These Are the Coolest Small Brands We Saw at Outdoor Retailer

We give the big outdoor brands a lot of love at Outdoor Retailer鈥攁nd for good reason. Companies like and The North Face make great products. This year, however, we also wanted to highlight the little guys. The up-and-comers.
That鈥檚 because there are more small brands in our business than ever before. This year鈥檚 OR featured a giant breakout section of small companies that was overflowing with beautiful and innovative products. We spent hours combing through the booths. These are our five favorites.
Pictured: Robert Jungman, founder of Jungmaven.

Co-founder Muriel Bartol started Los Angeles, California鈥揵ased with her husband, Matt Rolletta, six months before they planned to go on their honeymoon in Vietnam. 鈥淲e just made knickers because my husband wanted them, and we thought we would sell some to friends,鈥 Bartol said. Then the New York Times featured their knickers, and the orders came in so fast they had to cancel their plane tickets and postpone their honeymoon. That was ten years ago, and they鈥檝e spent the ensuing years building out an entire line of smart, well-designed bike clothes.
Pictured: Muriel Bartol.

began when Robert 鈥淏ernie鈥 Bernthal met fourth-generation sheep rancher John Helle while skiing at Montana鈥檚 Maverick Mountain. Helle owns a 25,000-acre ranch with 12,500 head of fine Rambouillet merino sheep, and Bernthal has a background in branding and marketing. They hatched a business plan by the third lift ride and soon partnered with textile guru Graham Steward and designer Outi Pulkkinen to create a line of high-end wool apparel that includes everything from T-shirts to long underwear to puffy jackets. The company takes a lot of pride in its local product. I can attest to the superior comfort as well as durability of pieces like the men鈥檚 .
Pictured: Robert Bernthal and Outi Pulkkinen.

launched at the Kona Ironman in 2010. Owner Tony DeBoom had been a sponsored triathlete and was sick of how visually boring the whole sport had become. He wanted to add some visual flare. 鈥淭riathlon apparel was all about high tech. The casual apparel side was overlooked,鈥 DeBoom says. He drew art on the side and saw an opening. The company started with ten triathlete lifestyle shirts; today, it has 100 designs and makes some of the flashiest and cleverest bike kit we鈥檝e ever seen. There鈥檚 also a retail store on Pearl Street in Boulder.
Pictured: Tony DeBoom.

Will and Kelly Watters got married last year and launched their outdoor apparel company, , shortly thereafter. 鈥淵ou really get to know someone that way,鈥 Kelly jokes. The pair met as ski instructors in Vail, Colorado, and started the line because they wanted multifaceted products鈥攍ike the 鈥攖hat they could wear on the slopes, down into town, and even out on the river. To fund their venture, they moved back to Will鈥檚 hometown in Georgia, got full-time jobs, and worked on the brand at night. 鈥淚鈥檒l work from eight to five at my day job, come home, then work until midnight on Western Rise, then wake up at 6 a.m. and do it all over again,鈥 Will says.
Pictured: Will and Kelly Watters.

Robert Jungman, founder of the beautiful, classy hemp apparel line , has a very simple goal: He wants everyone wearing hemp shirts by 2020. 鈥淲hen someone says T-shirt, people automatically think cotton. I want them to think hemp,鈥 Jungman says. He鈥檚 not out to profit. Instead, he wants hemp to replace cotton because it鈥檚 better for the environment鈥攖he plant requires zero irrigation, pesticides, or synthetic fertilizers. We respect his goal鈥攁nd his product.
Pictured: Robert Jungman.