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Back in the Stone
Age when some unknown carved a board, specifically to ride a wave, the
foundation for contemporary boardriding was established. The activity came to
Hawaii 1500 years ago with the arrival of the first Polynesians. In the post
European contact period, authors Jack London and Mark Twain were early
enthusiasts.
Acceptance of surfing was greatly expanded through the
exploits of Hawaiian waterman Duke Kahanamoku. Duke, the swimming sensation of
the 1912 Olympic games, toured the world enthusiastically promoting his native
culture. In the process Duke introduced surfing to Australia, the eastern U.S.
coast, and many of Hollywood's top personalities.
By the 1920's there were approximately three hundred
dedicated wave riders in the world. World War II curtailed the growth of the
emerging surf scene. Soon after the war, newly developed materials such as
Styrofoam, polyester resin and fiberglass cloth found their way into surfboard
construction. Enterprising veterans such as Dale Velzy and Malibu's Joe Quigg
began to craft boards that were radical departures from the old pre-war planks.
These easy to ride boards opened up the once exclusive sport to legions of
enthusiasts.
Hollywood discovered the one-time sport of Hawaiian Kings
and a full-blown fad exploded. Gidget, the 1959 motion picture, prompted
commercialism. Surf mania ran rampant. Kids in Kansas began bolting surfboards
to their car tops in an effort to appear cool.
Fads and function operate on different paradigms. Looking
like a surfer is not the same thing as being a surfer. In the beginning those
who rode the waves wore nothing at all. By the start of the twentieth century,
surfers attempted to adapt extant surf bathing attire to their own use. From
Santa Cruz to Sydney surfers fought a losing battle with the heavy woolen tank
suits that were originally intended for a passive dunk at the plunge. In Hawaii
"da bruddahs" cut off the tops of their woolens, forever voiding the best
intentions of the Victorian moralists.
Back in the 1930's, early surf proponents like Palos Verdes
Surf Club founder, Doc Ball, fashioned their own trunks in the effort to
discover a workable garment. For the most part though, conventional clothing
manufacturers turned out thinly disguised versions of the ubiquitous swim
trunk.
By the sixties, surf chic was a cultural phenomenon.
Carloads of guys wearing suits and wing-tipped dress shoes showed up on the
sands of Malibu on research and destroy missions. The clever marketers from the
garment district even tried the protective camouflage- celebrity model
approach. Blatant examples of this were evident in the surf crazed 1960's.
Jantzen went with frontmen Paul Hornung of the Green Bay Packers, John
Severson, the publisher of Surfer Magazine and United States Surfing Champion
Corky Carroll. MacGregor used board manu Hobie Alter as a pitchman. Catalina
Martin sponsored the Malibu Surfing Association and the Wind an Sea Club.
Catalina went so far as to partially underwrite the Blum brothers' movie The
Fantastic Plastic Machine chronicling the emergent V-bottom short board
revolution in Australia.
A few years later, indigenous root brands came to market:
Hang Ten, Birdwell Beach Britches, Golden Breed, Kanvas by Katin, Reed of
Newport and Roy's Beach Cabana. By and large these products imitated the
garments favored by traveling surfers that were made by small Hawaiian boutique
tailors like M. Nii of Waianae, Taki of Waikiki, H. Muira and Reyn Spooner.
These trunks were constructed of stiff heavy canvas and were totally
restrictive to movement. The fact was surf trunks were not designed for the act
of surfing.
Ostensibly these Baggies may have been passable gear back in the
stand and pose phase of the sport. Board lengths and weights dropped
dramatically towards the end of the sixties. This dawn of newer directions in
surfing under scored how archaic these stiff bathing suit relics actually were.
Instead of riding on the waves in the old hopelessly heroic straight-line
style, people were now actively traveling all over the wave's surface in agile
anarchy. Progressive moves like acceleration turning, riding inside of the
barrel and flying off of the lip obviously demanded equally modern boardshorts.
In the late 1960's Australian surfers Alan Green and John
Law chased a dream - to live in Torquay, make a living and go surfing. In 1969
Alan Green produced wetsuits (Rip Curl) on a $2500 loan from his father, the
next product was sheepskin boots (UGG Boots), and in 1970 he and John Law
formed the company named Quiksilver. Greenie and Law ripped apart some old
trunks and discarded the portions that they deemed unnecessary or undesirable.
Gone was the leaden canvas, the lace up front, the long stovepipe legs, the
double thick seams and buttons that hurt when you paddled. Nothing of the old
was left so they started from scratch. A pattern that was anatomically based
was devised to move with the surfer.
Greenie and Law's innovative trunk was made from a durable,
lightweight fabric that dried rapidly. Their boardshorts had short scalloped
legs that didn't bind or hang up. The styling was essentially clean. A wide
waistband yielded support. They designed a snap that held and placed it so a
bloke could paddle. There were no decorative add-ons. There was a wax pocket, a
lay flat Velcro front closure and that was about it.
So Greenie and Law put them on and went surfing. Hard at it,
all day every day. People notice what works. They also pay attention to
individuals who devote years to chasing a dream. Soon other riders would do
anything to get one of these elusive newfangled boardshorts. This was the birth
of Quiksilver, the genuine, original, functional choice of the hard-core
participant.
Leading the beg, borrow and steal-a-pair brigade, was the
foremost competitor of the decade, Jeff Hakman. Personally trained by the Duke,
he understood both the history of the activity and the scope of greatness.
Tutored by the legendary surfboard shaper Richard Brewer he had an immediate
grasp of functional design. Above all, as one of the key players in the
radicalization of surfing itself, Hakman knew the future when he saw it. In
Torquay, Oz for a contest, Jeff got one of those glimpses. Quiksilver
boardshorts. With a little chicanery Jeff managed to abscond with some that he
forgot to return to his mate, Australian pro Mark Warren. They were a perfect
fit and everywhere Hakman toured people were mad to possess them. In 1976,
Hakman left Torquay with a Bells trophy and an agreement to distribute
Quiksilver in the United States.
Back home in Hawaii, Jeff enlisted the aid of his surfing
friend Bob "Buzz" McKnight a surf filmmaker and student who just happened to be
close to graduating from the University of Southern California with a business
degree. The demand for these new boardshorts was there. The design was there.
Everyone who wore them said these Quiksilver's were the most comfortable trunks
that they had ever worn. Bob, in addition to surfing everyday, was a business
major. How can you fail with a combination like that, Hakman reasoned. With his
usual persistence, Jeff managed to persuade Greenie and Law to grant Bob and
himself the American license to the magic boardshort. No recounting of the
annals of the sport fails to include the torrid tale of the eager to impress
Hakman actually eating the serving doily off of the dinner table at a local
Torquay restaurant much to the delight of Greenie. A great partnership had
begun.
By the mid-1970's, a small office/warehouse/distribution
center was opened in Newport Beach, California. McKnight and Hakman built a
business based on word of mouth, quality, unbelievable service and their
extensive personal contacts at surf shops on all three coasts of the USA.
Growing a company that produces a never seen before product
category is a difficult way to go. The partners were hard at it product testing
in the water, designing at the sewing machines and selling to the surf shops.
Leading converts from surfing's new school like Danny Kwock came on board. The
firm's constant innovation in materials, high tech fabrics and cutting edge
graphics helped propel Quiksilver further. Involvement in assorted boardriding
activities led to the creation of newer designs for these varied avocations.
Novel apparel for committed snowboarders and skateboarders led to additional
expansion. The Quiksilver program is universally recognized as the embodiment
of purist improvisation and innovation. Quiksilver's position of leadership in
the international teen and young adult markets is undeniable.
The seventh decade of this century went out in loud
outrageous fashion as Quiksilver let loose with Echo beach prints (which
included polka dots, triangles and checkerboards). The sky was the limit in the
early 80's: paint and graphics poured from the heavens and brought competitive,
fashion-hungry beach culture, The Quiksilver War Paint and ST Comp stretch
series were worn by legendary Australian surfers Gary Elkerton and Tom Carroll.
Both were bold, each stood apart, as did the expanded Quiksilver team of
professional surfers endorsing the products to a worldwide market. These were
the Performers, committed to a new era of high-performance surfing. Going with
the roots of Greenie and Law's simple goals of fashion and function, Quiksilver
designers listened to the words of top surfers, snowboarders, and skateboarders
in order to deliver a line of swim wear and sportswear to enthusiasts who
participated in their active sports.
In 1984, Jeff Hakman went to Europe with surf filmmaker
Harry Hodge, Brigitte Darrigrand and John Winship where they founded Quiksilver
Europe. The trio took the Quiksilver formula and applied a European twist to
its approach on product design and marketing.
In 1988, Quiksilver showed its prowess by endorsing one of
the industry's largest ever contracts with world champion Tom Carroll and in
1990 outstanding USA amateur surfer Kelly Slater joined the Quiksilver team.
Slater went on to dominate, leading the "new school" of surfing and winning six
world championships.
Quiksilver was instrumental in stimulating the current
growth in women's boardsports participation. The introduction of the Roxy
junior swim and sportswear brand in 1991, inspired major trends in the
activity. Roxy was the first brand to create functional, yet fashion driven
clothing and equipment for both the would-be and accomplished female surfer.
The unique style of Roxy's performance-inspired design has been widely imitated
throughout the fashion industry.
Long before the bastions of mainstream news reporting began
charting the company's progress, there was an elemental approach at work within
Quiksilver unique to the company. Following Quiksilver's initial public stock
offering in 1986, there has been a continual interest in the company's
activities. Many of these narratives center on the organization's notable
accomplishments: the over six-hundred million dollar per year gross sales and a
unique prominence in the growing US teen market, which has over two hundred
billion dollars of discretionary spending power each year in the US alone. So
why does CEO and chairman of the board Robert B. McKnight Jr. insist that key
management repeatedly meet on field trips and indulge the pursuits of gravity
before they sit down to meet?
First and foremost Quiksilver's products are created out of
need. Whatever success they will enjoy is always secondary to that point. From
Alan and John's first pair of boardshorts through the aggressive new imagery of
the Echo Beach period of the Eighties, down to anything in the line today, this
is authentic performance gear. The point is that Quik stuff works so well
because the people who design, make and sell it demand that it excel. This is
why board meetings may be scheduled on European slopes, a ship off the coast of
Java or a lake in Arizona. Quiksilver employees are a vital part of all
research and development. They are the end users; everything they do is
designed for them. There are no corporate marketing mission statements, trend-
marketing surveys or fashion forecasts anywhere near it. Simple logic is, just
create the best, most functional items imaginable and then work it. A survey of
current Quiksilver employees will reveal an impressive number of former world,
national, state and pro competitive title winners in surfing, snowboarding, and
skateboarding. You don't find this coefficient of reality elsewhere.
The Quiksilver style is rooted in the activity. Proof of the
viability of Quiksilver's passionate approach can be found in its continued
support of athletes such as six-time world professional surfing champion Kelly
Slater and women's four- time world professional surfing champion Lisa
Andersen. Affiliates often take their association with the company further.
Rusty Keaulana, in addition to being a three-time world longboard champion,
works with disadvantaged children in the Hawaiian community. Two-time world
champion Tom Carroll develops prototype equipment in Australia. Ten- time
international windsurfing champion Robby Naish is involved with European
operations. Legendary waterman Barry Kanaiaupuni and six-time world
professional surfing champion Kelly Slater own Quiksilver Boardriders Clubs.
Bruce Raymond, an Australian surfing champion, is the International Director of
Marketing. Founding figure and multiple International Pro Champion Jeff Hakman
still works daily in concert with Harry Hodge in France. Former United States
surfing champion Willy Morris is a sales rep in California. French surfing
great Peyo Lizarau is a vital part of the marketing team in Europe. Quiksilver
also sponsors a healthy number of surf teams, snowboard teams and a diverse
selection of skateboarders, sailboarders, wakeboarders and motocross riders.
The company also organizes and sponsors numerous contests and events ranging in
scope from premiere international events to small community based efforts that
its riders and dealers may be involved with.
The events created by Quiksilver may prove to be one of the
company's most compelling legacies. The choice of location, selection of
invitees, method of judging, the style, look and promotion are all variables
that are fine tuned in the making of a Quik event. A number of these projects
have influenced the development of the extreme sports milieu.
A selection of these influential events includes: The Eddie
Aikau Big Wave Invitational Series at Waimea Bay; The ground-breaking 1995
Quiksilver Pro at G-Land, Indonesia, that put hardcore credibility back into
professional surfing events (the best surfers in the best waves); The World
Amateur Surfing Championships at Newquay England, 1986; The Quiksilver
Snowboarding and Surfing Cup in Europe; The Quiksilver Roxy Pro at Sunset
Beach, North Shore, Oahu; The Quiksilver Winter Classic Surf/Snow Event; The
Quiksilver Mavericks Big Wave Event; The Roxy Surf Jam at Hanalei and Ventura,
The QuikSilverEdition Molokai to Oahu Paddleboard Race. These pioneering events
have firmly established Quiksilver as the authentic leader in the action sports
market.
Another unique Quiksilver involvement is a series of
innovative concept stores and shops, which have greatly improved both brand
recognition and distribution standards. Quiksilver Boardriders Clubs and
in-store shops, Quiksvilles and Roxyvilles, have become key retail models
around the world. Presently, there are two hundred and fifteen Quiksilver
Boardriders Clubs globally including thirty in the United States. Trend setting
in both their concept and execution, they are definitive presentations of the
Quiksilver ethic. Flagship stores in Paris, London and New York are often
mentioned by the fashion and business press as examples of truly entertaining
retail concepts.
Today, Quiksilver offers a diverse line of products under
its umbrella including a complete clothing collection, accessories, eyewear,
watches, and wetsuits. A similar offering for boys ages 8-14 years old, 4-7
years old and toddlers. The Winter Sports division is emerging with
snowboarding apparel and hard goods designed for high performance enthusiasts.
To further expand the division, in 1997, Quiksilver acquired Mervin, a
snowboard manufacturing company that makes Gnu and Lib Tech snowboards and Bent
Metal step in bindings. QuikSilverEdition is a line of clothing targeting the
now 25-40-year-old waterman. In 1999, the Company brought legendary
skateboarder Tony Hawk into the Quiksilver family by sponsoring him and
purchasing his company, Hawk Clothing. Girl's lines including Roxy, Roxy Teenie
Wahine, Raisins, Radio Fiji, and Leilani swimwear are stronger than ever.
Quiksilver has become far more than just a fashion apparel
company. It is a company with deep roots in the history of the demanding
outdoor sports lifestyle. Quiksilver, now a truly global brand, remains a
pioneering force in the most original of all sports: surfing.
TOP
link to international website : www.quiksilver.com
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