The Denver Post

Jil Sander ski wear, coming to a city block near you

- By Jessica Testa

It is a widely accepted truth that fashion has reached peak collaborat­ion.

Virtually every combinatio­n has been realized: an indie brand teaming up with a fast-fashion company; the big-name designer collaborat­ing on a line of affordable accessorie­s; luxury European brands riffing off other luxury European brands.

When it has all been done before, how can a new collaborat­ion feel necessary?

Ask Lucie and Luke Meier, the married creative directors of Jil Sander, which has kept up a fairly modest pace of collaborat­ions, making raincoats for Mackintosh in 2019 and sandals for Birkenstoc­ks this year. They will say it’s all about offering the highest levels of functional­ity and practicali­ty.

Which is why their next collaborat­ion, released widely on Wednesday, is a collection of men’s, women’s and unisex clothing for Canadian technical outdoors brand Arc’teryx.

“There has to be a real reason to do them,” Luke Meier said of collaborat­ions. “It’s not just there to create hype. It’s genuinely things that we like and we feel are complement­ary to the world of Jil Sander.”

Although it does help that Arc’teryx happens to be incredibly hype-y. The brand is a staple of gorpcore, the campwear-as-streetwear look particular­ly popular among city-dwelling, jawn-copping menswear enthusiast­s.

So while the collaborat­ion is designed for skiing, snowboardi­ng and outdoor sports, these pieces may end up being as prevalent downtown as they are on ski slopes. (Like the previous collaborat­ions, this one falls under Jil Sander+, a sub-line of outerwear “for going to the mountains or seaside or countrysid­e, where you want things to work and be functional, but you don’t want to give up your aesthetic,” Luke Meier said.) Prices range between $1,500 and $2,500.

Here, in an edited interview from their studio in Milan, where they each wore shades of white against a white

Zoom background, the designers talk about their approach to collaborat­ions and how growing up in coldweathe­r climes influenced their work with Arc’teryx.

Q. We’ve seen so, so many fashion collaborat­ions in the last few years. How do you decide when to seek them out or to say yes when they come to you? Luke Meier:

It’s a good buzzword, right? “Collaborat­ion.” We really only want to do things that make sense, to create something that we couldn’t otherwise do ourselves. So it’s not purely about working with brands that somehow have a parallel objective for marketing.

We never want to just have two logos on a product.

That’s not really that interestin­g, to be honest. So whether it was Mackintosh or Birkenstoc­k or now with Arc’teryx, they’re all specialty brands. They have a very deep expertise in the things that they do.

Q. With Arc’teryx, how did the process start? Luke:

We would work on the shapes and make patterns, and then we would send it over to their developers, and they would help us engineer the pieces in the right way. So it was very much a product-driven dialogue at the beginning. Obviously we respect the Arc’teryx aesthetic, but we really wanted to pull it into the Jil Sander world and give it our aesthetic touch.

But it’s the same on the other side, where we have people in our ateliers that have been working on Jil Sander pieces for over 20 years, where we have a dialogue with them about the shape of a shoulder or the way certain pieces should fit.

Q. The collection was designed for mountain sports. Hobbies of yours?

Lucie Meier: I grew up in Zermatt in a ski resort, so there was no way to escape it. And Luke was spending a lot of winters in Whistler in British Columbia. It’s something we’ve been doing since we were children and still really love. As soon as we can get out into the snow and the mountains, we go for it.

Luke: We still get at least 20 days a year skiing.

Q. So technical winter wear is something you’ve wanted to do for a while?

Lucie: I mean, these kinds of pieces have been part of our life for a long time. It’s just that we wanted to have the right partner, so we waited until the time was right.

Luke: I think it’s more and more difficult to find really beautiful garments that also work well.

 ?? Arc'teryx via © The New York Times Co. ?? Bibbed trousers from the Arc’teryx Jil Sander collection.
Arc'teryx via © The New York Times Co. Bibbed trousers from the Arc’teryx Jil Sander collection.

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