Advertisement

Canadian Athleisure Brand ‘Lolë’ Expands into Men’s and Travel Categories

Date:

Share post:

Canadian brand Lolë has taken a new approach to not only survive, but thrive in today’s retail economy.

Once focused exclusively on women’s athleisure apparel, the Montreal-based lifestyle brand has branched out with a new men’s line and travel-focused products to maintain a competitive edge.

“For the last 19 years and probably over the last 10 years when we opened our first store back in 2010 our primary target consumer was the sophisticated, educated woman who understood the importance of a wellness-based lifestyle, had a global perspective, and was quite often a career professional with a family but somebody that was kind of at the intersection of an active lifestyle and fashion,” said Todd Steele, the company’s CEO.

“Over the last 10 years, we saw a lot of these similar values and trends happening on the male side and we found that this was relatively unique in the world of sport and active wear. If we think historically about the development sport lifestyle brands going back to Nike and Adidas early on through the outdoor companies like Patagonia and North Face through the action sports like Quicksilver and Billabong, almost all of them have been male-focused brands first. What we’re seeing now is there’s an openness and an alignment between some of the values of female first brands like Lolë and like some of our competitors in the athleisure industry.”

The brand is 19 years old and today has 29 corporate stores, 19 in Canada, six in the U.S., and four in Europe, as well as another 12 franchisees spread across those areas. There’s also a few stores in airports in Canada.

Through distributors and other partners, the brand is in 11 countries.

“Lolë’s a lifestyle brand kind of predicated on a few values. The first – the kind of prominent one – is wellness. Wellness of mind and body. The second value pillar is community and the idea for us is to develop global communities in each of these markets that we’re in. And the third value is sustainable consumption. We build versatile, long-lasting products that hopefully will reduce the frequency that a customer has to re-buy or re-consume and we do those products where we can with recycled fabrics and with sustainable production processes,” said Steele.

He said the push into the male market has been well received. The retailer started the male collection very small with probably only 10 per cent the number of styles for men as it does for women. It tried to approach the men’s collection with as much versatility as possible so it designed a set of products that the average man could travel with, could be active in, and could live this active urban lifestyle.

“The company began as a 100 per cent wholesale business and I think this year we’ll be about 50-50 between wholesale and our direct to consumer business, meaning our retail stores and the web,” said Steele. “We like that balance. We believe in the wholesale market. We believe in our retail partners who are out there helping us build our brand and in places we wouldn’t otherwise be and in front of consumers we wouldn’t otherwise be in front of.

“On our own direct to consumer side, we’d like to continue to build out three to five stores a year. Our focus right now for the past year has been on four-season resort towns. We’ve opened stores recently in Vail and Keystone, Colorado, in Lake Tahoe, California and we’ve got a store opening up in January in the Canyons Village in Park City Utah. We think our brand has a real resonance in these four-season towns. Twenty five to 30 per cent of our business is outerwear and given that we’re from Montreal and Quebec we’ve got a real heritage in kind of building warm technical jackets that maybe some of our competitors don’t have. So we’re able to give an offering to the consumer in these resort towns in the winter and then when summer comes obviously we have a bunch of active and lifestyle athleisure pieces. We truly can provide something for every time of the year which is relatively unique in a ski town. That’s been our focus over the last year and we see that continuing in 2020.”

Actor and outdoor enthusiast Josh Duhamel has become an ambassador for the retailer after signing on as equity owner and investor.

“There’s a rugged yet fashion-forward element to the line that speaks to both outdoor adventurers and urban explorers,” said Duhamel. “Lolë will travel.”

“As an understated style icon, Josh has participated in design workshops with our product teams. The new line is an exciting opportunity for us to continue to inspire people to live outside their comfort zones in style. We want men to engage with the world through their own travels and be comfortable while doing it,” said Steele.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

More From Retail Insider

RECENT RETAIL INSIDER VIDEOS

Advertisment

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Subscribe

* indicates required

RECENT articles

Why Food Brands Are Quietly Reversing Skimpflation

Food brands are reformulating products as consumers push back against years of ingredient cuts and declining food quality.

Retail sales jump to $72.7 billion in March: Statistics Canada

Retail sales were up 2.1% in the first quarter of 2026, marking a seventh consecutive quarterly increase.

Tim Hortons to build or renovate 480 restaurants across the country

Canadian restaurant owners are investing $270 million, in addition to Tim Hortons corporate investing an additional $130 million.

Canadian Tire Jumpstart Charities launches national initiative to build 25 new community soccer pitches

Jumpstart has provided more than 4.5 million opportunities for Canadian kids to get into the game since 2005.

Canadians shifting focus to everyday loyalty rewards, Scene+ and Bond report says

Canadians are holding an estimated $13 billion to $15 billion in unredeemed loyalty points.

Tahini’s to roll out Shawarma Ramen across Canada after initial test launch

The national launch marks a broader expansion of a product the company has spent two years developing as it looks to build on customer interest in fusion-style menu offerings and social media engagement.

SKYBIRD Asian Grill opens fourth location as it prepares for continued growth

SKYBIRD Asian Grill has opened its fourth location at 2183 Rue Ste-Catherine West in Montréal, continuing its fast-casual growth.

Sports Retail Shows Resilience in Canada

SportChek growth, fanwear demand, and rising interest in soccer highlight resilience in Canada’s sports retail sector.

Luxury Shoppers Are Still Spending, But More Carefully: Canada Goose

Canada Goose’s latest earnings call suggests luxury shoppers remain active, but retailers are seeing more cautious and selective spending patterns.

Jersey Mike’s to open second downtown Toronto location as Redberry expands Canadian footprint

Redberry continues a broader plan to grow Jersey Mike’s presence in Canada, where the company says it aims to reach 300 locations by 2035.

nixit expands into Loblaw grocery banners with sexual wellness products

The move marks nixit’s first expansion into the Canadian mass grocery channel and increases its domestic retail footprint by 52 per cent.

Ferrari-Themed Calgary Fundraiser Supports Alberta Children’s Hospital

Ferrari-themed Calgary fundraiser supports Alberta Children’s Hospital with a luxury Maranello trip and community-driven charity campaign.

Daily Synopsis: May 21, 2026

Fuel charges on grocery hits economy, Rona leads radio spend, campus thrift store opens in Calgary, Time Out Market prepares to open at Oakridge Park, 500 charges in retail theft scheme, and other news.

Vivobarefoot to Open Second Canadian Store in Toronto

Vivobarefoot plans to open its second Canadian store on Toronto’s Queen Street West as barefoot footwear gains momentum in Canada.

adidas Taking Over Toronto’s STACKT Market for FIFA World Cup

adidas is turning Toronto’s STACKT Market into a massive FIFA World Cup fan destination with watch parties, retail, food, and soccer experiences.

Small business confidence falls steeply in May: CFIB

"Demand is weak, costs, especially fuel, are high and conditions don’t show signs of improving."

Lightspeed announces Q4 and full year 2026 financial results, net loss of just over $144 million

For the year, total revenue of $1,227.0 million, an increase of 14% year-over-year.

31% of Canadians have side hustle to cover every day expenses: Omnisend

85% admit they started for financial reasons rather than personal fulfillment or fun.

Time Out Market Vancouver prepares for May 28 opening date at Oakridge Park

Across 51,000 sq ft there are 18 kitchens, a dessert counter, a coffee counter, 3 bars, multiple event spaces and a large outdoor terrace onto a public park.

Survey reveals Canadians have reached breaking point: Harris & Partners

57.3% of respondents said their income did not cover basic expenses including rent, food, and bills.