A century ago, Eddie Bauer opened a store in Seattle to sell sporting equipment. Now, his eponymous company looks ahead at another century with its just-launched Centennial Collection of gear.
GearJunkie hasn’t been around quite as long as Eddie Bauer, but our editors and gear-testers have followed the brand over the past 10 years. We’ve witnessed a revival of a brand that has gone from core and innovative to guide-focused to a mass-consumer company.
Its launch of the First Ascent line of products a decade ago brought innovation back into the spotlight and reengaged Eddie Bauer with world-class guides. Melissa Arnot Reid, Adrian Ballinger, Dave Hahn, and more outdoor luminaries were brought in to design products and build new kinds of gear.

This past winter, in Estes Park, Colorado, GearJunkie attended an Eddie Bauer event celebrating its 100th birthday. We skied backcountry laps in prototype gear and interviewed Damien Huang, president at Eddie Bauer — as well as several product developers and guides.
“I am trying not to be too nostalgic,” Huang told our editor at the event. “It’s more about looking ahead to the next 100 years.”
Here’s how Eddie Bauer got to today — and a peek at what’s to come.
The Beginnings
In 1920, 21-year-old sportsman Eddie Bauer opened his Eddie Bauer’s Sports Shop in Seattle. At first, he sold sporting goods like tennis rackets, handmade golf clubs, and fishing tackle. Then, in 1940 — after coming down with hypothermia on a fishing trip — Bauer created a solution for increasing warmth, his patented Skyliner jacket.
It was the first quilted down jacket ever made.
