The Standún Story
"IS FEARR OBAIR NÁ CAINT."
- Irish Proverb meaning "Work is better than talk."
Just as May and Máirtín's first meeting was no ordinary encounter, neither were their lives in Spiddal. From the very outset, their business and social lives were uniquely interlinked with the local community and with the culture and traditions of the Connemara Gaeltacht.
Like all determined and hard-working business people of their time, they worked long days building their business from a tiny shop in 1946 to an all-purpose store within just a few years.
You name it, they had it: groceries, clothes, footwear, furniture, bicycles, cement and all sorts of other building materials.
People travelled from all over Connemara and further afield to shop at Standún. Some travelled by bus, and others even drove many miles on turf lorries to make their purchases.
Standún became a local hub for the community, ready to meet everyone’s needs.
Fact: Standún’s delivery van was also the family car and the local hearse!
Giving credit was essential during post-war times and this facility continued to be part of the business ethic of Standún for many years. Máirtín was later to comment that the people never let him down and they always paid their bills on time.
The Trade Board was formed in 1959 to market Irish goods abroad, and this gave Standún an exciting opportunity to set up a finishing factory for Aran Sweaters. It was to become one of the most important aspects of Standún's business - particularly as the tourist industry began to grow and develop in the 1970s.
The unfinished Aran Sweaters boasted unique and varied patterns – the cable stitch represented the Aran fishermen’s ropes, and the trellis stitch symbolised the stone walls of Connemara… they were collected from the homes of knitters all around the country and brought to the factory for finishing.
To this day you can still find women from Donegal to Kerry and everywhere in between who relied on Standún to provide income from their handknitted Irish Aran Sweaters. Standún was one of the most significant employers in the area. At one stage there were over 700 knitters on their books.
Standún also became the first store in Ireland to export the Aran Sweater to large department stores in the US such as Nordstrom and Lord and Taylor.




