You might think that a “Levi” started Levi Strauss & Co., but such is not the case.

In 1847, a man named “Loeb” Strauss left Bavaria and sailed to New York with his mother and sister. His half-brothers were in a wholesale dry goods (cloth and linen bolts, clothing, etc.) business. In 1853, Loeb decided to take the hazardous trek to a bustling (because of the Gold Rush) San Francisco to seek a new start. Sometime around 1850, he reinvented more than just his location: he changed his name to “Levi.” We should all be grateful for this change:

If he hadn’t have taken that step, the world would be wearing “Loeb’s.”

There are some myths and ambiguity (due to the loss of records from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire) surrounding how Levi actually started making his signature jeans. What is known is that a Nevada tailor, Jacob Davis, contacted Levi about becoming a business partner in his new venture: tough, riveted work clothing for miners in the Reno area. Levi realized the import of such an opportunity, and in 1873 Levi Strauss & Co. and Davis received a patent for an “Improvement in Fastening Pocket-Openings.” And you know the rest! Read the time-line below for exactly when everything happened.

Time-Line

19th Century

1829 – Levi Strauss is born in Buttenheim, Bavaria.Two children in Levis

1847 – Levi Strauss, his two sisters and mother sail for America, where they join half-brothers Jonas and Louis in New York. Levi joins their dry goods business.

1853 – Levi becomes an American citizen and sails to San Francisco to set up a small dry-goods house, which grows into a prosperous business over the next twenty years.

1854 – Levi Strauss donates $5 to a San Francisco orphanage only one year after arriving in the city to open his dry-goods business. This is equivalent to approximately $110 U.S. and begins the company’s tradition of sharing its prosperity with the community.

1866 – LS&CO. headquarters are at 14-16 Battery Street, where they remain for 40 years.

1871 – Levi Strauss & Co. gives $100 to the Chicago Relief Fund to help rebuild after the fire of 1871.

1872 – Jacob Davis, a Reno Nevada tailor, writes to Levi Strauss & Co., telling him of the process he invented to rivet the pocket corners on men’s pants. He suggests the two men take out a patent on the process together.

1873 – Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis receive the patent for rivets on men’s pants. They begin making copper-riveted “waist overalls” (the old name for jeans) in San Francisco. The denim comes from the Amoskeag Mill in New Hampshire.

1897 – Levi Strauss donates funds to endow 28 scholarships at the University of California,Berkeley. These scholarships are still in place today.

1900~1919

1902 – Levi Strauss dies at the age of 73. His nephews inherit the business.

~Levi Strauss’ will contains a number of bequests to Bay Area charities which serve children and
the poor.

1906 – The earthquake and fire destroy the headquarters and two factories of Levi Strauss & Co. The company extends credit to its wholesale customers so they can get back on their feet and back in business. Employee salaries are continued, and temporary headquarters and a showroom are opened in order to keep employees working. A new factory is built at 250 Valencia Street, and new headquarters are erected on Battery Street.

1912 – Simon Davis, son of Jacob Davis and the superintendent of the Valencia Street factory,invents “Koveralls,” a one-piece play suit for children and the company’s first nationally distributed product.

1915 – L &CO. receives the Highest Award for waist overalls at the Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco. The company begins to purchase denim from Cone Mills in North Carolina.

1919 – Walter A. Haas, Sr. joins the company

1920s

1920 – A factory is opened in Frankfort, Indiana to make Koveralls.

1920s – During this decade, the assembly-line technique is adopted at the Valencia Street and Frankfort factories. In addition, the climate for selling denim products is unfavorable; the price of cotton drops sharply, rendering cotton garments subject to price reduction. Despite this, Walter Haas, Sr. maintains the company’s $25,000 advertising budget, as he feels advertising (in the form of billboards and painted signs) is crucial to the success of the waist overalls.

1926 – Bonuses are given to the workers at the Valencia Street factory, possibly a first in theapparel industry.

1928 – The company registers the word Levi’s® as a trademark.

1930s

1930s – The Depression strikes and the demand for products declines. Workers at the Valencia Street facility are put on a short work week to avoid layoffs, and others are given non-manufacturing tasks such as laying the hardwood floors that are still in use today. At the same time, the company adopts the cowboy as its advertising and image-building icon, associating the rugged individualism of the cowboy (and his Hollywood counterpart) with the famous 501® waist overalls.

1934 – LS&CO. creates “Lady Levi’s®,” the company’s first blue jean for women.

1940s

1940s – During World War II, the design of waist overalls is changed due to government
mandates regarding the conservation of raw materials. U.S. soldiers wear their Levi’s® jeans and jackets overseas, giving the products their first international exposure.

~African-American workers at the company’s California plants work in integrated facilities.

1948 – LS&CO. discontinues its wholesale business in order to concentrate on manufacturing apparel.

1950s

1952 – The Levi Strauss Foundation is formed to coordinate the company’s charitable giving.

1954 — “Lighter Blues” casual slacks and the “Denim Family” line mark the company’s entry intothe sportswear business.
~An Army colonel on an American base in Frankfurt, Germany, bans military wives from wearing blue jeans, saying it reflects poorly on the U.S.

1958 – Levi’s® jeans are chosen for the American Pavilion at the World’s Fair in Brussels.
1959 – Levi’s® jeans are exhibited at the “American Fashion Industries Presentation” in Moscow.
~The company begins exporting garments to Europe and appoints an Export Manager.

1960s

1960s – LS&CO. opens its first southern plant. Located in Blackstone, Virginia, the company insists from its inception that the facility be integrated. This occurs before desegregation is mandated by federal law.

1961 – Clothing is exhibited in Paris by our French distributor.

1962 – LS&CO. receives President Kennedy’s “E” award for significant contributions to the United States export program.

1963 – Pre-shrunk Levi’s® jeans are introduced.

1964 – STA-PREST® slacks —the first wrinkle free products — are introduced. Levi’s® jeans become part of the permanent collections of the Smithsonian Institution.

1965 – Levi Strauss International and Levi Strauss Far East are established, beginning the
company’s expansion into Europe and Asia.

1966 – The company airs its first television commercial.

1967 – Levi’s® jeans are exhibited in Moscow, Prague and Warsaw.
~Rock groups such as The Jefferson Airplane and Paul Revere and the Raiders record radio commercials for the Stretch Levi’s® and White Levi’s® lines.

1968 – The Community Affairs department is established, formalizing the company’s
philanthropic efforts.

1969-1970 – LS&CO. introduces bell bottoms into its jeans line.
~LS&CO. renovates the Valencia Street plant and the surrounding areas, creating a community gathering place and contributing to the improvement of the community.
Peter Haas, Sr. becomes President.

1970s

1970s – Corduroy and polyester pants are added to the Levi’s® range, reflecting the styles of thetimes.

~The first Community Involvement Teams are formed at the headquarters office.

1971 – LS&CO. becomes a public corporation, and includes a statement of its values in its prospectus.

~Levi Strauss Japan is established, marking the company’s first official entry into the Asian marketplace.

1974 – Company headquarters move to a large office complex at Embarcadero Center in San Francisco.

1980s

1982 – The Levi Strauss Foundation makes its first matching gifts to the Kaposi Sarcoma Clinic at San Francisco General Hospital.

1984 – LS&CO. is the official outfitter of the U.S. Olympic Team and the Los Angeles Gamesstaff.
~The “501® Blues” television campaign is launched at the Olympic Games, leading to  resurgence in sales of the 501® jeans.LS&CO. receives the Lawrence A. Wien Prize in Corporate Social Responsibility.

1985 — LS&CO. wins the Governor’s Committee Media/Advertising Award from the New York

~State Office of Advocates for the Disabled, for its positive portrayals of disabled people in the “501® Blues” television ads.
~LS&CO. completes the largest leveraged buyout in the apparel industry and the company becomes private again.

1986 – Dockers® Khakis are introduced in the United States. The company holds its first auction of celebrity-decorated denim jackets to benefit AIDS research and education at Barneys in New York.

1990s

1990 – LS&CO. receives the German Apparel Supplier of the Year award, the first non-German and the first jeans company to win the award.

1991 – “Project Change,” an initiative to fight institutional racism in LS&CO. communities, is launched.

~The first Original Levi’s Stores® are opened in the United States, in Columbus Ohio.

~LS&CO. develops the first known set of comprehensive standards for manufacturing and finishing contractors worldwide, dealing with wages, hours, working conditions, ethics and the environment.

~Levi Strauss North America is formed to better coordinate the strategies and needs of the business in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico.

1993 – Business Ethics magazine names LS&CO. as one of three companies to win its
“Excellence in Ethics” award.

~Due to positive changes in South Africa, LS&CO.’s South Africa Policy Group recommends that the company modify its policy to consider doing business in that country (if free, fair, non- racial elections have been held and a Government of National Unity has been installed).

1994 – Levi’s® Dockers® are introduced in Europe..

~Employees at the Customer Service Center in Canton, Miss., are honored by the White House and Congress for their volunteer work in support of children and families in the Jackson and Canton communities.

1995 – Dockers® Khakis, invented in Japan ten years earlier as Docker Pants, are re-introduced to Japanese consumers.

~LS&CO. places No. 1 among apparel firms and No. 16 overall in Fortune magazine’s annual list of America’s most admired corporations.

~Hispanic magazine names LS&CO. among the top 100 companies that provide the most
opportunities for Hispanic employees.

~LS&CO. launches its first site on the Web at www.levi.com.

~Levi Strauss Japan sponsors the Rolling Stones’ “Voodoo Lounge” tour.

~”Clayman” becomes LS&CO.’s first global commercial for the Levi’s® brand and runs in countries on all five continents.

1996 – Levi’s® Vintage Clothing is introduced globally. LVC is a line of authentic reproductions ofclothing from the Levi Strauss & Co. Archives.

~The Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change presents LS&CO. with the 1996 Management Award. The Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE), which represents several LS&CO. owned-and-operated manufacturing facilities, made the award nomination in recognition of the unique partnership between LS&CO. and UNITE.

1997 – LS&CO. receives the Organizational Award for a Large Business from the Centers for Disease Control.

~The company also receives the Quality of Life Award from Auburn University.

1998 – LS&CO. celebrates the 125th anniversary of the invention of jeans.

~A flagship Original Levi’s Store® opens on San Francisco’s Union Square.

Present

2000 – LS&CO. introduces Levi’s® Engineered Jeans™, the reinvention of jeans for the 21st century. LS&CO. named No. 2 in Fortune’s “America’s Best Companies for Minorities”.

~Levi Strauss & Co. sponsors D’Angelo and Christina Aguilera concert tours.

2003 – Levi Strauss & Co. celebrates the 150th anniversary of its founding and the 130th
anniversary of the invention of blue jeans by Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis.

2004 – The Levi Strauss Foundation is presented with the Corporate Philanthropy Award by the Ms. Foundation. The theme of the awards is how community participation builds and strengthens democracy.

~Case studies involving LS&CO. and the Levi Strauss Foundation are featured in the book called Compassionate Capitalism: How Corporations Can Make Doing Good an Integral Part of Doing Well.

For more information, time-lines and facts, visit the Levi Strauss Co website.

Soles4Souls LogoFM Light Logo

+

Do you want to help Haiti?

Do you want new shoes?

Visit F.M. Light and Sons: we are partnering with Soles4Souls to benefit you and Haiti. Here’s the scoop:

old shoes + need for new + F.M. Light and Sons and Soles4Souls = 10% off (or more) and a donation for Haiti

We have a large selection of sale shoes (up to 50% off). If you donate gently used shoes, we’ll give you the sale price, plus 10% off. And, you help those in need. How great is that?

Questions about shoes – such as what gently used means, exactly?
Click Here for more information.

Susanna and the Gang at F.M. Light and Sons

What kind of shoes do we accept?

Soles4Souls accepts all types of shoes: athletic, running, dress, sandals, pumps, heels, work boots, cleats, dance, flip flops, just as long as they are new or gently worn.

How do I know what is gently worn?

We define gently worn as shoes that you would still wear. They should have solid soles with no holes, laces if applicable, clean (no mud). We never like to see anything thrown away, so please, if there is any question, send the shoes along and we will sort and utilize the best possible way.

Do we accept half pairs?

Yes, Soles4Souls accepts half pairs. Hopefully they can match them up one day!

More questions? Visit the Soles4Souls website for more information.

Buyers' Vendor of the Month
Ryan Michael Logo

While in Denver, we stopped in at the Ryan Michael showroom, and were privileged to see beautiful color palettes and fresh designs, and meet the president of the company. We are proud to present Ryan Michael as our vendor of the month. Pictured below is the president, Michael Ryan, and his description of the company.
Michael Ryan

“At Ryan Michael, we’re not the first to create clothing inspired by the west. We’ve embraced its bold, independent spirit and followed our own path in creating a brand providing unincorporated men and women with a look that reflects the romance and complex sophistication of this uniquely American lifestyle.
We’re driven to ensure originality and quality in everything we craft. So, we have to think differently to capture the confidence and inner strength of those who choose to wear our apparel.
For us it starts with our broad palette of colors, and the manner in which they are infused into each garment to produce a distinctive look. It means we must blend the best natural fibers like cotton, silk, and linen in new and striking ways to create designs both refined and comfortable.
In short, we want Ryan Michael to transcend the fleeting nature of trends – to become a time weaver providing a tangible link between the discriminating demands of today with the tradition and values of the past. It’s this inspiration that’s woven into everything carrying our name.
That’s especially important when the name is your own. It makes things personal, makes us work a little harder and helps us to be better. We’re passionate about our work and committed to building a brand true to the character of the west.”
Michael Ryan
President

Women's Ryan Michael Shirt

Men's Ryan Michael Shirt

Bustling, friendly people: Behind the Scenes

Have you ever wondered where the stores get the merchandise that you shop for? Read on for a behind-the-scenes look at how it all works.

At least twice a year, F.M. Light and Sons sends a delegation (headed by our buyer Michelle) to Denver, CO to purchase the merchandise you see in our store. This past market, in January, featured ladies clothing, and western apparel. Here are the steps we take to provide you with a shopping experience:

Appointments are made with each vendor (the companies you like, such as Levi, Scully, Dan Post, Pendleton, Woolrich, Old Gringo, Christopher Blue, etc.). At each appointment, Michelle picks out what will be sold in the store as representatives from each company show us clothing, arranging shipments, and working out any and all problems. As our trip is bi-annual, it is especially nice to see old friends – men and women who have worked with us for years. At our appointments, reps display clothing for fall – always a season in advance, highlighting the products that have performed the best during the show. This is the best part of buying: seeing what is new and fresh a season in advance.
As the buyer, you also have to look for new, fresh products. The building is huge (look below for statistics), so this task can be quite daunting. January’s market was the largest Western and English Trade Show in the entire world.

To give you an insight into the scale:

  • 25 foreign countries, all 50 states, and 1 territory was represented at the January Market.
  • The Mart building and facilities comprise 269,000 square feet. That can hold a lot of people!
Altogether, the show is quite the experience.
Behind the Scenes: The Denver  Buying Show - enable images to view

Boots are like friends; you have to take care of them. They can dry out, and get dirty. If you take a few minutes and maintain them properly, it will greatly extend the life of your boots, and boost your enjoyment and pride in them.

Old Boots

Old, cracked, neglected boots.

1. CLEAN
Do not let dirt and dust accumulate on leather products. After each wearing, boots should be wiped down with a damp, not wet, cloth. Dust and dirt can break down the leather and shorten the life of your boots. Allow your boots to dry out thoroughly between wearings. This prevents the onset of bacteria from forming in the leather. Allow your boots to air dry, do not set them near heat. It will dry them out excessively.
2. CONDITION
Conditioning leather is important because conditioner helps to maintain the original look and feel of the leather. Conditioning keeps the boots from drying out. Use a conditioner specially formulated for boots. Lanolin based products work best.
3. POLISH
To keep boots looking their best, you should periodically apply a matching boot cream polish. The polish will help to cover any scuffs and can be brought to a bright luster.
4. PROTECT

Protect your boots even more with water repellant, use boot trees to help maintain your boots shape and form and use edge dressing on the outside edge to maintain welt color.

Tan Mignon Ladies Boot

A shiny, well- loved boot

See? It’s really very simple! If you have any questions, or if you have discovered any ideas or tips for yourself, or, if a brilliant idea has popped into your head, and you want to share it, let us know!

Susanna and the Crew at F.M. Light & Sons

Cleaning tips referenced from danpostboots.com

Christmas Sales
Christmas is a time for giving, that’s why F.M. Light and Sons is offering many gift ideas on sale!

For your man:

20% Off
All Carhartt and Dri-Duck Coats

50% Off
Rainforest Coats

25-75% Off
Select Vests & Jackets (Leather and Canvas)
$99.99

Outback Oilskin (regularly $130.00)


$25-$100 off
Select Scully leather jackets and vests


Up to 1/2 off
Select Western Boots


For the special woman in your life:

$25-$100 off
All Carhartt and Dri-Duck Coats


$50-$150 off
Select Scully Leather Jackets


$25-$100 off
Select Western Boots

$40 Off
Fleece Vests
1/2 off

Select Michael Ryan Shirts

$99.99

Sonora Western Boots (Regularly $290.00)

buyers_vendor_month_newThe UGG® Australia story began in 1978, when Brian Smith, a young surfer from Australia, took a trip to the United States with a bag full of sheepskin boots. After finding a new home amongst California surfers, the UGG® Australia brand began to take shape.

Ugg Logo
| Beacon |

| Beacon |

| Classic Cardy |

| Classic Cardy |

Sheepskin: UGG® Australia uses only the highest-grade sheepskin available. Twin-face sheepskin is used in many of their products. A piece of twin-face sheepskin has been treated on both the fleece side, and the skin side, providing the soft comfort UGG® Australia is famous for.

Grade-A sheepskin is extremely dense and soft, which provides for a more comfortable and durable material. Lesser quality material and synthetics can be coarse, scratchy, and non-breathable. Grade-A sheepskin breathes naturally, wicking away moisture, and allowing air to circulate freely.
Fleece breathes, wicks moisture away, and allows air to circulate, keeping feet dry.
Sheepskin is naturally thermostatic thus keeping bare feet close to your natural body temperature regardless of the temperature outside.

 | Bellvue |

| Bellvue |


Warmth: 30° Below
– the science behind thermostatic footwear.
Ugg’s fine woolen sheepskin breathes, wicking heat and moisture away to keep your feet dry and at body temperature indoors and out.
Sheepskin is a naturally thermostatic material. This means that while you’re wearing sheepskin, it’s automatically regulating your body temperature throughout the day. Because of this, UGG® Australia sheepskin footwear can be worn all year round.
In addition to regulating body temperature, grade-A sheepskin breathes naturally, wicking heat and moisture away.

| Cove |

| Cove |

Slippers: Why not combine the warmth and comfort of sheepskin with a slipper? Ugg carries a fine array of slippers – the perfect gift to keep your friends and family (and you!) comfortable throughout the year.

| Scuff |

| Scuff |

| Coquette |

| Coquette |

| Scuffette |

| Scuffette |

| Ascot |

| Ascot |


Birthday_Cake copy

November 9, 1905. F.M. Light & Sons opened its doors for business, with a foot of snow surrounding and a frigid temperature. What began on that bitter day in November proved to be a 104 year legacy that the intrepid Francis Marion Light left to his grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren; six generations. In history, the year 1905 brought many great changes to the world.

January 1 – The Trans-Siberian Railway officially opens after its completion on July 21,1904.

January 5 – The play The Scarlet Pimpernel opens at the New Theatre in London and begins a run of 122 performances and numerous revivals.

March 4 - U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt begins a full term.

April 2 – The Simplon Tunnel is officially opened through the Alps.

May 15 - Las Vegas, Nevada is founded when 110 acres (0.4 km²), in what later becomes
downtown, are auctioned off.

June 30 - Albert Einstein publishes the article On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies where he reveals his theory of special relativity. 1905 is regarded as his “miracle year”.

October 5 – The Wright Brothers’ third aeroplane (Wright Flyer III) stays in the air for 39 minutes with Wilbur piloting. This is the first aeroplane flight lasting over 1/2 an hour.

November 9 – The Berlin Wall is opened in 1989 – citizens on both sides walked freely through the barrier as others danced atop the structure, signaling the end of a historic era.

Fascinating Statistics

Did you know that the tallest structure in the world was the Eiffel Tower? Or that only 8 percent of the homes in the U.S. had a bathtub? Check below for other interesting statistics and see how much the world has changed in only 104 years.

  • The average life expectancy in the U.S. was 47 years
  • There were only 8,000 cars in the U.S., and only 144 miles of paved roads.
  • A three – minute call from Denver to New York City cost eleven dollars.
  • The maximum speed limit in most cities was 10 mph.
  • The average wage in the U.S. was 22 cents an hour.
  • There was no Mother’s Day or Father’s Day.
  • Crossword puzzles, canned beer and iced tea hadn’t been invented.There were only about 230 reported murders in the entire U.S.
  • The population of Las Vegas, Nevada, was 30.
At F.M. Light and Sons we are devoted to meeting the growing demand for American made products. That’s why we carry brands such as Churchill, Fox River, Craighead, Schaefer, and Wah Maker.

Boys with American Flag

Churchill makes excellent leather gloves – stay warm this fall wearing their dark brown elk skin thinsulate gloves, on sale in our store for $39.99, down from $54.99.

Cold Feet? If you want a sock that “fits your foot and your lifestyle, is good for the environment, is made in the USA and is a darn good sock,” then visit us and take a look at Fox River socks. Since 1900 (5 years more than us!), in the Fox River Valley of Appleton, Wisconsin, Fox River Mills, Inc.(now based in Osage, Iowa) has “been committed to producing quality knitted socks and handwear. Fox River was founded on the principle of offering a superior product with great service at a fair price. Today, Fox River Mills in one of the leading outdoor, athletic, and lifestyle sock manufacturers in the world.”

Schaefer Ranchwear is proudly manufacturing American – made products in their family owned and operated factory. This means they design, engineer, cut, sew and inspect each and every garment in the product line. They are one of the last full line apparel manufactures left in the U.S. In addition to this, Schaefer firmly stands behind purchasing American made raw materials – every thread, snap and label included. What dedication!

Wah-Maker Cowboy Clothing is the “recognized leader in the design and manufacture of the traditional clothing of the American West.” Their products are American Made and have been for over 125 years – their clothes embody the spirit of the frontier and are lauded for their authenticity; several Academy Award winning films have used their line.

Thank you for letting us know of your interest in American Made products – and thank these companies for their dedication to doing just that.  Come visit us, and ask to see these fine products.

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