Posted on 02/03/2026 9:33:50 AM PST by T.B. Yoits
Authentic Brands Group, which owns the brand’s intellectual property, last month shifted its e-commerce and wholesale licenses to another company.
The fate of Eddie Bauer’s brick-and-mortar fleet is uncertain as its operating company prepares to file for bankruptcy. There are more than 250 Eddie Bauer locations in North America.
In January Eddie Bauer IP owner Authentic said that Catalyst Brands — responsible for the operations of several brands in Authentic’s stable — would continue to operate those retail and outlet stores. But Catalyst is readying a bankruptcy filing for the entity that runs Eddie Bauer’s locations, according to a source familiar with Authentic Brands Group. Authentic last month also shifted the Eddie Bauer e-commerce and wholesale licenses to another operator, Outdoor 5, which has taken over those operations in the U.S. and Canada.
Authentic and Simon Property Group, via a 50/50 venture dubbed Sparc, acquired Eddie Bauer about five years ago. Sparc and its entities became part of Catalyst when Catalyst formed a year ago, incorporating J.C. Penney’s operations and leadership into the mix.
Less than three years ago, Eddie Bauer and Authentic unveiled a new logo and growth strategy for the century-plus-old outdoor retailer, including the expansion of wholesale and international sales. Before joining Sparc, Eddie Bauer, along with PacSun, was run by an operating setup established in 2018 by private equity firm Golden Gate Capital.
Authentic owns the intellectual property of several brands including Eddie Bauer and licenses those rights to others to run operations; the brand management firm also owns a stake in Catalyst. The U.S. operating company of Forever 21, whose brand is also owned by Authentic, filed for bankruptcy last year.
(Excerpt) Read more at retaildive.com ...
Most unfortunate. One thing I like about their clothes... men’s jackets particular; they generally run about an inch or two longer than mots clothing brands regular. EB also offers tall and slim, classic and full fit shirts, as well as, tall clothing for those that need it. It was disappointing when they closed that last store in Cincinnati last May.
For the store 21 miles away, it stated the following: "This store sits on Lənape Haki-nk (Lenni-Lenape) Land"
Folks who do land acknowledgements need to deed over their property title immediately to the Native Tribe they acknowledge.
I am sick and tired of their vapid virtue signaling.
They need to either do it or shut up about it.
The quality went to crap.
I am seeing the same thing with LL Bean. They are opening retail locations all over the place with most of their clothes being made in Vietnam. Not exactly boots from Freeport.
Same with Brooks Brothers. Its sad to see how badly the quality of their clothes declined over the past 30 years. Is there any American clothes manufacturer that still has high quality?
Something akin to the Browns incorporating the Jets’ leadership.
” incorporating J.C. Penney’s operations and leadership into the mix.”
i think i see the problem ...
on top of the insanely convoluted IP and operations ownership, which i suspect is ultimately designed to fleece the creditors ...
I shopped there in the 1980s. They had high-quality outdoor gear that lasted.
Then they decided to appeal to women and become fashionable.
I was looking to buy a nice Pringle sweater this Christmas. After spending a lot of time looking at vendors all over the world, I found what I was looking for on EBay.
I was ready to spend a couple hundred dollars (Yes…it was an emotional buy) and just couldn’t find the right thing. It cost me $40.
The world of quality clothing is in the crapper.
The American clothing manufacturing market (I should say branding market) is a prime example of how global outsourcing destroyed quality and US companies along with it. Eddie Bauer, Brooks Brothers, LL Bean and a host of others used to make good quality clothes. Take Brooks Brothers men’s underwear as an example - the boxer shorts used to be thick as pants with thick bands. Today they are indistinguishable from any other brand that you get on Amazon. Why? Because they are all made in China or some other Asian factory with a different label slapped on them. Cheap quality, thin material, nothing to distinguish them. Same with shirts and pants. The common denominator is that they are all cheap. For a while, they traded on the brand value of the name. Then consumers wised up and realized that they sold the same cheap crap as everyone else. So they all went bankrupt. Now you can’t buy high quality clothes in from a US manufacturer.
That, or buy property in MA whose first entry the Title History indicates that some Puritan paid some indian Tribe to buy the land.
I used to own Eddie Bauer jackets and coats exclusively in the 70s, 80s and briefly in the 90s. Then they lost their way and went for the Yuppie crowd. I haven’t been back in decades. No loss as far as I’m concerned.
These hedge fund firms (Authentic Brands) have destroyed everything. Brooks Brothers is also from them.
Now Seattle and Peking have cornered fashion where nothing else matters.
I honestly thought they all closed down 20 years ago.
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