There鈥檚 no question that workwear聽has been聽trending, as classic outdoor brands like Patagonia come out with hefty, utility-oriented apparel and, in turn, utility apparel on fashion runways.
This afternoon at OR, we sat in on a panel with designers and marketing managers from , , , and . The topic: What is workwear, and why has聽it grown so popular?
鈥淲orkwear is the notion of protection and versatility,鈥 says Cindy McNaull, global brand and marketing director for Cordura. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a tool, that you happen to wear.鈥 But unlike the basic canvas work pants of yore, today鈥檚 workwear is not about utility and durability alone; it鈥檚 about protection with stretch, moisture management, and all the other qualities of typical technical outdoor apparel.
鈥淲orkwear is for the industrial athlete,鈥 says Sarah Deluca, co-founder of women鈥檚 workwear brand Dovetail. 鈥淚t鈥檚 for the person who works on a skyscraper, but it鈥檚 also for the person who is landscaping or in the natural sciences or doing DIY projects at home and then heading into the mountains.鈥
Sixty years ago, workwear was the norm in the outdoor industry. Pioneering big wall climbers Yosemite wore canvas and denim, since it was the toughest apparel available and could hold up to the sharp granite crystals of El Cap and Half Dome. But it was cast aside when lighter, more technical sport-oriented fabrics came to the fore. Now those hefty fabrics and durable designs are experiencing a resurgence.
One audience member wanted to know聽why now? As a representative from Carhartt, seated in the audience, explained: workers a decade ago didn鈥檛 care much how their clothes fit. The millennial聽generation聽does. 鈥淓veryone wants fewer items that can do more, so you don鈥檛 have to be as concerned with what category you fit into [workwear or technical outdoors apparel],鈥 says the Carhartt representative.
In many ways,聽technical, modern workwear聽seems like an obvious opportunity for growth. After all, workwear was the original mountain apparel, and聽its popularity is part of a broader trend of brands returning to basics. (Just this week, Five Ten announced the return of its original approach shoe, the Five Tennie. Last year, Vasque聽brought back its classic Clarion boot.) 聽鈥淧eople want to go back to that original product,鈥 says Erica Cottrell, product design manager at Topo Designs.聽鈥淭hey want to return to the purist version.鈥