Outdoor American Legend Fashion

Outdoor American Legend Fashion




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Outdoor American Legend Fashion
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Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry







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Denim






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Sherpa,Denim,Viscose,Polyester,Cotton,Fur
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Is Discontinued By Manufacturer

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Mens Date First Available

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December 12, 2018 ASIN

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B07LF8H11R


5.0 out of 5 stars

2 ratings



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17 days ago in Style Words By Highsnobiety
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To many, outdoors techwear clothing begins and ends with the same few brands. But there's more to functional fashion than a Guerrilla Group tank .
The world of outdoor clothing brands is just that: the world. While a famous German studio might have defined techwear's styling, there are South Korean brands pushing it on performance. While a Swedish label makes bold strides toward sustainability, a legend of the French Alps is putting dad shoes on the fashion runway. And that's not even counting the Chinese extreme gear label that powers the world's most populous country's Arctic research.
Techwear is also the clothing of the future, a promise that technology can get more from our clothes. The future might be uncertain, but one thing isn't: today's clothing innovations will affect us all down the line.
Now, after weeks of research, we're proud to present our in-depth guide to the world of techwear and outdoor clothing brands.
Why: In 1947, a family of metalworkers started making saw blades in the French Alps. Some 70 years later, tech runners bearing that family’s name get called " the ultimate fashion sneaker ."
Salomon is known around the world for its Alpine ski gear, but in techwear, the brand’s shoes and hikers have granted it legend. Hard-wearing and styled to show it, a Salomon sneaker radiates function — and this purity of design might have been what attracted Boris Bidjan Saberi to collaborate with the brand .
Saberi’s Spring/Summer 2017 show, “Post-Humanism,” put a spotlight on Salomon’s twisty, morphing, bioorganic designs. The word was out and other collabs followed . Now, everyone from Paris Fashion Week attendees to members of the techwear subreddit is bound to own at least one pair of Salomons.
Why: Jack Wolfskin is to ACRONYM what Audi is to Porsche. Both make premium products. Both play in the tech space. Both presumably know their way around a currywurst.
From there, however, the differences become stark. Jack Wolfskin is a massive, multi-million euro brand – in some ways, The North Face of Europe. But to describe it by its reach is to miss the point. The label is known for its attention to quality and its focus on the environment. Entire product lines , including waterproof hardshells, are available in recycled plastic alternatives. On top of that, Jack as a whole was honored by the Fair Wear Foundation for its efforts to build and maintain an ethical supply chain.
While a Jack-RONYM partnership may never quite work out, we’ve teamed up with the German techwear giant for our Highsnobiety Sports collection. The drop features a cache of bags, caps and jackets, all primed with its signature Texapore water resistant fabric.
Why: Founded by climbers in 1989, Vancouver-based Arc’teryx has spent 30 years building and perfecting hardcore tech apparel. Arc’teryx gear is built for outdoor extremes, from fast and light (FL) climbing gear to taped-seam, blizzard-ready severe weather (SV) shells.
Around outdoor climbing routes, an Arc’teryx jacket left unattended is likely to end up with a new owner. It’s just that good. But construction creds don’t secure a place in fashion. Past its super-tough rep, Arc’teryx is also famous for its devotion to design. The original Alpha SV Jacket moved the world from baggy, oversized GORE-TEX jackets to today’s slim silhouettes. Recent product innovations such as slimmer waterproof zippers have continued this tradition.
With a portfolio that now includes the technical menswear line Veilance and the lifestyle-focused 24 range, Arc’teryx is perhaps the sleekest gear-maker on the market, the Range Rover of techwear. Stylish, expensive, and beastly at the core. Look for the brand’s distinctive dead bird logo in many a techwear ’fit.
Why: There is no technical apparel without The North Face . Yes, there were outdoor brands before 1968, and sure, Eddie Bauer invented the down jacket, but because of The North Face's genius for invention and focus on use, the idea of gear-as-fashion has become standard.
Named after the north face of Yosemite’s Half Dome, the California-based outdoor giant arguably defined the shapes, materials, and technologies through which the world sees techwear. The Denali, a zip-front Polartec fleece, is the precursor to the sherpa . The Mountain Jacket, a multi-paneled GORE-TEX shell, might be the design influence behind contrasting black shoulders in general.
In fashion, The North Face produces some true standouts through direction-setting collabs. The king of them all? Junya Watanabe MAN’s Backpack Jacket .
Many brands make techwear, but only one truly made it: The North Face.
Why: With the rise of techwear comes the rise in techwear brands. What that means is that you really have to be able to distinguish between marketing jargon and the real deal. When we saw what the young German label KONUNDRUM was doing, it was instantly obvious that this was a name to pay attention to.
Founded in 2020, the label has made a name for itself by taking no shortcuts. Every aspect down to the zipper has been perfected on each of its jackets. But what really sets KONUNDRUM apart from the crowd is its modular approach to outerwear. The brand’s jackets are made up of multiple components, allowing the wearer complete autonomy when it comes to changing conditions.
Organic cotton is woven into the highest-possible density to ensure that it’s waterproof and windproof but still breathable. Nickel-free buttons and polyurethane-coated zippers round out the flawless designs which come in all-black only.
KONUNDRUM represents a new guard of outerwear labels that are pushing the possibilities both technically and visually. We’re excited to see what’s next for this burgeoning powerhouse.
Why: The world of technical outerwear struggles with a seriousness problem. It goes part and parcel with the serious tech that many contemporary outdoor labels forget to have fun. And Wander brings a refreshing sense of poetry into its collections. Just take its Instagram bio for example:
and wander / to be rained upon / caught in the wind / or simply trekking / the mountain is fun
But it goes deeper than the IG bio, obviously. Alongside some of the most weatherproof builds in the industry, And Wander lands each season with a couple of beautiful color palettes or prints as well as a lookbook even more breathtaking than the last.
Ranging from small pouches and backpacks to fully fledged masterpiece coats and jackets, And Wander presents one of the most viable ways to incorporate seriously technical pieces into your everyday wardrobe and that says so much about the brand as a whole.
Why: The release of ACRONYM 's debut KIT-001 in 2002, featuring a jacket, bag, soundtrack, concept art, and more, was arguably the inception of what we call “techwear.”
Taking inspiration from military surplus, technical sportswear, and the idea of cyberpunk, ACRONYM was launched as a vision statement. With functional garments as a canvas, ACRONYM paints a broad scope of references — zip sleeves, magazine pouches, the world of Akira — onto beautiful finished products sold at luxury price points.
Labels including Guerrilla Group, Stone Island Shadow Project, and Enfin Levé hold this ethos tight. Countless others have benefited from it. Whether they realize it, someone tagging their black all-Nike ’fit as techwear is a disciple of ACRONYM. By merging the worlds of streetwear and technical apparel, ACRONYM created a whole new one.
It’s also worth mentioning that ACRONYM co-founder Errolson High has been involved with a number of other techwear brands (e.g. Tilak’s Poutnik) and that ACRONYM has collaborated with a “who’s who” of sportswear and street culture, Futura and Nike included. That Nike hook-up included Hugh overseeing the Swoosh's reboot of its ACG outdoor line from 2014 to 2018.
Seeing an ACRONYM jacket for the first time is somewhere between unnerving and sublime. Yes, the wearer looks like the type you don’t trust at airports, but holy shit the cargos/chest pocket combo. It’s undeniable, it’s expensive, it’s ACRONYM .
Why: Founded in 1957, Canada Goose has built a decades-old reputation as the first name in extreme cold. Long before the CNCPTS collabs and Drake features, the brand supplied heavy-duty down gear to some of the world’s iciest crews – like the Canadian Rangers, a volunteer Inuit army unit tasked with patrolling Canada’s Arctic. There’s cool. There’s cooler than bein’ cool. Then, there’s Canada Goose weather.
In the early 2010s, the brand began a steady expansion into other tech apparel categories. While parkas like the Expedition remain their bread and butter, Canada Goose now makes everything from ultralight shells to trench coats.
While the bright red logo patches may turn off some, the Canada Goose mark has always stood behind some of the highest-ceiling tech gear on earth. Is it expensive? Absolutely. But like Moncler, the Goose is a utilitarian luxury brand with performance to back it up. If that combination of technical chops and brand equity doesn’t get your goose, there’s a fine Goose to get.
Why: Since 1958, Japan’s Snow Peak has produced some of the world’s finest camping gear – from backcountry stoves to $170 titanium flasks and everything in between. Just 5 years ago, under the guidance of the founder’s granddaughter Lisa Yamai, the brand brought its expertise in outdoors design to a new arena: technical garments.
Snow Peak makes upscale techwear filtered through the lens of a campsite. Cuts are relaxed. Waterproof membranes are rare. Compared to other tech mainstays, Snow Peak might even appear casual . Under the surface, however, is a world of cunning design that makes the brand’s pastoral aesthetic borderline impressive.
For example, the Takibi Coverall . Cut from a military-grade ripstop cotton, what looks like a refined take on the chore coat is actually a fire-resistant utility piece with enough tool hooks for Batman’s belt. Discerning details like these adorn every Snow Peak piece: from the DWR Lightweight Jacket ’s convertible pockets to the Wanderlust ’s ability to pack down into itself.
While Snow Peak may be designed for a life by the campfire, it is still bonafide luxury tech. Outerwear starts around $400 per piece with seasonal standouts hitting right four digits. If the titanium flask didn’t tip it, high-tech materials and good design don’t intersect at cheap.
Why: Veilance is the sister brand of Vancouver’s own Arc’teryx. Begun in 2009, this upscale offshoot merges mountaineering tech with classic garment shapes to produce “technical menswear.” The materials scream Arc’teryx. The designs whisper refinement. The price tag reflects them both.
Imagine a $1500 GORE-TEX fishtail with a single defining line.
In the world of Veilance, that’
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