Sky High Farm Goods and The North Face Launch Recycled Outdoor Capsule
Sky High Farm Goods and The North Face turned farm-justice into a six-piece outdoor capsule, with recycled shells, weatherproof pants, and strawberry graphics.

The North Face has a lot of collabs, but this one actually has mud on it. Sky High Farm Goods’ six-piece “Goodness Grows” capsule took classic TNF shapes, a Mountain Jacket, Mountain Pant, fleece half-zip, tee, tote, and hat, and pushed them toward a very specific kind of buyer: the gorpcore shopper who wants utility gear with a story that goes beyond logo fever.
The strongest pieces are the ones that can survive a cold, wet day and still look sharp in the city. The Mountain Jacket lands at $375, the Mountain Pant at $200, and the Fleece 1/2 Zip at $275, with the tote at $150, the hat at $75, and the tee at $70. The fleece is made from 100% post-consumer recycled fabrics, and the capsule leans hard into recycled or recycled-material construction. This is not decorative sustainability. It is the kind of material story that makes sense on a shell, on a pant, on a layer you would actually drag through sleet, trail grime, or a weekend market run.

The graphic language keeps the whole thing from feeling sterile. Moon and strawberry motifs run through the collection, along with woven logo patches and chenille patch graphics that give the clothes a little whimsy without tipping into costume. The North Face’s collaborations director said the imagery was designed as a “system of dress appropriate for the outdoors,” and that phrase fits the project better than any syrupy fashion-language would. It is functional, but it is not joyless. The collection understands that outdoor gear sells harder when it carries a point of view.
That point of view matters because Sky High Farm Goods is not just another lifestyle label looking for a seasonal hit. It calls itself a benevolent brand and fundraising model whose sole beneficiary is Sky High Farm, a nonprofit in New York’s Hudson Valley focused on food sovereignty, food access, climate, and agriculture. The farm says it has operated since 2011, became a nonprofit in 2016, and has donated more than 100,000 pounds of vegetables and 65,000 pounds of animal protein since 2011. Sky High Farm Grants was established in 2022, and its 2026 cycle will award $350,000, which makes this capsule feel less like merch and more like a revenue engine with taste.

The release also fits Sky High Farm Goods’ larger strategy. Its ongoing Converse collaboration launched in 2022 and sends proceeds directly back to Sky High Farm, and Goodness Grows extends that same model into harder-weather gear with a bigger streetwear footprint. Available through The North Face’s XPLR Pass loyalty program for early and exclusive access, the capsule gives the customer what they want most right now: a jacket that works, a pant that can take weather, and a cultural reason to care.
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