Misplaced Pages

Crispa (clothing brand)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Shirt brand This article is about the shirt brand. For the original Crispa basketball team, see Crispa Redmanizers. For the amateur teams that played in the MICAA (1977-1981) and the PBL (1989-1992), see Crispa 400.
Crispa
Product typeShirt
OwnerVNF and Sons, Inc.
CountryPhilippines
Introduced1948
Previous owners
  • P. Floro & Sons, Inc.
  • Star Textiles, Inc.
Websitecrispa.ph

Crispa is a Philippine brand of shirts.

Background

Crispa was established in 1948 as a department store chain by the spouses Pablo and Crisanta Floro. The name is a portmanteau of the couple's first names and was later also used for its textile manufacturing business.

The brand gained a good reputation by the 1970s with its line of T-shirts, coinciding with the success of its basketball team, the Crispa Redmanizers. The basketball team was established in 1956 by Valeriano "Danny" Floro, one of the sons of the Floro couple.

The original Crispa shirts and underwear were made purely from cotton and underwent a mechanical process called "Redmanization" to make the cloth dimensionally stable and more resilient to unwanted shrinking after washing. Crispa's garment and textile products were marketed as "Redmanized", "shrunk-to-fit". Crispa would discontinue its manufacturing and retail businesses, as well as disband its basketball team, following the decline of the Floro business enterprises by the late-1980s.

During the mid-2000s, the Crispa brand was briefly revived by Star Textiles, Inc. with a line of shirts similar to the original line.

In 2020, VNF and Sons, Inc., owned by certain grandchildren of Danny Floro, revived the Crispa brand with the introduction of a new line of T-shirts.

See also

References

  1. ^ Defensor, Tet (8 June 2021). "Crispa makes a comeback". Manila Standard. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  2. ^ Gomez, Jerome (3 August 2021). "This Crispa shirt revival is taking us back to the wild days of PH basketball". ANCX. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Crispa Redmanizers t-shirts making comeback". BusinessMirror. November 25, 2021. Retrieved November 25, 2021.

Further reading

Stub icon 1 Stub icon 2

This article about a fashion brand, house, corporation or company is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: