Beloved Boot Maker Danner Makes Apparel, and It's Honestly Really Good

Author Photographer
  • Courtesy Danner

Beloved Boot Maker Danner Makes Apparel, and It's Honestly Really Good

The nearly 100-year-old brand is finally making clothes, and they’re built with the same lifetime mindset as its iconic hiking and work boots


Published: 05-27-2026

About the author

Leon Hedgepeth
Leon Hedgepeth
Leon Hedgepeth is a menswear and grooming writer and market editor based in Cincinnati, Ohio. When he’s not writing, he enjoys time with his family, brewing local coffee, and perusing the latest records.
Field Mag may receive a minor commission from purchases made via affiliate links.

My affinity for Portland-based footwear stalwart Danner has been a long, product-loving affair. Field Mag has a longstanding relationship with the brand. And personally, I first came across the brand over a decade ago, when the shop I worked at carried a collaboration between Danner and the now-defunct Canadian label Wings + Horns. Then I remembered spotting Reese Witherspoon wearing the Danner Mountain Light Cascade boots in Wild. My first boots from the company were a pair of Cascade Crests, which have that perfect ’90s throwback look, plus they're waterproof and as comfortable as sneakers. I’ve been sold on Danner ever since.

As a writer, I primarily cover contemporary menswear, and whenever I’m asked what the best boots are, I point to the nearly 100-year-old PNW brand. (And, often, to the excellent Danner Light.) A big part of that rec is because Danner’s bootmaking DNA appeals to both city dwellers and the traditional outdoor crowd. If there were a Venn diagram of footwear that works well with selvedge jeans in one circle and down pants in the other, Danner would undoubtedly sit right in the middle.

I think Danner is one of the best heritage bootmakers of all time. Several of their styles are still handmade in Portland, and their GORE-TEX liners keep your feet dry, whether you’re walking through snow or hiking the PCT. Beyond GORE-TEX, the outsoles are typically made by Vibram, which adds serious traction, and any foot that sits atop a Vibram sole feels nearly indestructible.

In addition to my Cascade Crests, I own two more pairs of Danners—the Danner Light and Mountain Light—and both were comfortable from the jump. Unlike some other heritage lines that require a five- or six-wear break-in period, these didn't. Also, not many brands stand behind repairing their products anymore, but Danner does; they offer a recrafting service to rebuild or resole your boots, extending their life instead of sending them to the landfill.

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Courtesy Danner

Why Danner Got Into Apparel

Given my love for the company, I was intrigued when I first spotted a few apparel pieces on their website last year, then watched it grow into a full-blown, ready-to-wear offering. From GORE-TEX windstopping jackets to fleeces durable enough to stand on their own, denim shirts tough enough for a woodshop class, and double-kneed pants you could hand down to your grandchildren, the range is no joke. But why entertain the idea of making clothes to go with the company's footwear? Boots that good don’t exactly need a supporting apparel collection.

A lot of brands are branching out—Red Wing, Merrell, and even Timberland, with its latest clothing collaboration with BEAMS Plus. When I first saw Danner offering apparel, I thought, I hope this matches the quality of the company’s boots. With some brands extending their footprint into apparel, it doesn’t always work. It often feels half-hearted, or worse, like a complete afterthought. But last year, I tried one of their fleeces, and I was sold.

I liked that the fleece has some heft (17.6 oz), the fit is relaxed but not baggy, and there’s a key loop made from a Danner boot lace that ties the apparel and footwear lines together. The price point lines up with the boots (as in, it’s high) but the quality and fit are genuinely good. As a self-professed Levi's 501 obsessive and someone who’s constantly writing about chore coats and soft-boy loafers, I was surprised—and I felt compelled to dig into the rest of the collection.

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Courtesy Danner

How does a 100-year-old brand translate a heritage footwear ethos into clothing? Longevity and function, plain and simple. “We wanted to create garments that would feel like a huge score if you found them in a thrift store decades from now,” Yoji Kaneda, director of lifestyle apparel and footwear at Danner, tells Field Mag.

Although the company has been steadily ramping up its apparel arm, this didn’t happen overnight. Danner secured a GORE-TEX license for garments back in 2011, but didn’t yet have the resources to make rain jackets that could handle inclement weather. As the brand expanded its hiking and lifestyle categories, the focus shifted. “We started to make products that weren’t all about getting to the peak or being extreme,” Kaneda says. Essentially, gear for everyday, not just summiting mountains are hauling logs.

What’s most notable about the apparel collection is its balance: it’s neither overly synthetic nor aggressively outdoorsy. A big part of that comes down to where and how it’s made. While overseas production is unavoidable, Danner leans on strong partners: its own Portland factory (where leather is sourced for select pieces), Mount Vernon Mills in South Carolina for denim, and UK-based Halley Stevensons for the waxed exterior of a Coaches jacket, which also has insulation from Primaloft. As Kaneda puts it, “I own many great vintage pieces that were made in the USA, and there’s a nostalgia there as well.”

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Courtesy Danner

Firsthand Impressions

Out of the 108-piece collection, a few standouts rise to the top: the Larch Mt Denim Shirt, Kenton Double Knee Pants, and the Woodsman GTX Jacket. I took my usual size (small) in the tops, and the fit is spot-on.

Recently, I've been wearing the denim shirt in heavy rotation. It’s substantial enough to wear in springtime temperatures that swing from 50 to 70, almost like an overshirt, but it also layers easily when temperatures drop in fall and winter. The shirt is cut from 10-ounce American-grown cotton, with reinforced patch pockets and zig-zag stitching at the inner collar, a detail you might recognize if you've got a taste for the most coveted vintage denim jackets.

The shirt also happens to be one of Kaneda’s favorites: “There’s a lot of premium selvedge denim in the world, but I really like the practical, durable denim that Mount Vernon makes,” he says, adding, “It reminds me of the work shirts from the ’60s.”

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Photo by Leon Hedgepeth

As for the double-knee pants, I sized up to a 32, and they fit just right. They wear like a classic pair of Carhartts, relaxed through the leg with a slight taper toward the leg opening. The silhouette stays true to traditional workwear, built for ease of movement. They’re probably the lightest workwear pants I own, thanks to a breezy herringbone fabric that carries well from spring through early fall. The relaxed cut works equally well with boots or sneakers and won’t feel overly baggy if you’re after something in the straight-to-relaxed lane.

Then there’s the Woodsman GTX Jacket—my favorite piece in the entire lineup. There's a recycled GORE-TEX fabric on the interior and a leather collar from Danner's factory. “I have never seen leather used in GORE-TEX jackets, but most of our GORE-TEX shoes are made with leather,” Kaneda says, and that idea became the foundation for the design. Along with the leather detailing, the jacket is waterproof, loaded with pockets, and features a stowaway hood. “We opted to add a detachable hood for versatility, but I think this jacket really showcases the PNW’s rugged mentality and Danner’s focus on materials and function.”

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Larch Mt Denim Shirt | Photo by Leon Hedgepeth

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Woodsman GTX Jacket | Photo by Leon Hedgepeth

Build Clothing Like Boots

Danner's apparel philosophy is refreshingly straightforward. “We want our products to be worn as long as possible," says Kaneda. "We don’t want them to break down easily or end up in a landfill because they’re no longer in style.”

And that’s the throughline: with a focus on fabric, construction, and timeless design, these clothes are built to age gracefully, not trend-cycle themselves into oblivion. Just like the Mountain Lights, one of the brand’s greatest hits, they’ve transcended cyclical fashion, and I see the apparel having that same staying power. It leans heritage with a slight dose of performance and doesn’t subscribe to whatever’s happening in the broader fashion world.

As a PNW brand, “being outdoors is part of our lives,” Kaneda adds. And with this ongoing rollout, Danner’s apparel doesn’t just complement the boots—it earns its place right alongside them.

For more Danner deep dives, check out how Danner teamed with teh Crag Rats, America's oldest search & rescue crew, to build a new mountain boot.