Fjällräven Winter Jacket Review: The Mad Genius of Swedish Warmth | Fashion’s Digest

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Fjällräven Winter Jacket Review: The Mad Genius of Swedish Warmth | Fashion’s Digest


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History Lesson
The Iron Snail

The Warmest Jacket in the World?!

This jacket is what you get when a mad genius decides that he no longer wants to be cold. Hello everyone, it’s Michael. Welcome back to the Iron Snail.

The first version of this jacket was actually two down jackets sewn together by a man named Åke Nordon. If you couldn’t guess it already, Åke is the mad genius that we’re talking about today. A man who, at 14 years old, when he was just a boy, started his company by selling wooden-framed backpacks to reindeer herdsmen he met while hiking.

And then the Space Race happened, and he was like, “I’ll make the frames out of aluminum instead because that’s what people in space are doing.”

He did, and he started a really successful company that makes this jacket one of the warmest parkas in the world. Also, it’s full of little Åke flares, let me show you in my Fjällräven winter jacket review!

Fjällräven Winter Jacket Review by The Iron Snail
The Iron Snail

 

The Hockey Lace Secret Sauce

Hockey Lace Secret Sauce
The Iron Snail

When Åke was in the lab sewing up this jacket for the first time, he needed cords so he could cinch the hood and the hem tight, but he didn’t have cords. Instead, what he did have was hockey laces, so he put those in the hood, he put those in the hem, and he put those in the jacket locker loop thing.

One more thing about these cords – when it’s on the blue jacket, it resembles the Swedish flag. Very symbolic, very beautiful. This obviously does not resemble the Swedish flag, maybe inspired by Brazil.

Wait… Why is There Synthetic Padding Here?

Synthetic Padding
The Iron Snail

Also, Mr. Nordon had another trick up his sleeve, which was to layer synthetic padding along the zipper packet, along your shoulders, and along the brim of the hood. The rest of this jacket is filled with goose down. Why, you may ask? I knew that would bring a little bit of controversy into this article, which I’m always after.

The reason it’s there, which is not what I expected, is to keep your shoulders warmer when you’re wearing a backpack, which I’d never heard before, so we’ll get into that later, and I am suspicious.

How I Got My Hands on the Jacket (Kind of)

How I Got My Jacket
The Iron Snail

So here’s the skinny – Fjällräven emailed me, and they said, “Hey Michael, can we send you our 50th-anniversary edition Expedition down jacket in a beautiful cobalt blue?” and I said, “Yeah, absolutely, that’d be sick!” And then they didn’t.

I totally got shafted – I got the green one. Whatever, some hot TikToker probably got it and danced in it. Little old me. It actually didn’t matter because that’s not what I was after. I was after knowledge.

How I Got My Jacket
The Iron Snail

So when I had Fjällräven’s phone number, I called them a lot. I went undercover and pretended that I was a nice young man with nothing but a passion for jackets and outdoor wear when, in reality, I really wanted to get that jacket – the Polar Expedition Parka.

Boy, oh boy, did I get it! Fjällräven sent it to me. I was like, “You fools, got it!” They were a little bit immune to my charm, though, and they’re making me send that jacket back.

How I Got My Jacket
The Iron Snail

Also, I got to speak to the big wig at Fjällräven, which was actually a big surprise – I did not think that was going to happen. I spoke to Donna Bruns, who I looked her title up after we spoke – she’s the Global Product Director of Fjällräven. AKA, anything that you see at Fjällräven is because Donna said it’s good to go.

And I also spoke to Carl Hård af Segerstad – he’s the Global Events Senior Manager at Fjällräven. The only reason I’m telling you that is because I triple-checked all this information, and I got it from the source, so hopefully, it’s as accurate as possible.

The Big Question – Why Not Go High-Tech?

The Big Question
The Iron Snail

Also, disclaimer time: Fjällräven didn’t pay me, they have no say over what I say, this article does not have to go through them before I publish it, blah blah blah. Also, a little controversial – wanted to get the hot goss – I asked Donna and Carl, “There’s all these outdoor brands that are doing a lot of very techno-forward stuff that you guys are not.

Why is that?” They’re still using wax bars, which first started being used in the 1400s, so why are you guys still using that? And they actually had an answer for it, and that was really cool. I like that answer a lot. So that’s kind of the finale – we have to go through a lot of things first, but let us begin.

A Little History Lesson – Eddie Bauer and the OGs

History Lesson
The Iron Snail

We live in 2025 now, and down jackets have been around for many, many years, so they’re not as crazy anymore, so it sucks that we can’t have the same awe-inspiring people way back when they did.

But on the phone, Donna told me, “Oh yeah, Åke didn’t really know how to sew a down jacket, so he flew to the US to meet with Eddie Bauer,” and I almost spit my drink out! I was like, “Not the brand – the man, Edward Bauer!”

History Lesson
The Iron Snail

So, to set the scene here, Eddie Bauer is the true OG of down jackets. He didn’t invent them – they were invented hundreds of years before he was even alive – but he popularized them in the US after World War II. Everybody was like, “Hey, that one jacket I wore while I was fighting a war? Amazing, love that!” Eddie Bauer made it – he popularized the down jacket, and he is one of the American outdoor recreational brand founding fathers.

There is Eddie Bauer, there is Clinton Filson, there is Charles Danner, there is Leon Leonwood Bean – these are kind of the OGs, the pillars. And Åke is kind of the next generation – he’s about 30 years after that.

So flying to the US to meet with Eddie Bauer is like you’re going to see The Godfather, you’re going to meet with Steve Jobs to talk about technology or something like that – it’s a big deal.

A ton of amazing things happen at the same time: World War II ends, and everybody’s like, “Oh great, that really sucked,” so now they’re at home, and outdoor recreational activities explode. Also, nylon, which was invented before World War II but was really rationed to civilians, is now not rationed. So there is a magic material that is incredibly light, dries really fast, and is super, super strong.

History Lesson
The Iron Snail

And on top of all that, our good man Eddie stuffed down inside – well, it was cotton at the time – but stuffed down inside of cotton and made these incredibly light jackets that all of a sudden, when you go outside, and you’re not bogged down by really heavy wool jackets, even though I do love wool. I love wool!

If we look at Fjällräven and Åke and everything like that, his big thing was a dual-layered tent. I think it was polyester on the outside and nylon on the inside – it might be flipped.

The big feature of his tent was that when you were laying in a tent, it could be raining and the tent wouldn’t get wet, but also the condensation from your breath wouldn’t gather in the tent and get really gross and damp when you woke up – it would be dry, which is massive.

If you want to go outside just for fun, you’re not on some crazy expedition, and you want to be cozy the whole time. And nylon and polyester were allowing the masses to do that affordably and easily.

The interesting thing, though, is the outdoor pioneers – the guys that were making the tents and jackets and backpacks and stuff out of this new material – had no idea how it worked. It was a very experimental time, and what I really like about it is it seemed like everybody was on board to help each other out, what are the odds of that actually happening?

The Warmest Jacket
The Iron Snail

When Åke flew to the United States, he met with George Lamb of Camp 7, who was a very big deal in the early world of outdoor recreational gear and was just like, “Hey George Lamb, how do I sew a jacket together?” And George was like, “Well, I’m actually going to sell my business really soon and own a farm, but before that, this is how you do it, and this is why.”

And then Åke would publish catalogs and say, “Hey, this is how my tent works, this is how the jacket works. Do you have any feedback? How can I make this better? Do you have any ideas? Please let me know.”

A very collaborative-driven, “let’s make the best product we possibly can because we all just want to go outside” mentality, and I love that. I think that’s the most amazing thing in the world. So what did Mr. Nordon do when he got on his plane and, well, a plane and flew back to Sweden? He made the Down Expedition Parka – the last down jacket you’ll ever need in the cold.

Down Jacket Construction 101

Down Jacket Construction
The Iron Snail

There are a few different ways you can make a down jacket. The North Face utilizes the first way on this down jacket. You can do sewn-through construction, which is just like a bunch of little pillows—the baffle stitches on the outside line up with the ones on the inside of the jacket.

You can also do box construction. It’s exactly what it sounds like. Instead of sewing right through the down and getting nylon on nylon cold spots, the “pillows” are more cubed shaped, so there’s more fill in there, and you don’t get those cold spots.

But you can also do offset channel construction, which is what Fjällräven does. Offset baffle construction is cool because Fjällräven always says it’s essentially two down jackets sewn together ’cause that is essentially what it is.

Down Jacket Construction
The Iron Snail

But what’s happening is the baffling is still sewn through, but if you have two down jackets – one over one another – what you can essentially do is pull one up a little bit so that the threads don’t match. So you essentially offset two jackets.

So those seams still exist; they’re still there, but two layers of sewn-through basically remove all of the cold pockets that you can have on your jacket. It is one of the warmest ways to sew a down jacket – it’s very effective.

The Tank – More Than Just a Big Jacket

More Than Just A Big Jacket
The Iron Snail

And the reason this jacket is so massive is that no matter what you’re doing, if you’re doing anything physical like strenuous, you’re not going to wear a jacket this big – you’ll totally overheat.

But the reason it is so big is that the jacket is meant to be so warm that when you go to base camp, and you have all of your other clothes on from the day, you should be able to just throw this jacket on over whatever you’re wearing. You could have a whole other jacket under this jacket – it’s supposed to be a tank.

The first feature, which, yes, I was a little suspicious about in the beginning, but I believe Fjällräven, I think they’re right, obviously. This came on the first version of the jacket as well, so I believe Åke and his entire company. The Expedition Down Parka is a layer of synthetic and down put together. I think the Expedition Light is just synthetic. Why? Why? Why is that?

More Than Just A Big Jacket
The Iron Snail

The original reason that I said to Donna was just because it dries faster – synthetic insulation dries much faster. Your shoulders get wet a lot, your hood gets wet a lot, the plackets and stuff like that – you want to have them be as weather-resistant as possible. Donna said that it was a pleasant bonus, and I was like, “What? A pleasant bonus? Are you kidding me, Donna?” Something like that. I don’t remember exactly what I said.

The reason Åke did it is because of backpacks. Obviously, Fjällräven started as a backpack company, so it’s a big tribute to backpacks, and that’s also what you take whenever you go on hikes. But synthetic insulation compresses less underweight in the short and immediate term, so your shoulders – everything under your straps – stay warmer.

More Than Just A Big Jacket
The Iron Snail

Because if you don’t know, the common thing about synthetic insulation is that while it’s great and it dries really fast, it compresses and it stays compressed and you lose loft, and your jacket becomes less warm over time.

What I found really interesting about this is obviously that it’s talked about a ton in the nerdy small consumer community where people buy the jackets and are wearing them, but the woman who is designing the jackets and trained under Åke, who also added synthetic insulation in the shoulders from the start, said this to me when I asked her because I was nervous.

I emailed her right before I wrote this article because I was like, “I just want to make sure I got this right.” Does Fjällräven worry about synthetic padding compressing over time and losing loft? Her response: “Not really, it holds its loft quite a long time if you have the right padding.”

I’m going to believe the Global Product Director of Fjällräven, especially because this jacket has been around for 50 years, and if it was an issue, I’m assuming they would have fixed it if people were complaining about it for that long. So cool, very cool to know.

The Polar Expedition Parka – Feature Overload!

The Polar Expedition Parka
The Iron Snail

While this is a very warm jacket, a very big jacket, it’s not very feature-packed – that’s about it. So we immediately have to jump over to the Polar Expedition Parka, which is feature-packed – the bad majama.

And once again, I am also the bad majama – I was not given permission to take that jacket outside, but I sort of did. You know, no one knows what crazy things I’ll be up to in it, so permission denied.

The Polar Expedition Parka
The Iron Snail

Either way, here are the cool features of it: Number one – there’s a snow skirt, which is made to stop wind from going up your hypothetical skirt. Number two – this one’s quite neat – there’s a neck baffle inside of the jacket, which is like a folding collar inside of your jacket, again to make sure that your hot air doesn’t go out or cold air comes in.

Number three – there are giant leather pulls because you’ll be wearing mittens or gloves when you have this jacket on, so you need to get it easier. Number four – there are massive side-entry booby pockets and huge dump-dump pockets with side-entry access to slip your hands into.

Five – you obviously have a fur hood, synthetic fur, to create a pocket of air in front of your face so the condensation of your breath doesn’t freeze onto your skin.

The G1000 Mystery – A Happy Accident

The G1000 Mystery
The Iron Snail

Number six – my favorite thing because it is a little blast from the past, is G1000 and G1000 Heavy Duty. Very significant and a blend – very important to be a blend.

Down Jacket Construction
The Iron Snail

But this is why I asked Donna and Carl, “Why are you using 600-year-old technology when everybody’s doing adhesive and Gore-Tex or waterproof linings and stuff like that on jackets?” not having people buy bars of wax and put it on their jackets. In all fairness, Fjällräven does do some of those things on certain pieces, but not all.

The G1000 Mystery
The Iron Snail

And this is the conclusion of my Fjällräven winter jacket review, ’cause this is the coolest part: the G1000 fabric is actually a failed fabric because it was originally supposed to be on tents, but it was too heavy – nobody wanted to take it around with them. So it kind of just hung out for a while until Åke saw it.

He saw people skiing, and what they were doing was they had wax that was going on the bottom of their skis, but they were rubbing it on the back of their pants so that way when they sat down in the snow, their pants didn’t get wet. Well, they got wet, but the actual water didn’t soak through and soak their pants, and he said, “Ooo!”

Sustainability and Innovation – The Future of Fjällräven

Sustainability and Innovation
The Iron Snail

The first thing, if you didn’t know, is Fjällräven is a very sustainability-focused brand, and to be frank, a lot of the waterproof membranes – most of them remove all the harmful chemicals or some of the harmful chemicals, but a lot of them still do have them. So why not use something without it that can also be water-resistant and can be reproofed over time and reused, and you can reapply the wax and stuff like that?

Also, a fascinating thing – there’s this great video series from Future Proof about Fjällräven that’s very fascinating. He was talking about how waterproof zippers typically still have harmful chemicals in them, even if the rest of the waterproof jacket does not.

I’m kind of paraphrasing the rest of it here, but essentially, it was like, “Why? Why are zippers so hard to do?” And I found out they’re not so hard to do, but a lot of brands don’t really care, the manufacturers of the zippers don’t really care ’cause it’s waterproof and printing money still, so why change anything?

Sustainability and Innovation
The Iron Snail

And I know that now because I brought this up to Donna, and this was her quote. She said, “I’m carrying three global powers behind me kicking and screaming” – when she’s talking about things like zippers and stuff like that, trying to get them on board with removing harmful chemicals from waterproof zippers and stuff like that.

Waterproof membranes like Gore-Tex are very cool because they are waterproof and breathable, although not at the same time. G1000 is much, much simpler than that, and the great part about it is it’s not either on or off – you can do both.

So if you have a Gore-Tex jacket and you’re thinking, “All the snow is going to hit me in the front and not the back, so I want the back of my jacket to be breathable.”

You can’t remove a layer of Gore-Tex, but with G1000, you could wax the front of the jacket and not the back and have breathability, or you can not wax the under part of the arms, or you know, whatever it may be. You can pick where you want your water resistance and extra wind resistance to be while keeping your jacket or your piece more breathable. That’s really cool – I like that a lot.

Carl’s Amazing Answer About Technology

About Technology
The Iron Snail

And then, finally, my favorite answer for G1000 rounded out the entire brand and answered the question, “Why does Fjällräven not always chase the most technologically advanced thing?” And it was all Carl – you absolutely nailed this answer. You said that… I was like, “Whoo!” Everybody on the call was like, “Wow, Carl, that was great!”

You could easily make the lightest down jacket, as in like lightest weight, using the thinnest technical nylon – a lot of companies do that and they’re really amazing. When you do that, you do two things: one, you increase the barrier for entry, so things are more expensive, you have to upkeep them more, and you have to worry about them more on the trail.

But two, you increase the margin for error, and if you increase the margin for error and all of a sudden your jacket rips on a hike because it’s so thin, you’re cold, your hike sucks, you don’t want to go outside after that, you might not want to go outdoors as much, which is the entire thing that Åke was trying to fix in the beginning.

About Technology
The Iron Snail

By chasing this crazy technical route and going absolutely insane, you lose people in the process, and when you lose people, they don’t want to go outside, they don’t care about preserving nature.

Fjällräven, from a business perspective, can’t sell to people who don’t want to go outside, and everything in this process kind of collapses and crumbles. I thought that was a fantastic answer.

Watch This Review

Final Thoughts and a Surprise in the Mail

Donna is a very cool, very nice person, but I’m also like, “Yeah, you’re clearly a top dog, you know, business,” but she kept saying, “Push us.” I kept writing it down – “likes to be pushed.” And then I said a few other things, and then again I said, “would love someone to really push them,” and then a few notes later I said, “really wants to be challenged,” and then the last note I took on the Donna section of the call is “push us.”

Donna basically forcefully said to me like four or five times, “Push us, ask people what they want to see improved, what can we change, what are they thinking about?” This makes total sense with the brand because Åke founded it off the feedback, sharing ideas, and being collaborative, and they kept that spirit alive till today.

And I said to Donna, and I always say this when I’m on calls with people, “I want nerdy details – we have to go deeper. Why is it this blend? Why is it this percentage? I want nerdy details.” And then what comes in the mail like a week after our call? A book! I opened the book – inside the book, it says it’s for the Iron Snail, and it’s signed “Donna,” and it says “a little nerdy detail to have fun with, signed Donna.”

And then I thought that said Carl for a while, and then yesterday when I was looking over it again and reading the book, I realized it said Martin Axelhed, the CEO of Fjällräven.” That’s kind of nuts. Anywho, thanks for reading my Fjällräven winter jacket review! See you all next time!

This article was adapted from Michael Kristy’s video on The Iron Snail, with edits from Fashion’s Digest, and was reviewed by Michael to ensure the integrity of his original content. Watch the full video here.



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