The first of three Outdoor Retailer shows this year went off with a bang. The OR Snow Show is North America’s largest outdoor trade show, and at the end of January, outdoor, ski and snowboard brands revealed their fall-winter 2019-20 products at the convention center in Denver for everyone from retailers and media to check out. This is the place for powerhouse brands like Patagonia, The North Face and Black Diamond to smaller brands and up and comers to launch product, host important speakers and mix and learn from each other. Our team met with over 120 brands to see what’s coming out next fall, winter and beyond.
All around the showroom floor, there were nods to the ’90s (bright pinks and neon greens) and too many anoraks reminding us that what’s old is new again. Sustainability was a big buzzword across the entire showroom floor — whether that’s a commitment to biodegradable items or mindfully sourcing and using materials like recycled wool and cotton. Many brands are turning plastic water bottles into products like blankets, sunglasses and more. Fabric-focused brands Polartec and PrimaLoft both announced their commitment to creating and using recycled materials and biodegradable gear. When ingredient companies, like these, spearhead these shifts it means there will be ripple effects throughout the entire industry because their partners will have to adapt with them.
While our brains are still ringing with all the innovative gear we can’t wait to test, these ten products were standouts. These items won our Best Of Outdoor Retailer Snow Show Award thanks to their top of the line designs, advanced technical materials and well-defined upgrades. Here are the ten that we are most excited about.
Additional contribution by Tanner Bowden, Meg Lappe, Brenden Clarke, Ali Carr and AJ Powell.
We were at the Outdoor Retailer Snow Show 2019 and covered the show extensively. To see all of our product coverage, not just our award winners, you can head: here.
Cake Kalk

Our team tested the Cake Kalk last spring and loved it. It even made our GP100 list this year. The catch with this electric motorcycle is that one can only ride it off-road, not on the street. So Cake got to work, added a headlight, turn signals and a longer fender with a license plate mount, and kept everything else the same. As of March, you’ll be able to pre-order this street-legal version with a $200 deposit. The bike will cost $14,000.