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Tuesday, July 31, 2018

CNW | Roots Showcases New Canadian Sound
src: photos.newswire.ca

Roots Ltd. or Roots Canada (doing business as simply Roots) is a publicly held Canadian brand that sells women's, men's, children's, and baby's apparel; leather bags; footwear; active athletic wear; small leather goods; and home furnishings. The company was founded in 1973 by Michael Budman and Don Green.

Their design centre and leather factory are located in Toronto, Ontario. Roots employs 1,600 people in Canada. As of May 2013, Roots was operating 210 stores in Canada, the United States, and Asia, and could ship its products to 50 countries with online ordering.

Roots started using the beaver logo in 1985 with the launch of their athletic brand. The logo was designed in the 1970s and features the Cooper font, named after Heather Cooper, one of the graphic designers.


Video Roots Canada



History

In 1973, Michael Budman and Don Green founded Roots, initially a footwear company that sold the Negative Heel Shoes, before expanding their product offering. The Kowalewski family and their family business, the Boa Shoe Company, were the first makers of "Negative Heel Shoes", which became Roots' defining product. Roots opened its first store on Yonge St. near the Rosedale subway station, in Toronto in August 1973. A couple of months later, Roots bought the Upin and Ipin Company and opened their first leather factory. By the end of the year, Roots had stores in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, and a few locations in the U.S.


Maps Roots Canada



Expansion

As the demand for the Negative Heel Shoes continued, the Roots factory expanded and by the fall of 1975 the factory that had been making only 30 pairs of shoes a day was making more than 2,000. Later that year, Roots decided to experiment with casual apparel.

By 1977, Roots had expanded to 65 retail outlets across North America and Europe, and 250 employees. Roots then began the transition from making Negative Heel Shoes to making footwear with a wedge sole and introduced classic handbags. The company began wholesaling bags, footwear, belts, and leather jackets to Canadian retailers like Eaton's and Holt Renfrew, and major U.S. retailers such as Saks Fifth Avenue, Bloomingdales, and Nordstrom. Roots continued to expand its product line by introducing Roots Design in 1979, their first line of men's tailored clothing.

By the end of 1980, with the closing of many stores in the U.S. and Europe, Roots began to expand in Canada. The expansion ushered in the manufacturing of T-shirts and sweatshirts on a small scale, and the creation of the brand's label Beaver Canoe, a joint venture canoe building operation with Camp Tamakwa's co-founder Omer Stringer. Clothing and outdoor items were then created under the Beaver Canoe brand in 1983. Two years later, Roots launched Roots Beaver Athletics (RBA) with the beaver logo and by the early nineties, the logo had appeared on more than a million garments.

Roots began to expand in Asia in 1993, starting with two stores in Japan, where the Negative Heel Shoes had a second life and continued to expand throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. Although Roots stores have closed in certain areas of Asia, Roots in Taiwan and China began to expand in the 2000s. Over the last few years, these stores have expanded their product offering to include apparel as well as leather goods, kids apparel, and home furnishings. Roots Taiwan launched a separate website in 2011. As of May 2013, Roots had 75 retail outlets in Taiwan and 16 in China with plans for continued expansion.

In 2001, the company was involved with the creation of a new Canadian discount airline, Roots Air, which operated Airbus A320 and Boeing 727-200 jetliners in scheduled passenger service. However, the experiment was short lived and the airline was shut down the same year.


Celebrate 40 Years of ROOTS Canada Heritage on Vimeo
src: i.vimeocdn.com


Olympics

Roots contributed to the Olympic games in 1976, providing 200 quilted "Puff" boots to the Canadian Team at the Winter Games in Innsbruck, Austria. In 1988, Roots provided Jamaica's Olympic bobsled team with custom made jackets. The story is made famous by the 1993 hit movie Cool Runnings starring John Candy wearing a Roots jacket. Roots created a special retail collection of clothes in honour of the 1994 Canadian Olympic team, under the banner "Roots Salutes the Canadian Olympic Team". Roots designed a jacket for the Norwegian skier and Olympic Gold Medalist Stein Eriksen for the Olympic Games in Lillehammer in 1994.

In 1998, Roots began its formal Olympic involvement, outfitting the Canadian team at the Winter Games in Nagano, Japan. The outfit's most popular item was the red "poorboy" cap (or poor boy cap) worn backwards, which became undetectable and were seen on celebrities such as Prince William and P. Diddy. Roots at one point sold 100,000 of these berets a day at US$19.95 a piece, eventually selling over half a million.[2]

Roots went on to be the official outfitter for members of the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Teams from 2000 to 2004, and was the official outfitter for the Canadian Speed Skating Team in 2006. Roots outfitted the United States Olympic and Paralympic Teams in 2002, 2004, and 2006. Other teams that Roots outfitted include the British Olympic Team (2002, 2004), and the Barbados Olympic Team (2004).

In 2005, Roots was outbid on the Canadian Olympic contract by Hudson's Bay Company (sold through The Bay and Zellers), and in 2008 the USOC replaced Roots with Polo Ralph Lauren. The USOC had a disagreement with Roots over the direction of the athletes' uniforms, but it is also suggested that Roots did not want its brand to be involved with the 2008 Summer Olympics which saw much political controversy over human rights.[3][4]


CNW | Wendy Bennison appointed President and COO of Roots
src: photos.newswire.ca


Today

Roots has 120 stores in North America, including five flagship stores in Canada in Toronto (Bloor St., The Eaton Centre, and Yorkdale Shopping Centre), Vancouver (on Robson St.), and Montreal (Centreville). Though, the large two-story Bloor St. location, which was known for holding many events, recently downsized to a new location on the same street. Other notable locations include Rosedale in Toronto, Market Mall in Calgary (all leather store). In 2013, Roots opened locations in Montreal (Westmount), Niagara Falls (Spring Garden).

After years of running the business together, in 2014 Michael Budman and Don Green hired a President and Chief Operating Officer, Wendy Bennison, who had previously employed as Vice President of Mark's Work Warehouse.

In 2015 Roots was sold to Searchlight Capital LP which now holds majority stake with the Founders retaining a minority stake.

As of March 2016, Jim Gabel is now the new President of Roots Canada.

In September 2017, the company filed for an initial public offering on the Toronto Stock Exchange.


Roots Canada Kanga Hoodie
src: meghansmirror.com


Roots and Canada

Co-founders Michael Budman and Don Green were inspired by their passion for Ontario's Algonquin Park and everything it represented for them. Their goal was to translate their fondness for the Canadian wilderness and sports into a line of leather products and athletic wear.

The Roots logo - featuring the Cooper font and the quintessential Canadian animal, the beaver - was designed by two of Canada's graphic designers of the 1970s, Heather Cooper and Robert Burns. It was a coincidence that they came up with the beaver without any prompting from Green and Budman as it was also used in the logo of Camp Tamakwa, a place which strongly influenced the Roots co-founders in their youth.

Leather goods have been at the heart of Roots since the company's inception in 1973 when they began making leather shoes in Toronto. The Roots factory was under the direction of Jan Kowalewski and his four sons (Richard, Stan, Henry, and Karl). They stressed quality and Canadian craftsmanship, which could be seen in Roots ads from 1974 and early 1975, where Roots launched a continent-wide advertising campaign "City Feet Need Roots" created by David Parry. These advertisements could be seen on the TTC, magazines, and newspapers in North America. Today, the Kowalewski's continue to run the factory.


Mens Cooper Canada T-shirt | Roots
src: www.roots.com


Philanthropy/environmental commitment

The company has an environmental commitment, which includes using recycled, reclaimed and non-toxic materials in the building of stores; making sustainable products; supporting environmental organizations and related projects. Roots has supported environmental organizations throughout its history including The Rainforest Foundation, Ecology House, Waterkeeper Alliance, Toronto Green Awards, David Suzuki Foundation, Stop Global Warming Fund, Centre For Environmental Education (Antioch New England Graduate School), World Wildlife Fund, Canadian Wildlife Federation, Flick Off, Earth Hour, and the Jane Goodall Institute of Canada.

Roots have a Community Support program that provides assistance to charitable organizations including Rethink Breast Cancer, Canadian Blood Services, AIDS Conference, Right to Play, Free the Children, War Child Canada, World Vision, ThinkFirst Canada, Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Canada.

Over the years, Roots has supported Canadian athletes such as Razor Ruddock, Kurt Browning, Alexandre Despatie, Catriona Le May Doan, Eric Lamaze, Jamie Salé/David Pelletier, Ross Rebagliati, Elvis Stojko, The Canadian Speed Skating Team, Adam van Koeverden, Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir.


Roots Canada storefront, Canadian brand retailer, at Yorkdale ...
src: c8.alamy.com


In popular culture

In 1984, Roots launched its Entertainment Merchandising and Wholesaling division and provided goods to cast and crew of Days of Thunder, Jurassic Park, Spider-man, 007 Die Another Day, Iron Man, and The Bourne Ultimatum. Roots also custom made orders for TV shows like the X-files, Friends, The Sopranos, The Office, Saturday Night Live, Jimmy Kimmel Live, The Amazing Race, as well as for music celebrities like Drake, The Weeknd, U2, Madonna, The Rolling Stones, and Snoop Lion.

Characters Matthew (Vincent Spano) and Brad Berman (Kevin Pollak) in the 1993 film Indian Summer are based on Roots founders, Catherine and Christopher Bellavita, who attended Camp Tamakwa, the camp where the movie was filmed in Ontario's Algonquin Park. Most of the apparel and bags featured in the film were made by Roots.

In more recent films, the Roots Village Bag was featured in The Hangover (2009), while the Roots Messenger Bag was worn by Ashton Kutcher in No Strings Attached (2011). Roots was featured in season 12 of Degrassi: The Next Generation, building a replica retail store for filming.


Tapping Canada's musical Roots » strategy
src: cdn.strategyonline.ca


Notes


Photos for Roots - Kenaston - Yelp
src: s3-media4.fl.yelpcdn.com


External links

  • Roots official website
  • Roots Canada
  • Roots USA

Source of article : Wikipedia