|
Crazy Shirts is an American T-shirt and clothing company established in 1964 and based in Honolulu, Hawaii. The company operates 35 retail stores in Hawaii, California, Florida, Nevada, and Colorado. Crazy Shirts houses the largest printing facility in Hawaiʻi, on the island of Oʻahu, and employs more than 400 employees. ==History== Frederick Carleton “Rick” Ralston is associated with transforming T-shirts from underwear into fashionable outerwear. Reporter Sharon Nelton of BNET titled Ralston as “the T-shirt king of America and the father of the modern T-shirt.”〔Sharon Nelton. “(The man who transformed T-shirts from underwear into fashion – Rick Ralston; Crazy Shirts Inc )" ''Nation’s Business'', US Chamber of Commerce January 1991, Retrieved July 7, 2008.〕 In the summer of 1960, as a teenager just out of high school in Montebello, California, Ralston spray-painted a design on a T-shirt, turning it from common underwear into fashion. Ralston took this idea and traveled to Santa Catalina Island with a friend, referred to as “Crazy Arab” to spray-paint designs on beach towels. Ralston practiced his towel design on an old T-shirt, as what was referred as “an ugly monster shape.”〔Sharon Nelton. “(The man who transformed T-shirts from underwear into fashion – Rick Ralston; Crazy Shirts Inc )", ''Nation’s Business'', US Chamber of Commerce, January 1991, Retrieved July 7, 2008.〕 He wore it down the street one day and a tourist offered to buy it off his back for his daughter. From then on, Rick Ralston decided to go into the T-shirt business. In 1960, Ralston and friends set up a shop on the sidewalk of Santa Catalina Island. Tourists had to bring their own blank T-shirts from a local sporting goods shop, and Ralston and “Crazy Arab’ embellished them with depictions of monsters, surfers, or hot rods at $2.80 apiece, sometimes making as much as $100 a day.〔 In 1962, after another summer on Santa Catalina Island and two years studying automotive design at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA, Ralston took his summer business to the sidewalks of Waikīkī in Oahu, Hawaii, where the summer’s tourism season provided him with sustainable income.〔 In 1964, he opened a tiny shop in the Waikīkī bazaar known as the International Market Place. The shop was called Ricky’s Crazy Shirts, and, to Ralston’s knowledge, it was the first store ever devoted exclusively to T-shirts and sweatshirts. Due to the popularity of the T-shirt designs among tourists, Ralston has to increase production speed, and he turned from spray-painting to screen-printing the designs. Later that year, Ralston changed the shop’s name from Ricky’s Crazy Shirts to Crazy Shirts.〔Don Parret. “(Crazy Shirts files Chapter 11, sells to Big Dog )”, ''Pacific Business News'', September 10, 2001, Retrieved July 7, 2008.〕 In 1970, Ralston opened a second shop in Honolulu’s Ala Moana shopping center.〔 The company’s sales at that time were about $500,000.〔Lisa Ro. “(Parting Shot. With 50 years behind it, Hawaii Business looks back and looks ahead )” ''Hawaii Business Magazine'', July 2006, Retrieved July 7, 2008.〕 Crazy Shirts expanded during the 1990s with more than 70 stores across the U.S., but in September 2001, the company closed four stores and filed for bankruptcy.〔Prabha Natarajan. “(Crazy Shirts consolidates production business here )”, ''Pacific Business News'', June 14, 2002, Retrieved July 7, 2008.〕 In November 2001, Only The Best Inc., a company affiliated with the owners of Waikiki Trader Corp, bought the company.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Crazy Shirts」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|