Jeff Freeman had an epiphany. After 15 years at Gerber Legendary Blades, including 11 years as the lead designer, he was ready to leave the city. The job was great, but the rat race of urban living—the traffic, the commute, the noise, all the people—had piled up. He and his wife Kathleen bought a 6.5-acre tract 100 miles south of Portland, made the move, and soon Freeman, an engineer by training, was looking for a new line of work.
“It was depressing,” he said. “I ran into this mindset in other industries like, ‘It’s just a knife. How much engineering skill does it take to just make a knife?’ These weren’t bad people, they just had no idea what goes into building a true outdoor or military blade.”
What those…
