Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Don’t have to be a skier to dress like one

- ALYSON KRUEGER

Once a month during the winter season, Laura McDonald, owner of Rad Max Vintage, hosts a pop-up shop at a bar named Le Chamois, at the base of Palisades Tahoe, a ski resort in Olympic Valley, Calif. The crowd there — a mix of skiers and nonskiers — comes to party, dancing to classic tunes and taking “shotskis.”

Some revelers are harder to miss than others, wearing neon or metallic one-piece snowsuits straight out of, or inspired by, the ’80s. “If I see four people in a friend group, usually three are in regular ski clothes and one is in a onesie,” McDonald said. (Regular ski clothes, for those who don’t partake, tend to be pants and jackets in neutral colors.)

But after a few drinks, those wearing traditiona­l ski attire opt to swap their neutral clothes for the bright onesies McDonald sells. “People are like, ‘Should we try them on because they are so fun?’” McDonald said. “And then they always buy them.” In one day, she can sell as many as 40 vintage snowsuits, most of which cost between $100 to $300 apiece. They always sell out, she said.

“It used to be that people would wear them on the last day of the season” — which tends to be April or May at many resorts — or “at a frat party or bacheloret­te party,” she said. “Now people wear them all the time.”

This ski season, secondhand and vintage-inspired snowsuits have been all the rage both on the mountain and off. Skiers and nonskiers alike are donning them to attract attention, to stay warm — and to find one another more easily. A number of Instagram accounts like @microwaves­ofaspen now track their popularity, and TikTok users rack up millions of views for videos showing off their goods (the louder and more colorful the better).

High fashion brands are getting on board. HEAD, Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn’s brand, for example, released neon ski clothes with Gucci this season.

So are startups. OOSC, a British brand, now specialize­s in making retro-looking snowsuits out of plastic bottles.

Websites that sell or rent vintage-style snowsuits have also been doing brisk business. Rent the Runway, a secondhand fashion site, confirmed it rented more snowsuits this year than any before. Revolve Clothing said its snowsuit sales jumped 35% this year from last.

With rentals booked up, Tita Loyek, an avid skier and full-time content creator who lives in New York’s East Village neighborho­od, finally found one at the Farm Rio store in the nearby Soho neighborho­od. “I got one that was so loud and vibrant,” Loyek, 26, said. On New Year’s Day, she wore it around Vail, Colo., where she said she “got compliment­s from everybody.”

“There are so many people who spend so much money on a cool ski outfit, and they don’t even ski,” she said. “They stay on the bunny slope and really just want to get a cool photo for Instagram.”

“I have friends who are guilty of this,” she said. “They just want the vibe.” Indeed, some ski suits don’t appear designed for actual skiing — maybe they’re too tight for long underwear or aren’t fully waterproof. Some have shorts.

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