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.

Here's everything you ever wanted to know about outdoor clothing brands and more.

Arc’teryx

Arc'teryx

Where: Canada

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.

Icon: Alpha SV Jacket

The North Face

Highsnobiety / Bryan Luna

Where: USA

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.

Icon: Nuptse

Patagonia

Where: USA

Why: Named after one of the world’s most pristine environments, Patagonia is the rare brand with its own center of gravity. An iconic logo. A telegraphed purpose. Behind it all, a dogmatic focus on doing things right.

Perhaps it goes without saying that Patagonia cares about Earth. If that last sentence didn’t surprise you, they’ve done their job.

Patagonia is, to quote the top of their website, in business to save our home planet. Everything – literally, everything – the company does flows through this lens. From making resilient products to donating their tax cuts. From innovative waterproofing to suing Donald Trump. This singularity of purpose (alongside some brilliant products, of course) has made Patagonia one of the most well-known brands in all of techwear.

Patagonia itself might tell you “Don’t Buy This Jacket”, but give the SST a try. Despite its fly-fishing heritage, the oversized pockets and high-tech fabrics make it a ringer for tech fits.

Icon: Synchilla Snap-T (Editor’s note: it’s Shia-approved.)

Houdini

Where: Sweden

Why: Houdini is an eco-conscious tech brand making extreme sports apparel with a focus on sustainability. The company is famous for its innovative use of fabrics. Textiles like the brand’s Surpass 2.5L hardshell perform like any other hardcore material, albeit with one key difference: they’re built around sustainability the whole way through.

Many of Houdini’s garments are recyclable. Additionally, the brand lets users rent its highest-performance gear, so a ski jacket used once doesn’t get thrown out in a future Marie Kondo-ing.

While you don't see much of its stuff being shot in front of a Shanghai skyscraper (yet), Houdini is making waves with its planet-friendly mission and performance cred alike. Take Patagonia, swap surfboards for dogsleds, and you’ve got a Swedish sustainable tech powerhouse.

Icon: Power Houdi

Haglöfs

Haglöfs

Where: Sweden

Why: Haglöfs is a Swedish outdoor equipment supplier with more than a century of innovation behind it, providing the Arctic Circle with durable, dependable tech apparel since the days when “waterproof” meant “animal fats.” That alone is impressive, but that’s not why it's a brand worth knowing.

While a long legacy may not seem too "techwear," consider this: to stick around for so long, Haglöfs had to get good at spotting new technology and reinventing its products around it. The brand’s V series Raw Anorak is a performance shell made from a hybrid of recycled nylon and bound with Vectran, a fabric five times stronger than steel and normally used for everything from deep sea cabling to inflatable spacecraft. The repairable, recyclable Eco Proof jacket, meanwhile, was a Highsnobiety pick last fall for its innovative approach to sustainability.

Haglöfs opened its doors on the eve of World War I and now designs garments built for the 22nd century. If that’s not tech, nothing is.

Icon: Rapak Poncho

Norrøna

Where: Norway

Why: Norrøna is Norway’s premier tech brand. Precisely crafted and prohibitively priced, Norrøna designs for obsessive-level quality and maximized performance. As a Scandinavian outdoor gear maker, it also scores high marks for sustainability (read our review of the Oslo Parka here). The real draw, however, is Norrøna's unique blend of outrageous aesthetics and pure capability.

Perhaps the purest representation of Norrøna’s design philosophy is the recon/tamok Co-Lab Jacket. Built from GORE-TEX Pro, this jacket combines elements of the brand’s iconic recon GORE-TEX Pro Jacket, which Norrøna designed in collaboration with the Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish Special Forces, with the build of a backcountry hiking shell. In summary: if Houdini is Northern Europe’s Patagonia, this is its Arc’teryx.

Icon: trollveggen GORE-TEX Pro Jacket

Mammut

Mammut

Where: Switzerland

Why: With roots going back to 1862, Mammut is a Swiss gear maker as famous for its climbing ropes as its high-performance techwear. The brand's products thread the needle between fashion and function, such as on the Alvier Armor hardshell. The brand’s Phase Weave tech seamlessly combines multiple pieces of fabric into a single material, beefing up high-abrasion areas without the need for exposed stitches. Plus, it looks damn cool.

While most Mammut apparel is designed around snow sports, the brand’s new Delta X collection might be its first step toward a place in tech fashion proper. Billed as clothing for “pushing urban performance,” Delta X includes futuristic garments such as the Teufelsberg HS, a 10-ounce packable shell cut from a single piece of waterproof polyamide. Stylish, functional, high-tech gear makes Mammut a Swiss nameplate worth banking on.

Icon: Nordwand Flex

66North

Where: Iceland

Why: If techwear is all about utility, a brand named after the coordinates of an island named after its weather is the genre at its peak. 66North is famous for its down parkas, although its lighter gear is exceptional as well.

The Snaefell jacket is an all-season layer cut from Polartec NeoShell, a high-tech waterproof fabric built for breathability. Its air-permeable design makes it perfect for everything from spring trail runs to winter ski runs — or, in Iceland, a blistering 10-degree summer day.

When Iceland's national soccer team made it to the 2018 World Cup, 66North released a special capsule collection featuring some truly wild kit. It's no matter that the brand makes boots for mountains rather than the pitch; if adidas can celebrate Germany, Iceland’s own sportswear name can do the same.

Icon: Jokla

Salomon

Highsnobiety / Eva Al Desnudo

Where: France

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.

Icon: Speedcross 5

Jöttnar

Where: UK

Why: Jöttnar isn't Scandinavian, as the name suggests, even if the harshness of Europe's north inspired it. It was founded by two former Royal Marine commandos and outfits record-setting British ice climbers.

The brand makes some of the hardest-wearing tech apparel in the world. No bones about it: this is gear designed for conquest. There’s no “Jöttnar Urban” lifestyle line or even a fashion collab. There is instead the option to buy the brand’s most expensive jacket, the titanic Ragnarok jacket, as part of a $1,535 “Full Ski” bundle rather than dropping a grand on it alone.

Some brands play up their extreme credentials to sell parkas at department stores. Jöttnar does not. If only the UK had real mountains…

Icon: Ragnarok

Tilak

Tilak

Where: Czech Republic

Why: Czechwear is real and its name is Tilak. Based in the mountains of the Czech Republic's northeast, Tilak is an outdoor brand specialized in high-performance GORE-TEX jackets. The company started out in 1986 when founder Roman Kamler made his first Tilak garments on a home sewing machine, and Tilak has remained family-run to this day.

Worried that a GORE shell made in the backyard might not hold up? Skeptics, meet the Evolution. The Evolution is a hardcore shell designed for winter exposure. It’s cut from GORE-TEX Pro (check), is waterproof to the zippers (check), has a removable inner snow skirt (check), and is made by Tilak (Czech).

With the recent addition of Poutnik, a lifestyle line co-designed with Errolson Hugh, Tilak is rapidly becoming techwear’s worst kept secret. The brand can still be hard to get hold of outside of Europe, but its gorgeous designs and ridiculous functionality make a Tilak jacket worth the hunt. Check out the brand at UK retailer Alpha Shadows.

Icon: Odin Jacket

Stone Island

Stone Island

Where: Italy

Why: The brainchild of Massimo Osti, Stone Island came to life in 1982 as a diffusion line of the designer’s innovative C.P. Company. The new brand experimented with colors, fabrics, and dyeing techniques to produce clothing wholly unlike sportswear-focused C.P. Unlike a Mammut or an Arc’teryx, Stone Island wasn't designed to help athletes push harder; it was meant to turn heads.

Over the brand’s history, Stone Island has produced outerwear that dazzles in light, makes nylon shine like metal, and even changes colors with the temperature. A Stone Island jacket may never scale Everest, but a garment like last year’s Reflective Hooded Down Coat from the brand's Shadow Project reaches a height all of its own.

Combine innovative color tech with what is arguably fashion’s coolest logo, and it’s no small wonder that names such as Drake, Travis Scott, and the A$AP Mob all stunt Stoney.

Icon: Liquid Reflective Jacket

ACRONYM

ACRONYM

Where: Germany

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.

Icon: J1A-GT

Jack Wolfskin

Where: Germany

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, Germany’s other techwear giant makes gear worthy of any urban exploration. The brand’s new lifestyle-oriented 365 line could be one to watch.

Icon: TwentyFourSeven Jacket

Goldwin

Where: Japan

Why: Much is made of the Japanese word “kaizen.” This concept of “continuous improvement” finds perhaps its truest expression in sock factory-turned-techwear pioneer Goldwin.

The brand's roots can be traced to 1950, when a tiny rural knitworks opened to help locals restart their lives after the destruction of World War II. Goldwin gained a reputation for high-quality knits and that technical expertise took the brand into ski sweaters, athletic jerseys, and in 1978, Goldwin became the exclusive distributor of The North Face in Japan.

Today, Goldwin is a powerhouse, making everything from jackets made of spider silk to The North Face Purple Label. The company’s two Goldwin-branded lines — a high-end techwear collection and a complete suite of Alpine gear — are seen as some of the best in their fields. From a tiny knitworks to World Cup skiing. Kaizen in action.

Icon: GORE-TEX Mountain Jacket

BLACKYAK

BlackYak

Where: South Korea

Why: There are two ways to approach performance. There is optimizing; with constraints such as cost, materials, and body mobility, an approximation of “the best” gets created. Then there is maximizing; those same limits appear but are promptly set on fire.

BLACKYAK is a South Korean maker of maximized techwear, of gear that takes very real constraints as open challenges. The limits are still set on fire, and the fire is powered by your clothing budget.

The brand’s most famous piece is the award-winning Hybrid Jacket. A Frankenstein's monster of insulators, each Hybrid contains four distinct ways of keeping you warm, each mapped to where that specific material does the most good. Would a down puffer do close to the same thing? Sure. But that’s for optimizers.

Burn the money. Embrace the ridiculousness. Spend $500 on pants you’ll wear twice a year. If techwear is the merging of function and fashion, BLACKYAK is a brakes-cut semi-truck barreling toward the Platonic ideals of what utility should look like.

Icon: Khillari Jacket

Garuda SS

Where: India

Why: Suhail Sahrawat finds inspiration everywhere: streetwear, suiting, even his father’s old military gear. In Hindu mythology, Garuda is a divine bird that carries the god Vishnu, as well as the symbol of the Indian Army battalion in which Sahrawat’s father served. In 2014, the designer founded techwear label Garuda SS to distill those inspirations into clothing that pushes the boundaries of functional fashion.

Garuda forgoes both drops and seasons to release garments through what the brand calls “Kits.” Each Kit covers a major genre of menswear (sportswear, workwear, etc) as interpreted by Sahrawat. A classic sportcoat is recut in Schoeller's c_change fabric to create the C4/M1 — Ubdi Jacket. A classic cotton army sweater is remade in a wool/nylon hybrid as the C7/M1 — Army Sweater.

The results are thoughtful, functional, and packed with hidden details, a blend of ACRONYM styling and Mammut thinking that makes for techwear unlike anything else.

Icon: C4/M2 — Work Jacket

Toread

Toread

Where: China

Why: China is one of the world’s biggest technical apparel markets, but outside of AliExpress brands or the occasional immersive look at its biggest sportswear label, the country might as well be walled off. A case in point: Toread.

Founded in 1999, Toread took less than two decades to go from start-up to outfitting China’s polar research and expeditions team. But while Toread sits alongside Arc’teryx and The North Face in its native market, the brand’s impressive tech gear has yet to make a dent overseas.

Toread's apparel isn't exactly techwear, but it’s damn cool to think that a pinnacle name for more than a billion people has yet to hit the wider culture. If nothing else, the brand’s breathable waterproof fabric is made with powdered hemp, meaning you can own a mountain jacket that could potentially get you high in more ways than one.

Icebreaker

Where: New Zealand

Why: A broke, unemployed 24-year-old listens to his girlfriend and then lies to the bank. Two decades later, the world is sold on merino wool. So goes the Icebreaker story.

In 1994, founder Jeremy Moon met a merino sheep farmer who told him about the technical properties of the animal's wool. Moon, encountering the material’s blend of performance, moisture control, and sustainability, realized its potential, took out a loan for a “new kitchen,” and started Icebreaker a year later.

The brand originally sold wool tees, but now New Zealand’s biggest technical apparel maker makes merino gear of all sorts. And due in part to Icebreaker’s influence, the world at large has woken up to merino as a sustainable alternative to synthetics like polyester.

Icebreaker is unlikely to embrace the aggressive styling that defines brands like ACRONYM, but its merino blends make for some of the best layering options around.

Icon: Tabi Tech Lite Long Sleeve Pocket Crewe

Templa

Templa

Where: Australia

Why: Founded by two snowboarders and now employing a former director of Haider Ackermann, Templa is one of the most fashion-forward tech brands today, with leather puffers, three-layer coaches, and a Raf Simons collab. What the brand lacks in heritage, it makes up in style. Somewhere between Rick Owens industrialism, Martine Rose exaggeration, and BLACKYAK overbuilding lies Australia’s own luxe tech star-child.

The Templa collection is split into two halves: “Urban,” which shapes street-friendly tech silhouettes through the brand’s artistic lens, and “Alpine.” While a jacket like the 3L Tombra might never leave the trailhead, its three-layer membrane fabric and PrimaLoft Gold insulation would be right at home on a Norrøna parka.

Whether January means walking at fashion week or skiing on Hokkaido, Templa’s luxe techwear has you covered.

Icon: 3L Tombra

First Ascent

Where: South Africa

Why: First Ascent is South Africa’s leading maker of specialist technical apparel. Founded in 1989, the brand has grown to provide South Africans with adaptive, functional apparel for every activity imaginable. Plus, its logo is a lizard.

Icon: Down Seal Jacket

Montagne

Where: Argentina

Why: Montagne is Argentina’s foremost maker and seller of technical gear. That's right, the home of the Patagonia region doesn’t wear only Patagonia.

With dozens of stores around the country (including at least one in Patagonia itself), Montagne makes more than just mountain wear. Some of the brand's less technical gear is pretty decent, too. And while it isn't a household name outside South America, if Montagne is good enough for a place flanked by the world’s longest mountain range, it’s probably going to get the job done.

Riot Division

Riot Division

Where: Ukraine

Why: The brainchild of Ukraine creatives Oleg Moroz and Andrey Titarenko, Riot Division is a techwear brand in the truest sense. Each Riot Division piece is like a William Gibson novel brought to life: vests transform into rain jackets; bombers come with modular pockets. Somewhere, a grizzled antihero guns down his last synth.

Riot’s dialed-in aesthetic has already given the brand some clout within the techwear community, but as impressive as the clothing is its mid-level price point.

Icon: Wrapping Parka

RedFox

Where: Russia

Why: RedFox is an outdoor equipment brand from St. Petersburg, and what Toread is to China, RedFox is to the world’s largest country: a massive, all-hands-served tech apparel machine outfitting a reported half of all Russians.

Perhaps because of its sheer scale, RedFox does it all — down, fleece, GORE-TEX shells — at pretty cheap prices. The styling here is pure outdoor utility. Some RedFox gear edges toward the techwear aesthetic, but generally the brand sticks to outdoor standards.

One major difference between RedFox and a brand such as Toread is accessibility. RedFox has a store in Boulder, Colorado, so if you're looking to cop, you can do so without Google Translate.

Icon: Gravity Parka GTX

Polartec

Wings+horns

Where: USA

Why: Polartec is a fabric innovator responsible for most of the fleece used in techwear. Brands such as The North Face, ACRONYM, and Patagonia come to Polartec for their raw materials, with Polartec Power Stretch used in everything from ACRONYM’s neck gaiters to the Arc’teryx Kyanite.

After getting its start making straight fleeces, the company has since expanded. Power Air, a textile unveiled in 2018, was developed as a solution to microplastic pollution, while NeoShell, an air-permeable waterproof membrane, is gaining traction with outdoor athletes for its breathability. Polartec has even launched its own in-house clothing brand, PolarFleece.

Icon: Supreme Reversible Logo Fleece

PrimaLoft

Where: USA

Why: At the height of the Cold War, the US Army had a problem. Soldiers could potentially be sent anywhere on Earth, but because goose down folds when it gets wet, standard-issue sleeping bags couldn’t be trusted to keep soldiers warm.

A company called Albany International was enlisted to develop “synthetic down” — in nerd words, a lofted, all-weather polyester filling — for the army's sleeping bags, and in 1989, the first garments to use Albany's new PrimaLoft technology hit the market.

Now spun off from its original parent company, PrimaLoft still produces high-performance insulation for everyone from Templa to L.L.Bean, with the material found in Stone Island bombers and the Allen Edmonds catalog. The company also made headlines in January 2019 when it unveiled the first garments made with PrimaLoft Bio, an insulator and tech fabric designed to biodegrade after disposal.

Icon: Houdini Mr Dunfri

W.L. Gore & Associates

Highsnobiety / Jan Kirkham

Where: USA

Why: W.L. Gore & Associates is the company behind GORE-TEX, and that makes it a big deal. Rather than waste words on things already known, here’s the lowdown on what W.L. Gore has done recently:

In 2018, the company launched GORE-TEX INFINIUM, a new line of performance fabrics that expand beyond its traditional breathable waterproof membranes. And recently, Y-3 dropped a new collection that features GORE-TEX SHAKEDRY, a waterproof textile that is W.L. Gore’s lightest yet.

Meanwhile, nearly every tech brand on Earth, from adidas to Veilance, has used the OG GORE-TEX fabric to keep people warm and dry. Sun shines. Grass grows. Techwear brands use GORE-TEX. Some things in life are true forces of nature.

Icon: Tilak Raptor MiG Jacket

Schoeller

Schoeller

Where: Switzerland

Why: Rudolph Schoeller opened Switzerland’s first worsted wool mill in 1868. More than 150 years later, Schoeller is still spinning fabrics, only today things have gotten a little more complicated.

Schoeller is the textile innovator responsible for technologies such as 3XDRY, c_change, and the entire category of softshells. Its creations power everything from Mission Workshop’s Eiger jacket to ACRONYM’s P10-CH pants. Garuda SS makes jackets from Schoeller materials. Outlier’s first pants were Schoeller materials. It might not have the name recognition of a W.L. Gore or a Polartec, but Schoeller is a fundamental techwear force all the same.

Veilance

Where: Canada

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’s “second place.”

No bones about it: the Dead Bird’s fashion line is sophisticated, under-the-radar techwear built for daily life. While one could theoretically go climbing in the brand’s “Fast and Light” gear, Veilance grabs rack space alongside proper luxury lines everywhere from Barney’s to BEAMS. It might seem a head-scratch to drop serious coin on unbranded performance wear, but the combination of understated styling and pure capability sends a message all its own.

Veilance is for the thinking and the thoughtful; for those who demand more with an inside voice. As far as tech brands go, its combination of design, performance, and price put it in a league of its own.

Icon: Monitor Coat

Snow Peak

Snow Peak

Where: Japan

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.

Icon: Fire-Resistant Poncho

Fjällräven

Where: Sweden

Why: Fjällräven is a Swedish outdoors company with a record of quirk nearly six decades long. The world-famous ‎Kånken (think: bright square backpack) is them. The funnel-necked Anorak no.8 (think: parka straight from S.T.A.L.K.E.R.) is them. One of their arctic down parkas was even declared a protected work of art.

While the brand has a long resume of building stylish products that perform outdoors, it’s not the art jackets or Acne collabs that make Fjällräven stand out. It’s something a little bit deeper.

Fjällräven makes technical apparel that, by design, won’t perform as well as say, something from The North Face. And they’re fine with – no, they’re excited about it.

Give up the third degree of waterproofing to not use plastic membranes? Awesome. Beeswax works just fine to keep water off naturally.

Charge more for a shell that will need to be re-treated more often? Of course. The Keb Eco-Shell ($500) is made from a climate-compensated fabric that uses no harmful PFC’s. It can’t work as hard as GORE PRO climbing jacket, but it’ll smile through rainy commutes like any other.

A jacket like the Greenland Eco-Shell also has the benefit of looking, well… not like it walked off a sci-fi set. Fjällräven makes capable outdoors gear; that gear just happens to not scream “weekend warrior.”

In fewer words, Fjällräven prioritizes sustainability in a way that only a Scandinavian brand can: through warm, charming designs meant to fit life as it is. If that seems a little too IKEA-y for a premium tech brand, check out the price tag on that “art parka” below. Go ahead. No rush.

Icon: Expedition Down Parka no.1

Moncler

Moncler

Where: Italy

Why: With roots tracing back to the ‘50s ski scene, Italy’s Moncler is perhaps the archetype for a luxury outdoors line.

The brand as it exists today straddles both worlds. Moncler Genius brings the craft of star designers like Craig Green and Kei Ninomiya to technical apparel. Moncler Grenoble takes the sophistication of the runway to alpine ski equipment. Between those two extremes lay the brand’s functional, fashionable dailywear pieces – pieces like the Maya, a $1250 puffer made famous by a certain Aubrey Graham.

Make no mistake, Moncler is a luxury brand before anything else. But it’s also, unlike many of its contemporaries, rooted in function. A Moncler jacket and a Saint Laurent moto are literally and figuratively cut from different cloth. Plus, considering the sticker price and status signaling of an ACRONYM shell, that prep schooler’s ski jacket might have more in common with that #hypebeast’s techwear than many would admit.

Drake wore a Moncler Maya. He also wore a J1A. Maybe, just maybe, there’s room for tech of all kinds.

Icon: Black Crepel Jacket

Kjus

Where: Switzerland

Why: From one side of the Alps to the other comes Kjus, a Swiss company churning out some of the world’s finest technical wear. Kjus is named after its founder, Norwegian Olympic medalist Lasse Kjus. The brand is famous for its ultra-high-end winter coats and the materials that enable them. Like Loro Piano wool. Or an electronic sweat management membrane that has its own smartphone app.

Yes, really.

It’s called HYDRO_BOT and comes on a jacket that costs more than Manhattan rent.

That about covers it.

Icon: 7SPHERE HYDRO_BOT

Bogner

Bogner

Where: Germany

Why: With a name like Willy Bogner, destiny seems set. What will Willy B. be? A test pilot? A stuntman? The world’s first accidental astronaut?

With a name like Willy Bogner, speed and danger seem guaranteed. As for this Willy Bogner, it became so much more.

Bogner, the brand, is the brainchild of German ski racer Willy… well, you get it. Since the 1930’s, the Munich-based gearmaker has produced some of the world’s most exacting alpinewear. Way back when, German Olympic teams raced in Bogner suits. Today, the brand’s $2000 coveralls are more likely to be found on a chairlift in Aspen than the medal stand.

Nonetheless, Bogner’s bold designs and precision craftsmanship embody a vision of luxury technical wear where sporting ability – alongside fashion credibility – separate the best from the rest.

Icon: Jason Ski Jacket

Aztech Mountain

Aztech Mountain

Where: USA

Why: Aztech Mountain is a performance sportswear brand based in Aspen, CO. Like Bogner and Kjus, it has a) fancy fabrics and b) modern tech at c) eye-watering prices. But Aztech is more than the New World’s lux line.

What makes Aztech special is its commitment to versatility. Technical jackets like the brand’s flagship “Nuke Suit” are built to take hard falls in snow, but styled like urban staples. The same Aztech jacket could travel from a Shanghai rooftop to a Colorado skislope with none batting an eyelash. The same can’t be said for most others.

As a young brand, it’ll be interesting to watch how Aztech grows. The line is already expanding into more “off-the-slope” techwear, and is currently stocked everywhere from MR PORTER to bonafide sports stores. Perhaps it’s only a matter of time before the Nuke Suit blows up in fashion.

Icon: Wool Multi Nuke Suit

Mission Workshop

Mission Workshop

Where: USA

Why: Famous for its overbuilt backpacks, San Francisco’s own Mission Workshop has spent the last decade using tech and design to make city dwellers the masters of their environment.

A California company doing cool tech things. Shocker, right? Moving on.

Mission is one of the more boundary-pushing functional apparel brands out there. While their gear may not be neon green GORE-TEX, Mission’s creative fabric use and unique approach to detailing turn heads all the same.

For this ethos in action, look no further than one of the brand’s latest drops, The Styrman ($845). A rebuild of a menswear classic, Mission’s Styrman skins the standard issue topcoat in a technical merino wool backed by Schoeller’s adaptable c_change membrane. Long lines and a textured outer mask the jacket’s performance muscles. Hidden pockets and weatherproofing tech make sure those lines need not twist.

Mission differentiates through its open embrace of the unconventional. The very fact that a volcanic sand-infused techwear bomber is a midpoint for them says it all.

Icon: The Sans

Alchemy Equipment

Where: New Zealand

Why: Alchemy Equipment is techwear’s best kept secret. Based out of Christchurch, New Zealand, the 6-year-old brand is quietly making some of the freshest functional garments around.

A particular highlight: the AEM164 “Lightweight City Rainshell.” At just $550, this sleek, everything-proof spring coat looks – and performs – like a lux tech jacket from brands twice the price. YKK AquaGuard zips and a three-layer Japanese nylon fabric round out the details on this seriously impressive piece.

Give Alchemy a look sometime. It might just lead to gold.

Icon: Insulated Tech Wool Coat

Stio

Where: USA

Why: Wyoming-based Stio is close to its roots. As an outdoors brand, it designs technical apparel meant for its hometown of Jackson Hole. As a clothing company, its bold palettes and easygoing designs reflect the relaxed “mountain life” one would find there – a far cry from the urban-inspired cyberpunk styles that compose lines like ACRONYM.

What Patagonia is to The North Face, Stio is to techwear as a whole. Rugged, outdoorsy, and built to take a beating, the brand’s eye-catching apparel is every bit as hardcore as the matte black GORE shells most think of when they think “tech.”

The perfect example: Stio’s Alpha Alpine Pullover. Filled with Polartec’s Alpha insulation, what looks like a college kid’s snap fleece is actually a breathable mid-layer stuffed with material designed for US Special Forces. Take it to the office. Take it the Green Zone. Take it on public transportation without someone shooting you the side-eye.

If “chill techwear” becomes a thing, Stio gets all the credit.

Icon: Pinion Down Pullover

Canada Goose

Where: Canada

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.

Icon: Snow Mantra Parka

Helly Hansen

Where: Norway

Why: Helly Hansen is one of the OGs of technical wear. Back when “performance fabric” meant cloth soaked in oil, the Norway-based brand (and its eponymous founder) provided waterproof garments to sailors working the frigid North Sea.

Over 140 years after its founding, Helly is still producing gear built for frozen waves –whether they be ski-hill moguls, America’s Cup yacht runs, or street-style scenes the world over. The brand has recently collaborated with contemporary labels like GmbH and WTAPS, mixing its craftsmanship heritage with some of today’s bleeding-edge brands.

Plus, of all the “legacy of service” stories in outdoors techwear, Helly’s rings clearest for a simple reason: it still makes legit workwear. Hi-vis tech apparel? They’ve been doing it for years.

Icon: Odin 9

Nilmance

Where: Hong Kong

Why: A little bit of ACRONYM. A little bit of Rick. Mix through the lens of the Hong Kong metropolis, and you’ve got Nilmance.

Billed as a “perfect integration between technology and the day-to-day wardrobe,” Nilmance is the brainchild of designer Mike Yeung. A Nilmance garment is a drapey, fashion-forward statement piece with tech fabric as a backdrop. The materials and construction are indeed technical – lightweight nylons and Dyneema composites feature throughout - but the real highlight is Yeung’s eye for detail.

Pieces like the AN-01 anorak demonstrate this best. A slick, color-blocked pullover, this jacket is arguably more wearable on a daily basis than a GORE Pro shell. A YKK AquaGuard zipper on the neck also nods to its technical design. However, outside of an urban core, the AN-01’s “wind resistant and mildly water resistant” properties leave a lot exposed to the elements.

Nilmance makes sleek, lifestyle-inclined techwear designed with the city in mind. Find it at Berlin’s Overkill.

Icon: Quilted Shell Jacket

TEÄTORA

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Where: Japan

Why: A “workwear brand for modern creators,” TEÄTORA is an urban-focused functional fashion line based out of Tokyo. The brand made waves overseas as part of MR PORTER’s 2016 collaboration with Japanese retailer BEAMS.

“The TEÄTORA collection is created to develop functional solutions for the urban environment,” explains Daisuke Kamide, the label’s designer, in a video promoting the collab. While silk-like nylons and travel packability may not be the first definition of “techwear,” the brand’s novel approach to how materials can improve life make it worthy of a mention. Even if the outdoors it seeks is once right outside.

Icon: Souvenir Hunter

Columbia

Where: USA

Why: Hailing from a city famous for its rainfall, Portland-based Columbia has staked its reputation on affordable, high-quality outerwear. The brand (founded in 1938) is symbolized by its chairwoman, the harder-than-iron "Ma Gert." Columbia's commercials sum up the brand in just two words: "Tested Tough."

Recently, the brand has made a push into the fashion space, collaborating with names like KITH and Opening Ceremony to revive its heritage silhouettes through a contemporary lens. A 2015 partnership with the former saw Columbia outfit its famous Bagaboo jacket in its OG 1986 colorway. A 2019 Opening Ceremony tie-up continued the '80s homage with a slew of anoraks and accessories. If the past few years are any indication, more trendy releases are sure to come.

Does the Columbia revival have staying power? Only time will tell. One thing's for certain, however: no matter how the fashion winds blow, Columbia's "tested tough" tech apparel will work though it all.

Icon: OutDry Ex Eco