Between a capsule collection with Danish designer Cecilie Bahnsen, the launch of a range of footwear and climbing slippers, and last Friday’s opening of its largest flagship store worldwide at 511 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, The North Face can at times appear removed from alpine ridges, the peaks of the Sierra Nevada and Himalayan summits. That’s a criticism regularly levelled by its long-standing customers and retailers, who continue to look to the snow-covered peaks. Hence, VF Corp’s flagship brand is working to maintain its connection to extreme pursuits.
Alicia Thin, The North Face – FNW OG
The brand outfits several renowned adventurers and mountaineers with its AMK (Advanced Mountain Kit) collection. It has supported French mountaineer Benjamin Védrines in his 2024 expedition to climb K2 (8,611 metres), and is a partner of his film K2 Chasing Shadows, which was screened in mid-November at the Montagne en Scène festival. To mark the occasion, The North Face hosted a presentation of the film by Védrines, who is a high-mountain guide in the Hautes-Alpes, alongside updates to its AMK range for men and women, on the seventh floor of the Printemps Haussmann department store.
“We had already launched a version of the AMK kit in 2020,” explained Alicia Thin, the brand’s category merchandising director for the Europe, Middle East and Africa region.
“We have a team entirely dedicated to innovation, with specialists in our Stabio, Denver and Shanghai offices who collaborate with athletes to iterate prototypes based on their feedback. We work on three levels: the R&D arm explores all solutions that can meet athletes’ needs in mountaineering, skiing and climbing—in other words, our three verticals: Snow, Climb and Trail. AMK addresses needs in Snow and Climb. The team working with athletes has made the products even more hard-wearing, while also delivering lightness and packability. In Benjamin Védrines’ case, he needs equipment for a versatile approach and very fast movement in the mountains, as he did on K2.”
The brand highlights the technical nature of its products – FNW / OG
The space in the Paris department store, usually dedicated to second-hand offerings, gave pride of place to high-altitude imagery and features around a dozen textile pieces forming three-layer systems, in malachite green for men and crushed raspberry for women, fulfilling different functions and using expert materials and treatments. The brand highlights its in-house technologies with DotKnit as a base layer, FutureFleece for a light, warm fleece, and the Summit 50/50 hooded down jacket, which uses a box-baffle structure filled with its ProDown insulation. The waterproof and breathable jacket and trousers using FUTURELIGHT feature constructions suited to mountain pursuits, with gaiters, harness-compatible zipped thigh pockets and details engineered for durability. Finally, the imposing Cloud Down parka, which pairs with trousers, creates a final layer of thermal protection thanks to the use of Spectra fibres for greater resistance. An igloo tent and a range of accessories, including a sleeping bag and technical backpacks of various litre capacities, are also featured.
“Spectra fibre is an example of how we continue to strengthen our products. After the first kit, we realised we needed to push durability further. This range is like a Formula 1 concept car. We’re always looking to push innovation further. And this range was designed for women. We wanted to build products truly around the needs of female athletes. For each product, we tested an average of five prototypes. And even if a few items, such as a DotKnit Wool sports bra, were not brought to market, most are now on sale. So the consumer ultimately decides how they will use them.”
Benjamin Védrines recounts his ascent of K2 in 2024 – FNW OG
Ultimately, whether occasional athletes or urban customers, everyone can be inspired by this world. They are, however, looking for more mainstream versions: more accessible products with fewer technical details or fewer combined features.
“At The North Face, the idea is to launch technologies, commercialise them, and see how they evolve—then roll them out across the ranges. Sometimes, as with FutureLight, we can bring these solutions into a more accessible offer in less than two years. Working upstream with integrated R&D allows us, for example, to have DotKnit Wool for performance, but also a simpler DotKnit for the trail-running range. For a less performance-focused consumer, it’s not necessarily about adapting the technology, but also about reworking the details or the cuts of some of the most technical products.”
The AMK collection is distributed in The North Face stores worldwide, including Chamonix, as well as online and through key retailers such as Au Vieux Campeur in France and Schuster in Germany. Unlike collaborations with very tight release windows, this line is intended to remain in the brand’s range for several seasons.
Puma is continuing its fruitful fashion-meets-sport collab with UK streetwear brand Represent, this time “rewriting the playbook of basketball-inspired staples”.
Puma x Represent
Fusing “Heritage Hoops Energy with Modern Streetwear”, it brings the two brands neatly together with a campaign fronted by German NBA star Dennis Schröder who “embodies the collection’s balanced fusion of court performance and off-court style”.
The “simple yet elevated collection” spans footwear and apparel that’s “highlighted by expressive and detailed cut-and-sew designs”, as well as a fresh interpretation of Puma’s All-Pro Nitro 2 sneaker.
Its “court-ready” Jersey and Shorts debut comes with a newly designed Puma x Represent graphic, featuring mesh construction and contrasting trim “that nods to retro game-day uniforms”.
The range is, of course, accompanied by “courtside essentials” including a Graphic T-Shirt and Hoodie, “pieces that bring bold visual detailing to the championship collaboration”.
A Coach Jacket and accompanying Pants also “comprise comfortable warm-up layers with everyday wearability”.
For footwear, Puma x Represent presents a re-envision All-Pro Nitro 2, a performance design underpinned by “explosive Nitro cushioning and a lightweight Ultraweave upper”. The black and white two-tone colourway is punctuated by subtle logo hits on the heel and tongue.
Complementing one of Puma’s “most modern examples of basketball performance technology”, the collection brings “a touch of ‘80s flair with the low-top Majesty”.
Spanish label Toni Pons continues to expand its global retail network and has opened a new store in the US. The Catalan espadrille brand has opened in Miami Beach, Florida, at 1656 Lenox Ave. It is the brand’s second store in the state, following its opening at the end of 2024 in Boca Raton.
Interior of the new Toni Pons store in Miami – Toni Pons
The Spanish footwear brand, which will celebrate its 80th anniversary in 2026, announced the opening via its profile on the professional networking platform LinkedIn and described it as “a new chapter in its international journey.”
Based in Girona, the footwear brand was founded in 1946 and currently operates more than 50 company-owned stores in Spain and abroad. The online channel is also a key pillar of its business, and the brand is available at around 4,000 multi-brand points of sale across nearly 90 markets. In financial terms, the brand records annual turnover of approximately €32 million.
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In another change to Kering’s organisational structure: the group has announced that Bartolomeo Rongone, CEO of Bottega Veneta, will leave the group on March 31, 2026 to pursue new career opportunities.
Bartolomeo Rongone and Remo Ruffini – Moncler
The executive will step down from his role at Bottega Veneta on March 31, 2026, and will be appointed CEO of the Moncler Group with effect from April 1, 2026.
Under the Moncler Group’s new organisational set-up, Remo Ruffini will serve as executive chairman, retaining responsibility for creative direction and continuing to play a central role in governance and in shaping the group’s strategic direction.
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