Thank you, Dru, and good morning, and thank you to everyone for joining us today and for your interest in our company. With me on the call is Ken Bowling, our Chief Financial Officer. Tommy Bruno and Mary Beth Hunsberger are not on the call today as they are fully engaged in their respective roles as Chief Commercial Officer and Chief Operations Officer, both of which are going exceedingly well. I will begin the call with some detailed comments. And as mentioned in the introduction, we have posted a slide presentation to our website that provides some information that is supplemental to what we will speak about today. That slide presentation is simply entitled First Quarter FY '26 Supplemental Information. Ken will then review the financial results for the quarter. And after that, I will briefly review our business outlook for the remainder of fiscal '26, and we will take some questions. Looking at our performance for the first quarter, the key takeaway from our perspective is that we were able to build on the momentum we had to close out last fiscal year and realize improvement in our operating results despite not only the depressed demand across the home furnishings industry that we're all too familiar with at this point, but also the continuing challenges from tariffs and the uncertain global trade environment. Even with these two significant headwinds, we were able to achieve substantial double-digit improvement at both the gross profit and operating lines during the quarter, particularly due to our streamlined bedding segment. An improvement of that nature in this market and macroeconomic environment is a testament to the effective work of the Culp team over the last year. Throughout fiscal '25 and into fiscal '26, we made tremendous strides to successfully transform our Culp Home Fashions mattress fabrics business, which following the integration of our two former divisions we now call our bedding segment. I'm impressed with how our team was able to execute on the comprehensive restructuring effort, including the closure and pivoting of production at a long-term manufacturing facility in Canada to our owned U.S. facility and some external strategic partners while also making sure that our customer service levels remained the highest priority. I think it's important to emphasize that we're certainly not yet where we want to be from an operating and profitability standpoint and where we believe we ultimately will be, but our improving trend tells us that we're doing a good job of controlling and influencing the things we can in an unmistakably tough industry environment. The actions and gross profit impacts of our fiscal '25 North American bedding consolidation and restructuring project are summarized on Pages 8 and 9 of the supplemental presentation that is now available on our website. Before we take a closer look at our results for the quarter, I'd like to take a moment to focus on some interesting data and market commentary out there regarding activity in the bedding industry published by the International Sleep Products Association and others, which we've included on Page 13 and 14 of the supplemental presentation. While the industry is obviously still in a down cycle, this information effectively shows how long the industry has been running below historic unit levels in the current cycle and correspondingly, how much pent-up demand may be building to support an industry recovery in the future. Some analysts who closely follow the market appear to be of the mind that demand for mattresses is finally close to bottoming out and the demand may be set to increase due to cyclical factors such as product replacement cadence and growth in household formation. To some degree, this information and commentary align with our own thoughts on the general direction of the mattress market, given the low activity levels we've seen over the last several years. However, as I've already mentioned, we are making the changes and updates to our business that are necessary to return Culp to profitability in this current demand environment. We will be pleased when the market recovers, but we are not counting on that. We are just working to get ourselves even better positioned to strongly capitalize on any recovery. This industry data also indicates to us that we've been able to win market share and gain a larger piece of the available mattress business by leveraging our competitive advantages in scale, product development and innovation and the ability to use our global platform to value engineer products and offer better supply chain solutions to customers. With our Canada restructuring mostly behind us, we have competitive, stylish, and innovative offerings in knits, wovens, cut and sewn covers and some bedding accessory products. Despite the historically low industry volume and ongoing tariff fluidity, our bedding segment was able to grow sales sequentially versus last quarter and comp sales year-over-year. Moreover and notably, with our newly streamlined platform in place, we achieved double-digit gross margins in the bedding quarter compared to negative gross profit in the prior year period. We also expect that our bedding segment margins will continue to improve with sequential sales growth and normalize at a much higher range and particularly once the price increases we've initiated to mitigate tariff costs and also rightsize margins in certain areas become effective for the majority of the second quarter. Turning to Culp upholstery fabrics, which we will now just refer to as our upholstery segment. Soft market conditions across the home furnishings industry, driven by muted consumer spending and housing market trends continue to impact that part of our business, especially on the residential upholstery side. The global trade and tariff situation continue to add more complexity to this business during the quarter, due to the primarily Asian supply concentration that the residential upholstery industry has gravitated to in the last few decades. The historically high and temporary tariffs on China produced imports last spring, which again reached over 150%, basically shut down our residential upholstery orders and shipments for over a month. Rather than absorb these cost increases for which we had no realistic time to plan, we simply did not ship any containers from China to the U.S.A. and waited for tariff rates to reduce to a more commercially reasonable level. The delayed effects of that pause in activity, along with the general market uneasiness and hesitancy that all these tariff changes and negotiations have created significantly dampened sales in our first quarter of fiscal '26. We do have the ability company-wide to navigate tariff fluidity and a snapshot of our global footprint is shown on a map on Page 15 of the supplemental presentation. It has long been a hallmark of Culp to have options in our supply chain, and that advantage was definitely supportive to our bedding performance this quarter. We have tremendous flexibility in our supply chain to service bedding customers strategically and from multiple locations. Likewise, our global platform has a strength in upholstery as well, but the pace and ever-changing tariff rates in April and May were extremely challenging to the industry. With time to react, we can manage upholstery tariffs effectively and with strength, and we will continue to keep our ear to the ground and balance our production to best serve our customers. Sales in our upholstery segment were also challenged during the quarter by an uneven year-over-year comparison caused by a large residential fabric customer's decision to focus most of its purchasing in the front half of last year, including a notable onetime buying uptick in last year's first quarter. We think this issue is now pretty much behind us as we expect a more even purchasing cadence from that customer this year and for sales comparisons to smooth out in the second quarter and the rest of fiscal '26. Despite the challenges mentioned in residential upholstery, demand in the higher-margin channels of our upholstery segment, hospitality and commercial remained relatively solid, and those products comprised almost 40% of our total upholstery segment sales for the quarter. These channels are less directly impacted by discretionary consumer spending and housing market trends, given their focus on upholstery fabric for furniture, window treatments, and related applications in hotel, theater, office, retail and other commercial settings. Moreover, the supply chains in these channels are less Asia-centric, although we are seeing some of our customers' projects and building plans impacted by the current tariff environment. As a final bigger picture note on tariffs, they've obviously been a disruption to our overall business, whether it's actual tariff rates on our imported items or delays on customer projects. Again, though, when we can manage through changes with appropriate warning and time, we believe the disruption can actually become a competitive advantage for us. We've also made solid progress on an initiative we announced last quarter, the integration of our two former divisions into a unified Culp-branded business. We have internally named this activity Project Blaze, and our work should provide a significant boost to the operating profile of our business overall and also help us better navigate the difficult residential upholstery demand and tariff environments. This project supports the two industry sales channels we target, but also allows us to move to a shared cost and talent model. Under the leadership of Tommy Bruno as Chief Commercial Officer; and Mary Beth Hunsberger as Chief Operations Officer, we are becoming more streamlined in sharing best practices across products, resources, processes, technology, and supply chains. A summarized scope of this work by major project is contained on Pages 10 and 11 of our supplemental deck. The transition of upholstery operations at our leased facility in Burlington, North Carolina, to a shared management model within our Stokesdale, North Carolina location is underway, and we expect the anticipated cost and efficiency benefits of that move to begin to manifest in our second quarter results with the majority of the benefits supporting the second half of this fiscal year. Additionally, we recently announced internally a similar transition in our upholstery segment's Read Window business, via which we are consolidating and shuttering operations at a leased facility in Tennessee into a more cost-effective shared management platform within our owned Stokesdale location, along with outsourcing to some valued domestic partners. This move should begin to positively affect our results in the third quarter as we reduce lease and manufacturing costs accordingly. Once fully implemented, these integration actions, together with the price increases I previously mentioned that are going into effect in our bedding segment beginning in the second quarter to mitigate tariffs and rationalize margins in some areas are expected to generate at least $6 million in annualized cost and efficiency enhancements, which are additive to the $10 million to $11 million of annualized benefits expected from last year's restructuring initiatives. Once again, the schedule and impacts of all these actions are summarized on the table on Slide 11 in our supplemental deck. The Culp team has clearly not been sitting on its hands and waiting for the market to turn around. We are executing our strategies to become a leaner and more unified company that is prepared to thrive in a variety of market conditions, and we are very well-poised for an eventual and general market recovery. We have best-in-class innovative products and a strong U.S. manufacturing base with well-established nearshore and offshore platforms that together give us what we believe is a growing competitive advantage in the market, particularly as customers continue to look for supply chain alternatives and geographic diversity in the current trade and tariff landscape. And as I mentioned in our press release, our highest priorities at Culp are to get back to sustained operating profitability and reduce debt regardless of any improvement in market conditions, and we believe that we are well on our way to doing so. I'm encouraged by our progress, the talent we have leading our two segments and the opportunities I believe we have to grow revenue and increase our operating performance. I'll now turn it over to Ken to provide more detail on our first quarter financial performance.