Chrome Industries
Industry | Apparel |
---|---|
Products | Messenger bags, footwear, backpacks |
Website | chromeindustries.com |
Chrome Industries is a global manufacturer of messenger bags, backpacks, utility cycling apparel [1] and utility cycling footwear.[2] After establishing a reputation in Boulder, Colorado in 1995, Chrome moved to Denver for several years before relocating in 2002 to its now headquartered retail and company location in San Francisco. In August 2010, Chrome opened its second retail store in Manhattan, New York, and has since opened retail locations in Chicago, Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis, a second San Francisco location in the Mission District, Denver and Washington, DC.
Manufacturing
Chrome is best known for producing quality products designed with a set of company standards, which they outline as functionality, utility and durability.
Their bags are guaranteed for life and built with industrial materials including tarpaulin, Cordura and steel. Chrome’s popular messenger bag line, Mini-Metro, Citizen and Metropolis, is chiefly recognizable by their signature seatbelt buckle release that doubles as a bottle opener. The company started building their bags in a garage with salvaged materials such as seatbelt buckles and seatbelt webbing and has maintained its straightforward aesthetic and industrial material usage across their entire range of product offerings. 90% of its bag line is still produced in the USA, mainly in their warehouse located in Chico, California.
They have since expanded to incorporate an apparel line, which includes their best selling Cobra merino wool hoodie, and a shoe line including their best selling low-profile design Kursk street shoe with built-in cycling functionalities such as reflective hits, shoelace garage, skid resistant soles and polyurethane contoured crash pad insole.
In 2014, Chrome began selling its city sneakers and messenger backpacks as one-off sales on Tilt.com.[3]
Athletic Sponsorships & Company Partnerships
Chrome’s sponsored athletes include professional skateboarders, John Cardiel, John Igei, Massan Fluker, Damian Riehl, Alonso Tal, and Nico Deportago-Cabrera.
Chrome partnerships have incorporated such companies and entities as Bad Religion, Krooked Skateboards, Motörhead,[4] artist and illustrator, Pat Perry, Tim Kasher, and philanthropic organizations such as the World Food Programme and San Francisco’s St. Anthony Foundation.[5]
References
- ↑ “Chrome’s Cobra & Pasha Jackets Make a Great Holiday Gift”, BikeReviews, 2010-12-13, http://bikereviews.com/2010/12/chromes-cobra-pasha-jackets-make-great-holiday-gift", Retrieved 2010-12-20
- ↑ "Chrome Tobruk Shoes", Urban Velo, 2010-08-09, http://urbanvelo.org/chrome-tobruk-shoes/", Retrieved 2010-11-02
- ↑ Tilt.com. Tilt.com https://www.tilt.com/users/chrome. Retrieved 25 August 2014. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ “Chrome Offers Limited Edition Motorhead Messenger Bag", AOL Music: NoiseCreep, 2010-11-25, http://www.noisecreep.com/2010/11/25/chrome-bags-motorhead-citizen-messenger-bag/, Retrieved 2010-12-20
- ↑ “San Francisco's Chrome gives veterans new shoes”, San Francisco Chronicle, 2010-11-12, http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/11/11/BAJQ1GAOP7.DTL, Retrieved 2010-12-20