By CHELSEY MAGNESS
It is a weekday morning and sub-freezing in Oregon. Under my parka I wear nothing but a bra and a thin base. Thus is an average day testing equipment for GearJunkie, and this week’s lab subject is a jacket from Loki LLC, a company known for its “shape-changing” outerwear.
Named after a Scandinavian god, Loki is a small company in Grand Junction, Colo., that has long existed outside the outerwear norm. The god Loki, according to the company, is a shape-shifter who “changes his own appearance to suit his needs.” The company follows that mantra in some ways, with its jackets and parkas containing obscured extra features like cuffs that fold out to convert into mittens and hoods with hidden neck gaiters that can be wielded to protect in wind and (bonus!) give a unique “alpine ninja” look.

My test this month of the women’s Stockholm Jacket, an insulated knee-length that costs $279, included a month of winter wear, short hikes, and nighttime bike rides to the store in the dark chill of a December in Oregon.
The verdict? This parka, which the company cites as the “ultimate in warmth,” is indeed too warm for many winter dwellers! In all but extreme climates, the long, Primaloft-stuffed parka will be absolute overkill.
This is all to say the Stockholm is a smashing success. It is equipped for an extreme blizzard or below-zero days. It means business — there are built-in mittens that unfold from the cuffs. A stowaway face shield is a toasty addition in wind and snow. The parka’s detachable rim of fake fur on the hood seals the deal.
