INDUSTRY — There is a long list of things that make Peter Robert’s jiu jitsu apparel and training gear company, OriginUSA, a unique story.

After the company’s first year of profitability importing its apparel from manufacturers overseas, Roberts had a moral awakening. He began the painstaking task of figuring out how to manufacture his products in the U.S.

The New Sharon native, who lives in Industry, decided he was going to do this all from Franklin County in the foothills of western Maine.

He traveled around the state to mills “rescuing” vintage pieces of machinery and learning how to use them in order to manufacture jiu jitsu gis of the best possible quality, when at the time he didn’t even know how to thread a sewing machine.

The plan came together and his company began making everything except for the fabric in-house. And then recently they began making their own fabric, too.

Then there’s the fact that today, at its cottage-like factory off a dirt road in tiny Industry, OriginUSA employs 20 people and is churning out 60 units a day.

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And to top it all off, OriginUSA is the only jiu jitsu apparel company in North America that Roberts knows of that manufactures its own products.

The overarching theme of OriginUSA’s journey is something Roberts likens to that of L.L. Bean or New Balance or G.H. Bass and Co. — a Maine-borne determination for a level of product quality that can only come from making it all yourself, even in the face of being told it’s impossible.

“I was so determined through frustration and just sickened through the importing,” Roberts said. “Everyone was like, ‘You’re not going to be able to manufacture that stuff. It’s impossible. You need a million dollars. No one has ever done it before. The textile industry is dead.'”

Last week, standing in his company’s 8,000-square-foot manufacturing plant in a town of fewer than 1,000 residents in Franklin County, as his company bursts at the seams with production, Roberts answered those negative voices with a question of his own: “Where else could you do this?”

Roberts started OriginUSA in 2011 as Origin Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. A Mt. Blue High School graduate, Roberts grew up involved in sports, particularly those that involved combat. After dropping out of the University of Maine his senior year to start a marketing agency in Farmington, Roberts stumbled upon jiu jitsu — a form of martial art that is based around submission grappling.

“When I saw jiu jitsu for the first time I was like, ‘I’ve gotta do that.’ So I started training and then I went all in,” he said.

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After the 2008 recession caused his marketing agency to lose 60 percent of its clients seemingly overnight, Roberts sold his part of the firm and took a year off to figure out what was next.

He decided he wanted to pursue something that he had already helped other people do — create his own brand. He was already immersed in the sport of jiu jitsu and he knew right away he wanted to create a line of high-end, quality jiu jitsu gis, or kimonos, the sport’s fighting apparel.

“There weren’t a lot of (jiu jitsu) brands out there,” he said. “Basically all your brands were skulls and crossbones and blood and gore. There wasn’t anything really super clean and streamlined and high-end, so we kind of filled that niche market.”

Roberts designed more ergonomically fit gis and at first had them manufactured and imported from a company in Pakistan, where most jiu jitsu apparel is made, he said. By changing the patterns of the traditional gi to allow more movement and flexibility, Roberts said he improved on a design that hadn’t been changed in nearly 500 years.

But despite the company’s profitability in its first year, something didn’t feel right.

“We started importing and it went really good and we made a bunch of money,” he said. “And I felt really bad.”

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Roberts had a clash of conscience about the imports, his concern about the quality of the products that carried his brand overriding the profits he was making.

The tipping point came when he was in Abu Dhabi for a jiu jitsu competition and saw a woman wearing an Origin gi — only there was another company’s logo on the back. The company he had been using to manufacture his gis were using his designs for other brands.

“I made a decision right there that I was either going to shut everything down or start making the gis myself,” Roberts said.

BRINGING IT BACK HOME

Having no idea how to start manufacturing his own products or what machinery was needed to do it, Roberts and his longtime friend and Origin employee Jon Malin began going around the state to mills and factories asking if they had any equipment they’d be willing to sell.

Malin, who’d been involved with OriginUSA since day one, said he and Roberts bounced a lot of ideas off each other to figure out what might work.

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“We had no clue what we needed,” Malin said. “Everything has been that way though, and it’s worked. Like ‘OK, we need to weave fabric? We need a loom! We get a loom, now what do we do?'”

Roberts and Malin started with sewing machines, collecting them in Roberts’ basement, where they started slowly by making belts. Not knowing how to operate a sewing machine, Roberts videotaped one of the mill workers threading the machine and learned from there.

“You find the old folks who used to work in the mills and you show them how interested you are in it and then they’re more than willing to help,” Roberts said.

In 2013, with the “micro-mill” taking shape in Industry, Origin became OriginUSA, and Roberts went full bore into production.

“Everything fell into place. The machines we bought were for heavy duty stuff. And some of our primary machines that we use today, we didn’t know what we were really buying. So that was pretty cool.”

With a staff of 20 and the mill in its second phase of expansion, OriginUSA produces 60 gis a day and has several product lines ranging from apparel to training equipment and backpacks.

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In 2014, OriginUSA took its “made in the foothills of western Maine” strategy one step further and began weaving its own textiles. Up until then they had been importing the thick cotton fabric used to make gis from Pakistan, because the fabric was not available in the U.S.

By making their own textiles in house, they were able to diversify the types of fabric used in their gis to allow for better performance.

“It’s still cotton-based, but then we started working on the textiles, going from the feel and fit to the fiber. Then we went from the fiber to the weave for the strength and performance,” Roberts said. “One textile we inject with pure silver so its 100 percent antimicrobial.”

MAINE-MADE CARRIES WEIGHT

Doug Ray, legislative liaison and communications director for the Maine Department of Economic Development, said that Roberts “could probably have his product manufactured anywhere in the world, so it’s great (that he chose Maine).”

Ray said Monday that while businesses occasionally relocate manufacturing to Maine or choose the state as its manufacturing site, “we’d like to see it happen more than it does, obviously.”

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“We’re trying to make Maine as competitive as possible, not just within New England, but on a global scale,” Ray said.

Despite challenges such as high energy costs and taxes, “Maine people have a great reputation for being hard workers,” he said. “That helps attract businesses.”

There’s also a marketing advantage that arises from being able to say that a product is Maine-made or made in the USA. And while Maine-made jiu jitsu uniforms don’t yet carry the cachet of a product like Maine lobster, Ray said there is hope that they could be very successful.

“Maine has a good reputation, and that crosses industry and product lines,” he said. “These types of uniforms for martial arts might be a new product as far as being Maine-made, but the track record is good for something that is Maine-made to eventually catch on.”

Roberts has been approached by the former coach of the U.S. Olympic judo team to begin making judo gis. Judo is a different style of martial art very closely related to jiu jitsu. Because the gis for the two sports are similar, Roberts said expanding his product line outside of jiu jitsu may be the next step for OriginUSA.

Roberts said the concern for the brand and the quality of the product that led him to produce it himself hasn’t changed. He said they don’t cut corners, and “everything is looked over and inspected.”

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“It’s one thing when you can have an American-made product,” he said. “But it’s another thing when it’s the best quality you can get in the world. And it is.”

Staff writer Rachel Ohm contributed to this story.

Lauren Abbate — 861-9252

labbate@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @Lauren_M_Abbate


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