City-to-mountain apparel — or, garments that blend performance fabrics and tasteful design — is growing into a full-blown movement. Perhaps the greatest champion of this category is Arc’Teryx Veilance, a sub-brand of the popular outdoor company, that produces sleek minimalist clothing fit for everyday wear.
The first Veilance collection was released 2009 with little fanfare. Understated outerwear was offered in a range of muted colors, featured the top technical fabrics and came with a luxury price tag, too. Before city-to-mountain became a buzzword, Veilance had all but perfected the category.
Today, the brand’s sleek jackets are now complemented with a range of pants and merino base-layers. In recent seasons, Veilance has expanded into accessories and now offers understated weatherproof bags and slim laminated-leather wallets.
We recently caught up with Arc’Teryx Veilance Director of Design Taka Kasuga to discuss the brand’s new spring collection, the growing city-to-mountain movement and how Veilance affects his everyday life.
Q: How do you stay true to the brand’s identity and aesthetic as you expand?
A: As long as the design is based on the user experience we want to provide, I think it’s good. But, aesthetically, I think we can stretch on both the material side and the lifestyle side. What I mean by that is that there are some very new technologies coming out and I feel like we are a little bit behind in adapting them. I want to bring the more progressive edge into the line. Right now, I think Veilance’s material palette, color palette and design palette are a foundation, but I want to expand a little bit.
Also, we don’t necessarily want to be an outerwear supplier. We want to be a progressive design brand. So we are looking into the product categories we are not in such as new packs and footwear. For our audience, Veilance being technical is a given — there’s a trust in that — but they want to see more excitement around design itself.
