Relevant, not a relic: After almost 75 years, Current continues to send greetings from Colorado Springs

Jun. 4—As its name suggests, Current — the Colorado Springs greeting card, paper products and gift company — is not a thing of the past.

In fact, far from it — even though its origins date back nearly 75 years.

In 1950, artist and lithographer Orin Loo and his wife, Miriam, launched Current from their home on the city's southwest side, where they produced and sold greeting cards, recipe cards, stationery, post-it notes and scores of other paper products and mailed them directly to customers who ordered from old-style catalogs.

Over the next three-plus decades after its launch, the Loos, later joined by sons Dusty and Gary, grew Current into a giant in the world of direct-to-consumer marketing, with sales that topped more than $300 million during its 1980s peak, according to Gazette archives. The company became one of the most successful home-grown businesses in city history.

"We were the only one that was selling by catalog direct to consumers," said Jon Medved, a former Current president and executive in the direct-marketing industry. "Just like Amazon does now."

After years of success, however, changing times created an air of uncertainty for Current.

The Loos sold the company in 1986, which was followed by more ownership changes. Regent, a Beverly Hills, Calif., private equity firm whose investments include retail, media and technology, most recently bought Current in 2015 from the Taylor Corp., a Minnesota-based printing giant that had purchased it in 1998.

Current also went through several rounds of downsizings and layoffs, which resulted, in part, because customers had abandoned greeting cards for digital messages they could send via text, email and social media.

The company once occupied 660,000 square feet of plant and office space at a 77-acre property it purchased in the 1970s at Interstate 25 and Woodmen Road on the Springs' north side, and at one point employed as many as 2,600 full-time and seasonal workers, according to Gazette archives.

Now, Current operates out of 188,000 square feet at the I-25 and Woodmen site. Its workforce numbers 160, though it doubles in size beginning around September in preparation for the holidays, which is the busiest time of the year for sales, Current officials say.

But a smaller operation doesn't mean Current no longer is relevant; in fact, it remains an active player in the world of direct marketing sales.

Current has used new equipment and technological advances to do more with less, company officials say.

Previous owner Taylor Corp. had added Colorful Images, which sells personalized paper products, and Lillian Vernon, the gift, decor and household goods direct marketer started in 1951 by its namesake founder, to the Current portfolio of brands; Regent then added FineStationery, a paper products seller, to the Current lineup when it purchased the company.