Crumpler

Crumpler
Private
Founded 1995[1]
Founder David Roper, Stuart Crumpler and Will Miller[2]
Headquarters Melbourne / Berlin
Products Messenger bags, photography bags, laptop bags and luggage
Website www.crumpler.com/au/ Edit this on Wikidata

Crumpler is a bag manufacturer with two separately held companies who design and supply different products to their respective markets. The company is headquartered in Melbourne, Australia and has a European office in Berlin. Established in 1995, the company was founded by Dave Roper & Stuart Crumpler. It began as a messenger bag company, but has since expanded its range, notably into laptop bags, camera bags and luggage / travel goods.

History

Crumpler was founded in Melbourne in 1995 by Dave Roper and Will Miller (ex bike couriers & founders of Minuteman Messengers), and sculptor / furniture maker / bike courier Stuart Crumpler. Stuart designed the logo in 1991 which he branded onto his furniture designs.[3]

From the beginning, the bags were designed for bike messengers, in particular those working for David Roper and Will Miller's bike courier company, Minuteman. The range grew to include more options in colours and sizes. The story goes Minuteman needed better bags and Dave approached Stuart who was working part time as a bike courier and asked if he could make 20 for the fleet. The simple shoulder bags were much more practical for the job than a backpack (no need to remove completely to access the contents). After making gradual improvements to the materials and design Stuart & Dave met at The George Hotel in St Kilda and decided to start a bag company.

Crumpler's first factory was at level 2 125 Flinders Lane Melbourne in what was the old rag-trade district and just up the road from the Minuteman Messenger base (199 Flinders Lane). After orders increased they moved to 30 Brunswick St Fitzroy where they had a factory out back, shop in the front and a flat upstairs where Stuart Crumpler and his partner Suze and their dog Ansen lived. After further expansion the factory moved to Ballarat for a few years then back to Melbourne where the firm took over a huge derelict wool-store building in Kensington. After 10 years in Kensington they moved the studio, pattern room and office to Total House 180 Russell St Melbourne and kept warehousing in Kensington.

Crumpler became known for unusual marketing largely credited to Dave Roper. Giant logo stencils painted on building site hoardings, the infamous Beer for Bags event where beer was the only currency accepted in store during the sale, logo fruit stickers placed on millions of apples and oranges, colour by numbers toilet paper, tiny boxes of matches, controversial websites & hosting the Australian Cycle Messenger Championships. The company was an active supporter of grass roots & student art, film, photography and many creative pursuits often sponsoring and or financing projects.

Stuart sold out to Dave & Will in 2011 & Will sold out in 2014 to Crescent Capital.

Pop Up Store

In October 2015 the brand has opened a Pop Up Store in the 1st arrondissement of Paris at the petite Cremerie de Paris next to the Cremerie de Paris in the historic Hotel de Villeroy.[4][5]

References

  1. "2001/127/2 Messenger bag, 'Seedy Three', Dupont Cordura Plus nylon/ plastic, designed and made by Crumpler, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 1995". D*Hub. Archived from the original on 2009-04-06. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
  2. Seid, Jessica (2006-06-06). "Trade your beer, get cool stuff". CNNMoney.com. CNN. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
  3. http://www.phm.gov.au/collection/database/?irn=9789&search=bicycle&images=&c=
  4. Crumpler Pop Up Store at the petite Cremerie de Paris
  5. Crumpler Pop Up Store Paris by Fashion Mag
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