10 Famous Garage Startups
 #1 Amazon
#1 Amazon
 Jeff Bezos founded Amazon.com in 1994 as an online bookstore. At the time, it was completely run out of his garage in Bellevue, Washington.
 He sold his first book in July 1995 and issued his IPO two years later in 1997.
Today it's the world's largest online retailer.
 Address: 10704 NE 28th, Bellevue, Washington
 #2 Apple
#2 Apple
 In  1976, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, ages 21 and 26 respectively,  started Apple Computers by selling 50 units of Wozniak's Apple I  Computer at $500 apiece to a local retailer. Jobs took the purchase  order to a parts distributor and ordered the parts. "The Steves" and  their small team hand-built 50 computers in 30 days from a garage in  Cupertino, CA.
Today, Apple is the most valuable technology company in the world.
Address: 2066 Crist Dr, Los Altos, California
  #3 Disney
#3 Disney
 About  45 minutes down the road from Disneyland Park in Anaheim, CA, there's a  house in Los Angeles where The Walt Disney Company got its start.
In  1923, the house belonged to Walt Disney's uncle, Robert Disney. Walt  and his brother Roy moved in with their uncle and set up "The First  Disney Studio" in the one-car garage out back. There they started  filming the Alice Comedies which was part of the original Alice's  Wonderland.
Today, Disney is the highest-grossing media conglomerate in the world.
Address: 4651 Kingswell Ave, Los Angeles, California
  #4 Google
#4 Google
 As  Stanford Graduate students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin started what's  now known as Google from Susan Wojcicki's garage in September 1998.
Soon  the project was interfering with their schoolwork, so they tried to  sell it to Excite for $1 million. Excite rejected the offer and now  Google is the most trafficked site in the world.
Address: 232 Santa Margarita Ave, Menlo Park, California
  #5 Harley Davidson
#5 Harley Davidson
 In 1901, 21-year-old William S. Harley drew up plans to create a small engine to power a bicycle.
 Over  the next two years, Harley and his childhood friend, Arthur Davidson,  built their motor-bicycle out of their friend's 10 by 15-foot wooden  shed in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It was the equivalent of a garage because  they didn't have cars.
They officially founded Harley-Davidson in 1903 and today it's the most well-known motorcycle brand in the world.
 Address: Somewhere in northern Milwaukee, Wisconsin
 #6 Hewlett-Packard
#6 Hewlett-Packard
 In 1939, Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard founded HP in Packard's garage with an initial investment of $538.
 Their  first product was an audio oscillator and one of their first customers  was Walt Disney, who purchased eight oscillators to develop the sound  system for the movie Fantasia.
The HP Garage in Palo Alto is known as the birthplace of Silicon Valley and HP is now one of the largest companies in the world.
 Address: 367 Addison Ave, Palo Alto, California
  #7 Lotus Cars
#7 Lotus Cars
 In  1948, at the age of 20, Anthony Colin Bruce Chapman started Lotus Cars  by building the first Lotus racing car in stables behind The Railway  Hotel in Hornsey, North London. Chapman used a 1930s Austin Seven and a  power drill to build the Lotus Mark I.
Today Lotus Cars is one of the premier racing car manufacturers in the world.
 Address: 472 Hornsey Rd, London N19 4EF, United Kingdom
 #8 Maglite
#8 Maglite
 In  1950, Tony Maglica moved from his war-torn home of Croatia back to  America. Knowing very little English, he settled in Los Angeles and took  jobs wherever he could find them.
In  1955, after saving $125, Tony put a down-payment on his first lathe.  Then he started working out of a Los Angeles area garage to manufacture  precision parts. He incorporated Mag Instrument in 1974 and released  their first flashlight in 1979.
Today, Maglite is the standard issue flashlight for all police officers in the US.
 Address: Somewhere in Los Angeles, California
 #9 Mattel
#9 Mattel
 Harold  "Matt" Matson and Elliot Handler founded Mattel out of a garage in  Southern California as picture frame company in 1945. To get the most  out of their materials, they started using picture frame scrapes to  create dollhouses.
Soon their dollhouses were selling better than their picture frames so they turned their emphasis to toys.
 Today Mattel, Inc. is the highest-grossing toy company in the world.
Address: Somewhere in Southern California
  #10 Yankee Candle Company
#10 Yankee Candle Company
 In  1969, at 16 years old, Michael Kittredge made his scented candle in his  garage out of melted crayons as a gift for his mother. The neighbors  took notice and expressed interest in buying Kittredge's candles, so he  started mass-producing them.
Four years later, Kittredge outgrew the garage so he moved the Yankee Candle Company to an old mill in Holyoke, Massachusetts.
 Today it's the largest manufacturer of scented candles in the US.
Address: Somewhere in South Hadley, Massachusetts.
 What's the Point?
Everything starts as nothing.
 It's easy to look at the world's largest companies and think, "I could never start something like that." And you'd be right. Most of these companies took decades to get where they are today.
 They  didn't start by trying to create Amazon, Apple, and Google. They  started by creating an online bookstore, a computer, and a search  algorithm.