Not only were they ridiculously expensive, but you couldn’t really call them stylish either.
The company didn’t really find its niche until the 1980s, when Reiss’s father and Tick’s son-in-law, David Reiss, created a parka built specifically to keep scientists warm at McMurdo Station in Antarctica. (His key innovation was a special down filling machine he invented.) In 1982, the company scored its first marketing coup, when Laurie Skreslet wore a custom-made Canada Goose parka en route to becaming the first Canadian to reach the summit of Mt. Everest.
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