
  
Stock Repurchases: The Company acquired treasury shares by way of the surrender to the Company from several 
employees shares of common stock to satisfy the exercise price and income tax withholding obligations relating to the exercise 
of stock options and the vesting of stock. In this manner, the Company acquired 33,000 treasury shares during the fiscal year 
ended April 2, 2023 at a weighted-average market value of $6.31 per share. There were no such transactions during the fiscal 
year ended March 31, 2024. 
  
Note 12 – Major Customers 
  
The table below sets forth those customers that represented more than 10% of the Company’s gross sales during the 
fiscal years ended March 31, 2024 and April 2, 2023. 
  
  
  
2024 
    
2023 
  
Walmart Inc. .................................................................................................................................     
42% 
      
51% 
  
Amazon.com, Inc. .......................................................................................................................     
19% 
      
20% 
  
  
Note 13 – Commitments and Contingencies 
  
Royalty expense amounted to $5.3 million and $5.2 million during fiscal years 2024 and 2023, respectively. The 
Company’s commitment for the next five fiscal years for minimum guaranteed royalty payments under its license agreements 
as of March 31, 2024 is $3.0 million, consisting of $2.5 million, $351,000, $90,000, $48,000 and $48,000 due in fiscal years 2025, 
2026, 2027, 2028 and 2029, respectively. 

F-22 
The Company is, from time to time, involved in various legal proceedings relating to claims arising in the ordinary 
course of its business. Neither the Company nor any of its subsidiaries is a party to any such legal proceeding the outcome of 
which, individually or in the aggregate, is expected to have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial position, results 
of operations or cash flows. 
  
Note 14 – Subsequent Events 
  
The Company has evaluated events that have occurred between March 31, 2024 and the date that the accompanying 
financial statements were issued, and has determined that there are no material subsequent events that require disclosure. 
  
  
  

 
SIGNATURES 
  
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly 
caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized. 
  
  
CROWN CRAFTS, INC. 
  
  
  
Date: June 28, 2024 
By:  /s/ Olivia W. Elliott 
  
  
Olivia W. Elliott 
  
  
President, Chief Executive Officer and Director 
  
  
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the 
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated: 
  
  
Signatures 
  
               Title 
Date 
  
  
  
  
/s/ Olivia W. Elliott 
  
President, Chief Executive Officer and Director 
June 28, 2024 
Olivia W. Elliott 
  
(Principal Executive Officer) 
  
  
  
  
  
/s/ Craig J. Demarest 
  
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer 
June 28, 2024 
Craig J. Demarest 
  
(Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer) 
  
  
  
  
  
/s/ Zenon S. Nie                                  
  
Chairman of the Board of Directors 
June 28, 2024 
Zenon S. Nie 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
/s/ Michael Benstock                                           
Director 
June 28, 2024 
Michael Benstock 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
/s/ Donald Ratajczak                                            
Director 
June 28, 2024 
Donald Ratajczak 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
/s/ Patricia Stensrud                                            
Director 
June 28, 2024 
Patricia Stensrud 
  
  
  
  
  


CORPORATE INFORMATION
Independent Registered  
Public Accountant
KPMG LLP
One American Place
301 Main Street
Suite 2150
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70801
Annual Meeting
The Annual Meeting of Stockholders will take 
place on Tuesday, August 13, 2024, at 10:00 a.m. 
CDT at the Company’s Executive Offices,  
916 South Burnside Avenue, Gonzales, Louisiana.
Stock Listing
The Company’s common stock is listed on 
The NASDAQ Capital Market under the trading 
symbol “CRWS.”
Transfer Agent and Registrar
Broadridge Corporate Issuer Solutions
1155 Long Island Avenue
Edgewood, New York 11717
Phone: (877) 830-4936
Stockholder Information and Form 10-K
A copy of the Company’s Annual Report on  
Form 10-K as filed with the Securities and 
Exchange Commission may be obtained  
without charge by contacting:
Crown Crafts, Inc.
Investor Relations Department
P.O. Box 1028
Gonzales, Louisiana 70707-1028
Phone: (225) 647-9100
e-mail: investor@crowncrafts.com
Crown Crafts on the Internet
Quarterly and annual financial information and 
company information may be accessed at  
www.crowncrafts.com.
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Olivia W. Elliott
President and Chief Executive Officer
Craig J. Demarest
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Donna Sheridan
President and Chief Executive Officer
NoJo Baby & Kids, Inc.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Zenon S. Nie
Chairman of the Board
Crown Crafts, Inc.
Chairman of the Board and  
Chief Executive Officer
The C.E.O. Advisory Board
Donald Ratajczak
Consulting Economist - Retired
Patricia Stensrud
Managing Director
Avalon Net Worth
Founder and Managing Partner
Hudson River Partners LLC
Olivia W. Elliott
President and Chief Executive Officer
Crown Crafts, Inc.
Michael Benstock
Chairman of the Board, President and Chief 
Executive Officer
Superior Group of Companies, Inc.
Cover Design by Jazmin Davis, Sassy Baby

Crown Crafts Incorporated
916 South Burnside Avenue
Gonzales, Louisiana 70737
(800) 433-9560 • (225) 647-9100
www.crowncrafts.com