Jovian Cummins (left) and a pair of the Woolies Jeans. Photos / Supplied
Sometimes the answer to a problem can be staring you right in the face.
At least, that's what Hawke's Bay shearer Jovian Cummins found while knee deep in Merino wool.
Cummins, 25, has come up with a bright business idea to make Merino-wool jeans specifically for shearers and farmers, calledWoolies Jeans, as opposed to traditional cotton jeans.
"I got fed up with wearing hot, sweaty work pants all day," he said, about his experience working in shearing sheds across the globe.
"I thought how could I solve the problem and the answer was staring at me in the face every day - it was wool.
They are aiming to raise up to $500,000 which will allow them to manufacture and sell the product online. They also hope to set up a base in Hawke's Bay in the future.
"We are planning on releasing hopefully by next winter, mainly online and grow from there," he said.
"We will start with the New Zealand market and I think Australia will follow suit. There is a huge market out there throughout the world."
He said during the early prototypes he received help from his mum, Jenifer Cummins, who is a teacher in Havelock North but has a background in fashion design.
Jovian Cummins has since teamed up with a designer in Auckland to make the product market ready.
He said he had received good feedback from friends who had worn the first pairs of Woolies Jeans, including a farmer working in extremely rough conditions.
"He took them out in the snow and said they were awesome."
A pair of Woolies will likely set you back about $250 when they go to market.