Toronto Star

Canada Goose jackets are warm, but not cheap

While the 60-year-old brand insists it puts function first, the winter uniform is trendy

- CHRIS LAMORTE

CHICAGO— The arctic has arrived with a vengeance in Chicago. Temperatur­es are hovering in the single digits. Space heaters are working overtime. Car batteries are dying. And the nostril hairs are freezing one by one inside of my nose.

Yet the city’s fashionist­as — look at them! They’ve never looked warmer.

The reason? Canada Goose, of course. The brand continues its unabated climb to the summit of winter necessitie­s. The company says it’s grown over 2,000 per cent in the last decade, with revenues of approximat­ely $300 million (U.S.).

The 60-year-old “arctic luxury apparel” brand opened a store on a tony stretch of Michigan Ave. this fall — one of seven global stores the retailer has opened this year.

Even TV stock prognostic­ator Jim Cramer remains bullish on the brand. “This company’s growing like a weed and shows no sign of stopping anytime soon,” he said in December.

So who needs Bitcoin when you have a fur-lined parka with down stuffing? Turns out, I’m not quite able to afford the snug-as-a-bug crowd. With prices that can reach up to $1,600 for a men’s jacket, Canada Goose remains out of my price range.

Yet, for such a pricey brand, it’s seemingly ubiquitous: from the valet at upscale restaurant­s to the Lincoln Park ladies who lunch at them. From strolling teenagers on a mall date at Water Tower Place to a pair of 60somethin­gs pushing grandkids with strollers, the Canada Goose brand is both trendy and utilitaria­n.

How did we get here? Well, the brand started in 1957. It outfitted scientists of Antarctica’s McMurdo Station and Laurie Skreslet, the first Canadian to summit Mount Everest. It was, in a word, warm.

Canada Goose started to be heavily adopted by Hollywood film crews on location. It was featured in The Day After Tomorrow and National Treasure. The company even has a parka named Mystique, after Rebecca Romijn’s icy-blue character in the XMen movies — the actress asked the company to develop a coat that could keep her warm on set.

Model Kate Upton wore one of the company’s bomber jackets on the cover of the Sports Illustrate­d Swimsuit Issue in 2013. The company sponsors film fests, and its jackets were featured in the James Bond film Spectre and warmed crew members of Game of Thrones.

So from there, It wasn’t long until the trendy set latched on to them. I asked Canada Goose CEO Dani Reiss about the phenomenon, but he bristles that Canada Goose is trendy.

“We are a function-first brand, not a fashion brand. We are built on function — of course we want people to look good in our products . . . but that’s not the first considerat­ion.”

And it’s true: it’s hard to argue a 60-year-old brand that is favoured by champion Iditarod mushers is offer- ing some sort of here-today, gonetomorr­ow gimmick.

“Consumers come to us because we are a real brand with real products that have an inherent and authentic story; our heritage, craftsmans­hip and product quality resonate. They know that we’ll protect them from the cold, especially those serious winds and winters in Chicago,” Reiss says.

But the question remains: how can people afford these jackets? On the Canada Goose website, you can’t touch a men’s jacket — a lightweigh­t down one at that — for less than $400. The top-of-the line Canada Coat tops out at more than $1,600.

One clue: Maybe the people I see are wearing fakes, and maybe I shouldn’t feel jealous. According to the company’s media kit, it is one of the most counterfei­ted brands in the world. In 2015, the company claims it shut down more than 19,000 listings of fake Canada Goose products.

Yet if you’re waiting for a big after-Christmas sale at the flagship store, you might be waiting until hell freezes over.

I asked a salesperso­n at the Chicago location if I could expect a discount when the shopping frenzy was over.

“No because we don’t do discounts. We’re like Louis Vuitton,” he quipped. But how many mushers can say they wear Louis Vuitton?

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Canada Goose jackets can cost up to $1,600 in the U.S. Yet, for such a pricey brand, it’s seemingly ubiquitous.
ALYSSA POINTER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Canada Goose jackets can cost up to $1,600 in the U.S. Yet, for such a pricey brand, it’s seemingly ubiquitous.

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