September 15 to October 15 marks National Hispanic Heritage Month and in honor of the rich cultural traditions of our Hispanic neighbors, friends, and colleagues, 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal聽would like you to meet five designers with roots in Mexico, Ecuador, and Peru. Some have worked in the industry for decades; others are fresh faces just starting out. All are working to bring about positive change in the outdoor industry.
While it鈥檚 important to reflect on and celebrate Hispanic culture, elevating these voices should not be limited to just a month. 鈥淚 understand the importance of celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month,鈥 said Martha Garcia, director of global brand creative and communications at HOKA ONE ONE. 鈥淏ut how can we get to a point where we鈥檙e doing that and also being intentional about bringing these people into the conversation beyond DEI? Where we鈥檙e bringing them in because they鈥檙e expert communicators or designers or whatever?鈥
As Garcia says (echoing 国产吃瓜黑料PR鈥檚 Massimo Alpian), people of color deserve to be part of our industry鈥檚 narrative on a regular basis, and not just on issues relating to diversity, equity, and inclusion. We will all be better for it.
Tahany Huerta
Technical softgoods equipment developer at Black Diamond

As a technical softgoods equipment developer at Black Diamond, Tahany Huerta has a lot of responsibility. Although she鈥檚 just two years into her role, she鈥檚 already fully accountable for the physicality of her projects鈥攃osting, materials, 3D versions of design鈥攁s well as managing the team to, well, make sure shit gets done.
Her leadership position gives her a voice. And Huerta, whose mother is Mexican and whose father is of Spanish descent, is using it.
鈥淚 kind of feel like I鈥檓 a pain in everyone鈥檚 ass, honestly,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut overall, I think it鈥檚 just the fact that I’m there and part of the team, it feels like it鈥檚 my obligation and also my opportunity to bring these things to peoples鈥 forefront.鈥
The 鈥渢hings鈥 she speaks of: products designed in a silo. She points to examples of packs and harnesses designed for a single user-base (read, slim, white, and male)..
鈥淲e see so many different body frame styles throughout different culture groups, but because the outdoor industry has been dominated by majority white men, those groups are never served,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey may be seemingly arbitrary examples, but they鈥檙e not arbitrary to me.鈥
Huerta recognizes that the problem is institutional, not just insular, and she cuts the outdoor industry some slack.
鈥淚 have moments of doubt and think, 鈥楢m I being crazy? This feels like an issue to me, but it鈥檚 not an issue to everyone else here,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淏ut it makes sense. They鈥檝e never had to deal with these experiences [of feeling unheard and unrepresented]. It鈥檚 hard to constantly be the one or one of a few people bringing up a problem when the majority is like, 鈥楴o, no, no. It鈥檚 fine.鈥欌
Yet even if the oversight is understandable, Huerta emphasizes it鈥檚 not acceptable from a moral, ethical, or even financial viewpoint.
鈥淥ur world is changing and even if that change doesn鈥檛 feel relevant to you, if all you care about is business, this is relevant to your business too,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have more people of color coming into climbing spaces or trail running spaces, and if we鈥檙e not going to speak to those new people entering those spaces, then you鈥檙e just choosing ignorance.鈥
Daniella Manini
Textiles designer with Patagonia
Rolled 鈥淩s鈥 and curved 鈥溍憇鈥 ring through the hallways of Patagonia headquarters thanks to Daniella Manini, one of the brand鈥檚 in-house textiles designers. Born and raised in Peru, she slides effortlessly into her native tongue when chatting with her Latinx co-workers.
鈥淪peaking to them in Spanish is a nice way to connect and bring diversity into the hallways, emails, and any communication,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 love to connect with them because some of them have been at Patagonia for a while, some of them for 30 years. Chatting with them makes me feel a bit at home.鈥
Having worked with Patagonia for more than six years after stints with ocean artist Aaron Chang, Billabong and Vouri, Manini is an industry veteran in her own right. Her prints and patterns have graced the Gore-Tex and recycled polyester canvases of kids鈥 puffy jackets, women鈥檚 swimsuits, men鈥檚 board shorts, and much more.
鈥淚 like to create bold and colorful pieces,鈥 she said. 鈥淧eru is known for that and I like to bring that inspiration from my youth whenever I get a chance.鈥
鈥淪o many Hispanic countries are being impacted by climate change. You can see it all around you there,鈥 she said. 鈥淧atagonia has so much history in South America and I think we have a great opportunity to be a voice for Hispanic cultures in the outdoor industry. I hope my designs for Patagonia can be a tiny reminder of this.鈥 In addition to breathing Peru鈥檚 passion for color into Patagonia鈥檚 palettes, Manini also aspires to represent her country on issues of global importance. She points to the brand鈥檚 mission statement, 鈥淲e鈥檙e in business to save our home planet,鈥 a credo that permeates everything it does. Hailing from a country facing deforestation, mining, fires in the Amazon, and displacement of Indigenous people, Manini recognizes her potential to speak out on behalf of her people.
Jorge Rojas
Footwear designer with Industrial Design Workshop and consultant to Vasque
Jorge Rojas began tagging along with his parents in the strawberry fields outside Portland, Oregon, when he was just a little kid. By the time he was a teenager, he was joining them in the backbreaking picking process, rising at four or five in the morning in order to get to the field by 6 P.M. For him, summer 鈥渂reak鈥 was no break.
鈥淚 was in the strawberry fields,鈥 Rojas said matter-of-factly, without complaint.
It鈥檚 clear the footwear designer and development consultant respects his parents greatly for the values they demonstrated.
鈥淚 picked up a good strong work ethic from being out there,鈥 he said. 鈥淪eeing my parents get up every day, really early in the morning and working until really late in the evening. Working hard is in my heritage. It鈥檚 in my DNA.鈥
Now with six years as a footwear/industrial designer with the wearable product experts at Industrial Design Workshop under his belt and a resume that reflects collaborations with big-name outdoor brands like Vasque,聽Rojas brings his staunch work ethic to the office every day.

He鈥檚 also actively helping to groom the next generation of designers, many of them Latinx. Someday he hopes to work as an instructor at a design school, but for now he mentors these aspiring footwear designers over Instagram.
鈥淚鈥檝e never met them, but they reach out and ask what you think about a sketch,鈥 he said, noting that he鈥檚 able to provide feedback on their designs, suggesting changes and providing tips for how to break into footwear design.
Passing on his knowledge to the next generation of designers is Rojas鈥 version of making sacrifices to ensure someone else has a better future鈥攋ust like his parents did for him.
鈥淚 see it in my parents鈥 eyes that all the work we鈥檝e done has paid off,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad that I鈥檓 able to make them proud.鈥
Anna Medina
Designer at Title Nine
Anna Medina, a designer with women鈥檚 outdoor apparel company Title Nine, actively brings her Hispanic roots with her to the office each day.
鈥淚t鈥檚 impossible to leave your heritage at the door,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 who you are, the essence of what makes you you.鈥
She鈥檚 currently working a year out on apparel for the Fall 鈥21 collection, a line that she hopes will level the playing field and 鈥渄emocratize the outdoors鈥 by reminding us that outside is outside, whether you鈥檙e covering miles of backcountry terrain or walking your dog through your neighborhood.
鈥淭he outdoor experience is not exclusive to visiting national parks, going surfing, or going on a climbing trip. That is a privileged experience that is not accessible to many communities for so many different reasons,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hile my designs may not feel as rugged as traditional outdoor apparel, the aesthetic is more inclusive and the garments are just as tough.鈥
Medina鈥檚 lived experience and Ecuadorian heritage have given her a wider lens to what an outdoorsperson looks like.
鈥淲hen you think about your target (outdoor) customer, I see much more beyond that because I am part of communities who experience the outdoors much differently,鈥 she said.

And though Medina is barely three years into her tenure with Title Nine, she already has big plans to tackle inequality in the outdoor space.
鈥淚 plan to disrupt the industry as much as possible and aim to use my position to change the status quo and support marginalized communities,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I can鈥檛 do it alone, and together, we can really shake things up.鈥
Vince Mares
Senior creative director with Kelty and Exxel Outdoors
Vince Mares鈥 great-grandfather walked a long road, roughly 1,100 miles, from Mazatl谩n, Mexico to L.A. to look for work. As the story goes, his industriousness was rewarded and he earned a job in a factory in L.A. Around him, the Great Depression was ravaging the U.S.
But while there鈥檚 a clear note of pride in Mares鈥 voice when he recalls his family lore, he鈥檚 quick to caveat his own California upbringing, calling himself the product of an assimilated culture more than a purely Hispanic one.
鈥淲hile I acknowledge my heritage and embrace all the different things like the culture, the music, and the food, I don鈥檛 express it in an outward way,鈥 the senior creative director and 11-year veteran with Exxel Outdoors, parent company to household name brands like Kelty and Slumberjack, said. 鈥淚f you ask most people around here, they wouldn’t be able to tell you I鈥檓 Mexican. They think I鈥檓 Italian.鈥
Mares鈥 trail to the outdoor industry is different from most. His passion wasn鈥檛 honed after a childhood spent exploring national parks or working in the family gear shop. After high school, Mares had to forge his own way in the world, so he signed up for the GI Bill and headed off to the U.S. Army, eventually serving in Operation Desert Storm.
鈥淚 found my love for the outdoors through the Army,鈥 he said. 鈥淏eing in the Army with a Light Infantry Airborne unit, I had to carry everything on my back. I learned about backpacking through romping around the woods at night and I thought, 鈥楾his could be really fun in the daytime without this camo on and all this heavy stuff on my back.鈥欌
Back in California after completing his active duty tenure, Mares started a degree in product design鈥攚orking part-time, yep, at a gear shop鈥攁nd fell in love with backpacking, passions he consistently wove together in school projects. His senior thesis design for a big-wall haul bag was sponsored by Wayne Gregory, founder of Gregory Mountain Products, giving him a foothold in the outdoor industry and cementing his future.
鈥淚 had a long road to get here and I had to do it myself, but I鈥檓 also proud of that,鈥 he said reflecting on the 鈥渄o-it-yourself mentality鈥 and gritty 鈥渞oll-up-your-sleeves鈥 perseverance that comes second nature to him. 鈥淢aybe it does relate to that story of my great-grandfather.鈥
Two long roads. Two uncharted paths. Two success stories. Mares may not express his heritage in an outward way, but he鈥檚 certainly, and proudly, a product of it.