“It is in the silence of November that the parkas take shape.”
Outside, the cold already bites the cobblestones of the Mayenne. Inside, the seamstresses double the stitching at the shoulders, elbows, pockets — wherever the garment works.
The Parka Heritage is the direct heir of the quarterdeck jackets that Coulange supplied to the French Navy. Same cut, same standards, same promise: to protect without hindering.
That Cross the Channel Parkas
Each parka is tested before leaving the workshop: thirty minutes under a shower, a slow air-dry. What withstands the Channel will withstand anything.
The November collection unfolds in five silhouettes:
- Heritage Parka Beige — Hand-waxed cotton, five successive layers. Each layer dries for 24 hours.
- Heritage Blue Parka — Vat-dyed, the pigment penetrates the heart of the fiber. It will not fade.
- Heritage Green Parka — The green of the Norman forests, captured in a natural dye.
- Heritage Parka Khaki Green — The original khaki, from the first models supplied to the army.
- M67 Khaki Green Trench Coat — Waterproof gabardine, raised collar secured by a hidden button. A detail inherited from the trenches of 1917.
Each parka is hand-waxed in the Coulange workshop, in the Mayenne. Each trench is assembled in eight hours of work. Each piece is designed to last — and to be passed on.
Discover the winter collection at coulange1918.com.


