American Giant
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | February 2012 |
Founder | Bayard Winthrop |
Headquarters | San Francisco |
Products |
|
Website | www |
American Giant is a San Francisco–based manufacturer of sportswear and casual clothing that sells directly to customers through its website. Its goods are all produced in the United States.
History
[edit]American Giant was founded in February 2012 by Bayard Winthrop, former head of Chrome Industries,[1] to address what he saw as a lack of affordably priced, high-quality, American-made products.[2][3] He believed that by selling direct to the customer, a business could save enough on distribution and marketing to sell products manufactured in America at mainstream prices.
American Giant was named one of the 50 Most Innovative Companies by Fast Company in 2015[4] and cited for "breathing new life into U.S. apparel manufacturing".[5]
The company's products were initially made at a factory in Brisbane, California.[1][6] The company decided to base much of its supply chain in North Carolina in part because it is an anti-union “right to work law” state, and therefore has very low labor rates.[7]
The company launched with one product, a hooded sweatshirt. After a viral video[8] and favorable publicity (a review in Slate called it "the greatest hoodie ever made"),[9] demand outstripped the factory's capacity, and unable to find other sites that satisfied his standards, Winthrop chose to let orders back up rather than compromise on quality.[1] As of January 2019[update], the company was manufacturing its clothing in Los Angeles and Middlesex, North Carolina.[8]
American Giant's main initial investor was former PepsiCo CEO and chairman Donald M. Kendall.[1] Later investors included Emil Capital Partners, a venture capital firm. As of January 2019[update], the company had raised $5.6 million and had begun a round of financing with a target of $12 million.[8]
With Randy Komisar, Winthrop published I F*cking Love That Company (2014), a book about direct to consumer retail.[10]
Products
[edit]American Giant launched with its Classic Full Zip hooded sweatshirt, which was created by Philipe Manoux, a former industrial engineer at Apple.[2] Using cotton grown in North Carolina,[3] it is constructed of heavyweight fleece and features reinforced elbow pads, a double-lined hood, and custom hardware.[6][9]
The product line has since expanded to include other kinds of men's sweatshirts, tee-shirts, and sweatpants,[6] and subsequently women's sportswear and jeans.[8][11][12] In 2018, the company began selling yarn-dyed flannel shirts.[13]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Marcus Wohlsen (August 30, 2013). "The Internet's Most Famous Hoodie Is Back—But What Took So Long?". Wired.
- ^ a b Eric Markowitz (February 1, 2012). "Exposing the Myths About American Manufacturing". Inc.
- ^ a b Nerissa Pacio Itchon (February 5, 2016). "Millennial shoppers embrace rebranded basics". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ Andrew Rice (February 9, 2015). "Most Innovative Companies 2015: American Giant". Fast Company.
- ^ Andrew Rice (February 19, 2015). "American Giant Guns For Gap By Doubling Down On The USA". Fast Company.
- ^ a b c Jennifer Wang (June 26, 2013). "The Man Behind the Hoodie That Started the Made-In-the-USA Apparel Movement". Entrepreneur.
- ^ Rana Foroohar (February 20, 2019). "Made in the USA: inside one company's all-American supply chain". Financial Times.
- ^ a b c d Shwanika Narayan (January 7, 2019). "American Giant, of 'best hoodie' fame, has raising millions sewn up". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ a b Farhad Manjoo (December 4, 2012). "This Is the Greatest Hoodie Ever Made". Slate.
- ^ Kyle Stock (November 20, 2014). "A Retail Playbook for How the Small Can Survive the Age of Amazon". Bloomberg News.
- ^ Gail Goldberg (December 31, 2018). "New denim options for dudes and dudettes". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ Elizabeth Segran (January 9, 2019). "It took almost a decade to design American Giant's first blue jeans". Fast Company.
- ^ Kurutz, Steven (November 28, 2018). "Style: The Annals of Flannel". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-01-30.