- Details
- By Jenna Kunze
On the February morning of the New York Fashion Week runway show exhibiting a collection of Iñupiaq parkas, designer Bobby Brower (Alaska Native Iñupiaq) awoke in Manhattan to snow.
“All of my models were so happy,” Brower, 36, told Native News Online. “They're like ‘finally! An appropriate thing to wear on the runway.’ It was perfect for my collection.”
Eight professional models donning Brower’s designs are captured in photographs strutting down a rooftop catwalk in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood, comfortably adorned in the felted parkas with elaborate fur hoods and trim as the snow dusts down.
Want more Native News? Get the free daily newsletter today.
But the coats aren’t just meant to look warm, Brower said. They’re meant to keep wearers warm in subzero temperatures, down to -50 Fahrenheit.
“It's part of our culture,” Brower said. “Being Alaska Native and growing up in the Arctic, it’s survival gear. It’s not just, ‘I killed these animals so that I could wear fashion.’ It's about keeping my kids warm and keeping my family warm.”
Brower, the designer behind Arctic Luxe, traveled over 4,000 miles last month to make her career dreams come true. After she learned she’d been accepted into New York Fashion Week last April, she began preparing eight atigiit, or parkas, at her home in Anchorage, where she’s recently relocated from her hometown in the Arctic, Utqiaġvik.
One of the male coats was made from sealskin pelts Brower salvaged from a big storm last year, when around 40 dead seals washed up on the beach in Utqiagvik. Brower and her brother were able to skin nine of them, and used the meat to feed animals at the beach.
“It was like I was recycling,” she said.
That coat will now be shown on loan as part of a nine-month long exhibit at The Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
To make up the cost of travel to New York—plus the $6,000 venue space—Brower hosted fundraising events and had fundraising events for her handmade parkas.
In the end, she said the exposure from New York Fashion Week was well worth it.
“I'm a single mom of four kids. So it was really hard for me to hold on to all my parkas because it took me about a year to prepare everything,” she said. “But I didn't only do this for myself, you know, I feel like I represented Alaska Natives as a whole. I think it was really needed for people, especially our young people.”
Although Brower wasn’t able to bring her own models to the show, her next big event— Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto, Canada this June—will showcase her work on exclusively Indigenous models. She said that the more exposure her contemporary Iñupiaq wares gets, the better it will be for young Natives like her children.
“There's still a lot of racism and hate towards Natives,” she said. “Being able to show that I went to New York Fashion Week and showed Alaska Native culture on the runway is crazy. I don't know what will come out of New York Fashion Week. I can't wait to see what things are going to come next.”
More Stories Like This
NFL and Nike Partner with Native American Athletic Foundation to Host All-Star Game at Cowboys' Ford CenterMitchell Museum of the American Indian Changes Name to Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum
Q&A: Sicangu Lakota Filmmaker Yvonne Russo on Her New Hulu Series, 'Vow of Silence: The Assassination of Annie Mae'
Third Annual Tribal Museums Day Centers Diverse Histories, Cultures & Lifeways
Tommy Orange's "Wandering Stars" Makes TIME's 100 Must-Read Books of 2024 List
Support Independent Indigenous Journalism That Holds Power to Account
With the election now decided, Native News Online is recommitting to our core mission: rigorous oversight of federal Indian policy and its impact on tribal communities.
The previous Trump administration’s record on Indian Country — from the reduction of sacred sites to aggressive energy development on tribal lands — demands heightened vigilance as we enter this new term. Our Indigenous-centered newsroom will provide unflinching coverage of policies affecting tribal sovereignty, sacred site protection, MMIR issues, water rights, Indian health, and economic sovereignty.
This critical watchdog journalism requires resources. Your support, in any amount, helps maintain our independent, Native-serving news coverage. Every contribution helps keep our news free for all of our relatives. Please donate today to ensure Native News Online can thrive and deliver impactful, independent journalism.