
Seasons are something you can take for granted when you live in LA — I do — rarely giving you an opportunity to truly test cold weather gear. Granted our desert climate can create temps in the high 30s on winter nights, but it’s still not the right environment for challenging the winter gear that comes across our desks. So when the producers of Translogic told me we’d be shooting in Europe for two and a half weeks I instantly coordinated with the cold weather warriors at the New York office to go hands-on with some winter wear.
After explaining I’d be spending 18-days planing, training, driving and public-transportation-ing my way through six cities across England, Switzerland, France and Germany, the cold weather warriors at GP HQ quickly brainstormed and tasked me with winter wear for warmth, packability, style and reliability. Quickly thereafter, I was greeted with a Sir Edmund Hillary approved Canada Goose Expedition Parka ($500) in midnight black packed with white duck down, and an easily-packable arctic blue Helly Hansen Cross Insulator Jacket ($150) sporting a PrimaLoft warmcore synthetic down fill.
Here’s how things went down.
Photos by Bradley Hasemeyer
Canada Goose Expedition Parka

I’ll admit, my initial giddiness to tear into the Canada Goose Expedition Parka was subdued by the sheer size of the parka. I thought it was too big. Paired with the more trimmer tailoring that I prefer, the CG created a bit of a water tower silhouette. The relaxed fit, however, is more about science than fashion. Using the dead air created within the loose down feather structure, the parka staves body heat loss. Just ask the scientists at the Antarctica McMurdo station who wear the Expedition. Every day.
What started in a small warehouse in Toronto has today become a global brand. From London to Paris, Frankfurt and Zurich — Canada Goose jackets have permeated the outdoor market. Their signature tells, a fur hood and iconic red Arctic disc patches.
Not unsurprisingly, the Goose lives up to every bit of its hype as a mainstay. From the water resistant Arctic-Tech shell, four massive storage pockets that housed everything from gloves to a mic-pack, zippered hand warmers located behind fur-mouthed pockets, shapeable wire-rimmed carry strap and fur hood, the Expedition parka brought functionality — and gobs of warmth — to a whole new level. The result: a parka that kept me warm while waiting for cameras to roll, interviewing people in the Swiss Alps and walking around on damp London nights.