Let other people line up in the evening hours of Thanksgiving Day.
Amanda Lefald of White Bear Lake was happy to see shorter lines and less frantic traffic as she shopped Friday morning at Rosedale shopping mall.
"Everything's a little slower," she said of the pace to her Black Friday shopping.
With major retailers opening stores Thursday across the country and Web retailers preparing a marketing blitz for Cyber Monday, the day after Thanksgiving is losing some of its luster as the ultimate one-day spectacle of shopping.
Retailers were hoping to draw more consumers this year by rolling out Black Friday promotions a day early on Thanksgiving. While it's too early to determine if they succeeded, about 17 percent of shoppers said they planned to shop at stores that opened on Thanksgiving, according to an International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs survey.
No doubt, Americans were ready to hit the stores after their Thanksgiving feast, as retailers reported lines of shoppers at many store openings in major markets. Over the weekend, more than 147 million Americans are expected to do some holiday shopping, according to the National Retail Federation, and some of them will take part in Small Business Saturday, which encourages shoppers to patronize neighborhood stores.
With promotions from one day to the next, Black Friday isn't just a 24-hour event, but a long weekend that stretches from Thursday through Monday, analysts said.
"Black Friday will be diminished because of Black Thursday," said Burt Flickinger, president at Strategic Resource Group. "What retailers gained on Thanksgiving they will give up on other days."