Everyone has their favorite event or story from the recent Winter Olympics. Mine is the tale of the Norwegian Curling Team’s very colorful pants. Now, how they came to find the pants is not the topic here. The pants, however, attracted a huge amount of attention worldwide, not only for the Norwegian team (which finally lost in the end to the Canadians), but also for the sport itself. A fan from Rochester, New York started a Facebook page, The Norwegian Curling Team Pants which has 600,000 fans (including 200,000 from Norway itself).
CNBC was running curling coverage after the close of business on Wall Street, so there the traders were, ogling the Norwegians’ red, white and blue diamond pants, while the teams were playing what has been heretofore considered a sport about as exciting as watching corn grow.
But I digress. As many of Aunt Toby’s readers recall, I have a keen interest in small business, in entrepreneurship, in plain old ‘following your passion’. Although long after the 2010 Winter Olympics has faded from the collective memory, in the chronicles of international curling, I am sure that the growth of interest in the sport is going to be tagged to the pants worn by the Norwegian team this year. But my interest in this story actually is in the company which designed and makes these pants, which are technically golf clothing, Loudmouth Golf.
Scott Woodworth, “a graphic designer who lives in Sonoma, California, with his wife, Cathy, and sons, Robert, 13, and Bailey, 14, turned his passion for audacious attire and brightly colored geometric designs into a men’s clothing business targeting a particular subspecies of golfer. “Loud mouth guys may be a little obnoxious,” he says, “but deep down they are good guys. You put those pants on, you are going out to tell jokes and have fun.”
“..After he moved to California, he noticed that golfers there dressed in muted tones. That would have to change. So in 2000 he went to the fabric store, bought a bolt of powder-blue stuff that depicted Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck riding in golf carts, and had a local seamstress make him a pair of pants to wear at a charity golf tourney. “They were horrible looking pants,” he says, “and I loved them. Guys kept asking me all day where I got them.”
He found a clothing manufacturer and ordered seventy-two pairs for his newly formed company, Loudmouth Golf. Six weeks after placing a classified ad in Golf Digest, he’d sold half his inventory. He doubled the next order, and before long he’d drafted his children into helping him pack merchandise from his garage. It was good-bye graphic design and hello clothing business.”
The international interest in the pants crashed Woodward’s server and he is scrambling to restock this particular model, with delivery scheduled for April.
For people who dream of having their own business and who feel that all the ‘needs’ that need to be filled are gone, I’d like to mention that crazy pants for golfers are not necessarily something that screams ‘a need needing to be filled’. What Woodward did, by wearing crazy pants to the tournament and getting comments was actually an unconscious form of focus group testing – on the fly, certainly, but testing nonetheless. Woodward’s advantage was that he also realized that there was a market there (the need) that no one else was doing anything about and that he could fulfill (filling it).
A lot of people would like to start a business, but many times they allow their fears of risk or lack of knowledge to stop them. Woodward was a graphic designer – it is not as if he grew up in the garment business (as Isaac Mizrahi did – Mizrahi’s father owned a dress design and manufacturing business). The difference is that Woodward got on the phone, called around, asked questions, found more people who could answer more questions, found more people who could help him, direct him, show him resources for fabric, sewing, manufacturing and so on. And that’s how he started and has grown his business.
Now, you can be sure that there are people already out there, already in the sports clothing business, who are riffing changes on the Norwegian Curling Team’s pants. Maybe they called up some curlers and asked them if they liked the pants or perhaps what they wanted in pants to curl in? Maybe they are producing them in water repellant fabrics for skiers or snow boarders. Maybe they are producing them with bibs. Or matching jackets. Or matching shirts. Or with zippers down the legs. Or glow in the dark? Maybe someone has decided that the whole curling pants thing is a fluke – in Canada, the big deal in curling clothing from what I have heard is colorful sweaters. Maybe someone is going to try to reproduce the diamond motif in a heavyweight sweater. A heavyweight sweater with a zip in the front.
Gad. The opportunities are endless.



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Evening, folks!
Hi Toby.
Actually, I have two more recent examples:
Courtesy of http://www.putthison.com, squareup:
“Their product is essentially a credit card scanner that plugs into your mobile phone – and comes with everything you need to take credit card payments easily, without a special merchant account.”
https://squareup.com/
And a guy out on the West Coast who has seemingly re-invented men’s undershirts and tee-shirts – and you can’t get more homely than that.
http://www.ribbedtee.com/store/index.php?_a=viewDoc&docId=13
http://www.ribbedtee.com/
Pants like that need curly toed shoes.
hehehe..yes, they do have that effect, but from a PR standpoint, those pants have paid off tremendous dividends not only for the Norwegian Curling Team, and the sport, but also Loudmouth Golf – Scott Woodward will be riding that deal for at least 6 months.
Great post – thanks Toby!
Canadian curler/hottie Cheryl Barnard can dress any damned way she likes. I love that sport!
whoops, wrong thread…
Hey Toby, didn’t Bob Hope wear some pretty crazy trousers to his USO trips to Vietnam? I think Haggar (or one of the other garment concerns) had a contract thingy with him.
Yes, he did, but again, it was part of the whole thing where he came out with his putter..
On the other side, though, the Danish women’s curling team wore very cute black wool pleated skirts and black tights – very chic – but no big deal. Part of this, I’m sure was the Facebook page – that thing is still cranking along.
Very cool, Toby.
Loudmouth Pants already makes matching jackets, though, so you can get ‘suits’ of all their patterns. Some pictures of the team showed them at bars wearing the jackets, which certainly attracted more attention than pants would (and less unwanted attention, too: “Hey dude nice pants” isn’t something you say in a bar entirely without risk).
Great, and inspiring, story. Thanks.
Here I was thinking that golf has always involved clothing that would embarass an used car salesman.
Just your garden-variety harlequin trousers. People may not remember Payne Stuart’s golf stylings. The 1990s are such a long time ago, only just yesterday. It’s a major gamble to commit to an idea. Most just end up as huge losses. But it lifts the spirit to talk about the successes. Product placement in this case at such a high profile event as curling in Vancouver was a bonus, eh?
I just did some looking and it seems like Bob wore pretty conventional slacks, although as time went on the waistband crept toward his chest, or vice versa.
Well, even in Upstate NY, the golfers wear yellow and green slacks but these pants are definitely over the red line.
I just got back from Las Vegas today, and I saw the most unusual FANAFI:
Firms who will go to court for your traffic ticket! “Speeding – now just $50 – GUARANTEED!”
hahaha…how many people followed curling before this Olympics? This is the winter sport that you always saw cartoons about.
I just finished looking, too, and I can’t find them. But one year he was sporting banana-yellow and a Navy shirt.
Think of all the services and products that no longer exist but which were prevalent 50-75 years ago. I remember when I was first married, seeing a local cleaners with a big sign in their window, “We block hats!” – the cleaners doesn’t even exist anymore.
If I’d been Woodward, I’d have probably gone after the snowboarders but perhaps they are too hip for something like harlequin pants.
Here’s a good pants selection. These might be my favorite.
Sort of as in needing protective eyewear?
To be fair, they do take it seriously in Canada. The football World Cup is almost as alien to America, what?
Well, wasn’t curling invented in Canada? Or am I totally offbase with that?
but, in case you did not see these above, here are two more – the first one is technology based (and really goes after a specific demographic – IPhone users)
Courtesy of http://www.putthison.com, squareup:
“Their product is essentially a credit card scanner that plugs into your mobile phone – and comes with everything you need to take credit card payments easily, without a special merchant account.”
https://squareup.com/
The second is another low tech-product improvement story. Who knew that men were looking for a better quality, longer in the body, undershirt and teeshirt?
And a guy out on the West Coast who has seemingly re-invented men’s undershirts and tee-shirts – and you can’t get more homely than that.
http://www.ribbedtee.com/store/index.php?_a=viewDoc&docId=13
http://www.ribbedtee.com/
Medieval Scotland.
ah, they must have brought it with them to Canada during the Clearances..
It seems to me curling is more akin to golf than snowboarding. The trousers are a better fit with the former. It just screams for casual wear. Otherwise, there’s just not much happening. Also, snowboarding wasn’t primetime material. When did the curling get airtime? I don’t recall.
I seem to recall a corny movie about curling. Sort of along the lines of dodgeball.
Gee, I’d forgotten about this.
During the Olympics? CNBC was streaming coverage after the close of the bell on Wall Street. All the trading guys were glued to their screens supposedly.
All in all, curling seems to be subtle sport. Trying to control the path of the stone by minute changes in the texture of the ice.
I’ve been finding it very interesting the number of these stories I’ve been able to find lately – for some crazy reason, Acontinuouslean.com and putthison.com have been full of them but I think that is because both of those blogs are focused on stuff made in the US, especially men’s clothing.
I’m considering donning clothing but heck, winter is almost over so why bother?
I love the idea of starting a small business. It would be an act of courage in this economy. But as you say, when better?
hehehe..well, we consider ourselves having had a heat wave in Upstate NY this week because it got up to 45 yesterday
Maybe best to start it as a sideline and see how it goes.
At the moment- one of the things holding people back (besides just the garden variety risk issues) is the fact that banks are not making loans. This is where finding community development banks, microloan organizations, local angels, family members with friendly money and so on, are very important things. Because no matter what the commercial banks are SAYING – they are not loaning. In our area, if you want a loan of less than $50,000 – you have to go to the credit unions – the banks haven’t made loans to small business in years.
Same here. A couple weeks ago high 20s felt like Spring, a pretty good indication it had been cold for awhile.
Oh, absolutely – I’m sure Scott Woodward started his crazy pants business with one or two models. And sometimes being the one person in an area with the right expertise or piece of equipment does the trick. My sister lives in northern VA and a guy a couple of streets away, once he figured out what was going to happen with the weather, talked his brother-in-law to let him use a Bobcat(tm) from his construction company – the guy cleaned up in their neighborhood. He was the one guy who could clean out people’s driveways and the street because the municipality couldn’t get plows down there.
Toby I bet you will get quite a few pups to think about starting their own business, whether as a sideline or the main thing.
I attended a meeting between my former employer and a bank official back in the early ’90s. The employer was trying to get a loan to reorganize his business. The bank wanted a DETAILED business plan, which was good because my employer didn’t really have a good plan and it would have been a waste of money. Somehow he managed to keep his head barely above water for decades, which still surprises me.
Well, let’s put it this way. Waiting for the ax to fall is horrible – I knew a guy once who was an engineer who kept losing his job locally – but he had always done welding on the side. He finally opened his own business because he felt he had more control that way. He still works part time as an engineer, but in our area, because so much of that business is military or government stuff, you never know what is going to happen.
G’evening Toby & Pups! Love the pants. I don’t know that i’d wear them, but i like them better than Zubaz, which i understand are making a comeback.
I always find it surprising how people can keep going with a business – sometimes it is just through sheer physical labor and forward motion. in our area, a little old lady has had a business making frozen halupkis for 30 years. She just gets up every day and makes dozens and dozens of halupkis, puts ‘em in plastic bags, freezes them and her daughter and son in law deliver them to local stores. Not a high profile concept, but it’s kept two families solvent for a very long time.
Hi NDFG! I hope all is well with you.
NDFG – hey there!
We just had an announcement locally this week where the gas and electric utility basically told the staff at the customer service call center that if they didn’t take a 50% cut in wages, they would shut down the call center. A community needs a lot of small businesses to soak up that level of people – I know a lot of people like the big hits in terms of getting a big employer to come into town – I’d rather have 15 employers with 100 people each than one 1500 employee place.
That’s pretty cool. Low overhead and a strong work ethic. I’ve long been amazed/impressed at stories of refugees arriving in this country with no money, unable to speak English and in a few years they are successfully self-employed.
Waving hi to NDFG!
Well, from a technical standpoint, she had the perfect model. We have a high population of folks whose families originated in Eastern Europe (our legacy from the period when we had thousands of people making shoes for Endicott Johnson). She was offering a food item that people liked, remembered their grannies making (but did not want to have to go to all the trouble to make themselves), and were more than willing to buy. There’s a Ukranian Orthodox Church locally that sells potato versions of these during Lent and people show up with five gallon buckets at the church kitchen door to pick up their orders every single week. She did not need to do focus group testing – she knew the market was there. It’s like spiedies locally – anyone who wants to operate a quick meal restaurant locally had better do spiedies – and the more permutations (sandwiches, salads, etc.) the better.
Going to power down here. Thanks Toby. Splendid evening to all.
Night, Rat..
Aloha, Toby…!
Sure another Canuck Gold in a Canuck spawned sport is buried by extraneous circumstances, much less by a fashion fas paux…! ;-)
Good evening CT, how are things?
Evening CT – we’ll allow the Canadians to get their medals on the ice, eh? The final match was very exciting (for curling, anyway). And I’m sure that the International Curling Federation (if such a body exists) is more than happy with the Norwegians (and the Danish Women’s team with their skirts) getting all that attention for the sport.
If I were going to go after business (and of course,this would entail getting some people with expertise because I am no engineer), I would be looking to produce something (hardware or software) that would squeeze out as much use out of energy as possible. Right now, in terms of household energy controls, the items that are out there basically just monitor how much energy is being used and depend on people to turn off appliances or not use them. There are certain appliances that you don’t have any control over in that way, such as refrigerators and freezers – this is a huge area of use. We need to be able to put a system on the appliance that would modulate the energy use – figure out how much juice can be used to keep the food cold and how much ‘off’ time there can be. Perhaps a totally different system needs to be designed – because turning things on and off sometimes burns out motors, but this is the next frontier in household energy use, IMHO.
ok – folks, it’s very late where I am – so I’ll sign off for now; thanks for stopping by.
Yow!
Goodnight Toby – thanks for this colorful post!
Oh, I know that I’m way too late (again), but curling is very popular here in Cleveland, only in the richest skating club set (and that would not be me and mrce) Sheesh!
Curling in Cleveland…who knew?
I’d rather watch corn grow!
Afterwords, you can eat it.
In between,
ENNUI!
Yes, they love it here! We were in a babysitting co-op for years. Many of the parents were “curlers.” Haha! How are you, EG?
Things are going well, thanks CE…are you anywhere near Parma? We used to go up there from southern Ohio every summer to visit cousins.
I’m on the other side of town, in Coventry Village (ex Haight Ashbury of Cleveland)where all the DFH’s live…and the art lovers.
Aloha, Toby and egregious, always a pleasure…! *g*
You guys have some pretty cool museums, if memory serves.