Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Vans co-founder Paul Van Doren dies

- By Robert Jablon

Paul Van Doren, co-founder of the Vans company whose iconic Southern California sneakers were beloved by skateboard­ers and became an internatio­nal success, has died. He was 90.

The company, based southeast of Los Angeles in Costa Mesa, announced Van Doren’s death on social media Friday but didn’t provide any details.

“Paul was not just an entreprene­ur; he was an innovator,” the company said. “Paul’s bold experiment­s in product design, distributi­on and marketing, along with his knack for numbers and efficiency turned a family shoe business into a globally recognized brand.”

High school dropout

Van Doren was a high school dropout who moved to Southern California from the Boston area. Van Doren, his brother James (who died in 2011) and business partners Gordon Lee and Serge Delia opened the Van Doren Rubber Co. in Orange County in 1966, making and selling their own shoes. At first, they struggled to produce enough of the product to fill the shoeboxes on store shelves.

Van Doren had two decades of experience in shoe manufactur­ing but none in retail, he recalled.

“The first person gave me a $5 bill; a pair of shoes was

$2.49,” he told Los Angeles Magazine last month after releasing his memoir, “Authentic.”

“But I didn’t have any money in the cash register, so I gave her the shoes,” Van Doren said. “We ended up selling 16 or 18 pair of shoes that day. You know what? I said, ‘Come back later to pay.’ Every one of those people came back and paid.”

Van Doren’s son, Steve Van Doren, said his father’s acumen helped make the business a success.

“My dad was a systems guy,” Steve Van Doren told the Los Angeles Times in 2009. “He did things like color-coding the boxes, blue for men, green for women and orange for boys, so you could see what inventory you had right away. He would only open stores that had a free right-hand exterior wall because he thought

that was the best place to catch someone’s eye if they were driving by.”

Van Doren also allowed people to order customized shoes. He expanded the customer base by allowing various designs to be sold everywhere from surf shops to department stores.

In “Authentic,” Van Doren said the key to success was to give customers what they wanted.

“If it’s a checkerboa­rd, if it’s bright pinks and yellows, or if it happens to be dinosaurs or a skull and crossbones, listen to their two cents’ worth about colors and designs,” he said.

Catching interest

The shoes, with their canvas tops and tough, diamond-patterned rubber soles, caught the fancy of skateboard­ers. The company, which kept a sharp eye on trends, was quick to catch on.

“Everybody else was kicking these kids out of the park, kicking them out of pools. And here’s a company listening to them, backing them, and making shoes for them,” Van Doren told Los Angeles Magazine.

The company paid profession­al skateboard Stacy Peralta to wear its shoes. Vans also sold shoes individual­ly, which benefited skateboard­ers who tended to wear out one at a time.

The brand’s popularity soared after Sean Penn wore his own pair of Checkerboa­rd Slip-Ons in the 1982 movie “Fast Times at Ridgemont High.”

However, knockoffs and competitio­n ate into Vans’ profits, along with misguided efforts to expand the range of its offerings with specialize­d shoes for football, basketball, skydiving and even breakdanci­ng. The company was forced into bankruptcy protection in 1984 and was sold to a banking firm in 1988.

Over the years, the brand’s popularity waxed and waned, losing ground to newer, high-techier kicks and regaining it when retro came back into fashion.

The firm, renamed Vans Inc., went public in 1991 and in 2004 was sold to VF Corp. of Denver, which owns a large number of footwear and apparel brands including Dickies, JanSport, Timberland and The North Face.

 ?? VANS ?? One of Vans’ co-founding brothers, Paul Van Doren.
VANS One of Vans’ co-founding brothers, Paul Van Doren.

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