CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy — Snoop Dogg brought heaps of outerwear with him to the Milan Cortina Olympic Games. A jacket with the face of snowboarder Chloe Kim, and another with bobsledder Kaysha Love. But something he picked up in Cortina was an accoutrement to fit seamlessly into the local scene: a fur hat.
Among the upscale mountain towns dotting the Dolomites, fashion and fur have been cultural staples for as long as anyone can remember. In ''For Your Eyes Only,'' parts of which were filmed in Cortina, James Bond donned fur-trimmed jackets, and many of the actresses wore get-ups of head-to-toe fur. Along Cortina's pedestrian-only main street, most clothing stores display fur — whether real or synthetic — in their windows.
Paola De Leidi, of Trieste, breezed into one boutique just off the Corso Italia on Feb. 14 with the ease of someone returning home after a winter's walk.
For seasonal visitors like De Leidi, 62, the Winter Games are a mere sideshow to their annual fur-finding pilgrimage. The youthful retiree has been a faithful client of this store for 25 years and stows her collection in a designated ''Cortina'' closet — wearable only within the bubble where a fur-positive attitude has survived animal rights activists' largely successful campaigns.
Much of the world has moved to synthetic alternatives — for environmental and ethical reasons — and the EU is mulling a measure to shut down fur farms and much of the fur trade.
''I like to come here and buy strange things, like pink furs, or panther!" De Leidi said. ''Now, with all the green people (environmentalists) and everything, I just feel safe going around here.''
And there's an added draw, said Marco Molinari, the shopkeeper.
''Here in the mountains you're truly free,'' he said. ''When you walk along the street, you don't have the anxiety of being robbed.''