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Patagonia August 2019 Recycling Issue

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WHY


R ECYCLE The earth is drowning in plastic—8.3 billion tons to be exact, a number so large it’s nearly impossible to comprehend, except to say that the annual production has surpassed the entire weight of humanity. Let that sink in. It’s a devastating quantity, made worse if you consider that 91 percent

used parts—sleeves, cuffs, hoods, down baffles—with factory cuttings

of all plastic waste has never been recycled. Even the stuff that gets

and leftover fabric to create beautiful, one-of-a-kind mashups. And

thrown in the blue bin is a problem. China and India have stopped

by pioneering ways to use recycled content in the products we make,

taking most imported plastic and, as a result, usable plastic is ending

we’re transforming what would be waste into something that’s good—

up in landfills, getting incinerated or parked on a barge to nowhere.

and in some cases, better than new.

We’re watching another victory for the environmental movement, one

that’s been in place since the early 1970s, erode before our eyes.

the early ‘90s, when it became apparent that everything we made pol-

This is why we’re dedicating an entire Patagonia Gear issue to

luted. We released our first postconsumer recycled product in 1993—a

recycling. Not because we have all the answers, but because we’re

green Synchilla® fleece made from recycled soda bottles. A year later,

Patagonia first started experimenting with recycled materials in

determined to do our part. Through our Worn Wear program, we

we helped establish a program for outdoor clothing companies to col-

repair what needs fixing so it can remain in service longer. Our new

lect and recycle the scraps from their fleece-cutting operations, and we

ReCrafted line keeps even more clothing out of landfills by combining

started making kids’ clothes from leftover pieces of our adult patterns.

Previous: In 1987, a barge named Mobro carried 3,100 tons of Islip Town and New York City trash at sea for over two months and about 6,000 miles, looking for a dumpsite. Thirty-two years later, the larger problem of where to ship it all continues. DENNIS CAPOLONGO

Left: A worker stops to rest while picking through trash in a Bangladeshi landfill. Shifts at the dump average 10 hours per day. BORJA SÁNCHEZTRILLO/GET T Y IMAGES

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In the first five months of the project, we kept 160 tons of scraps out of landfills.

We’re not done. While shipping all our stuff might seem the leading source of our greenhouse gas pollution, most of our carbon

We set a goal to increase recycled content every year and started

emissions—97 percent—come from our supply chain. And creating vir-

designing around virgin inputs wherever possible. Backpacks, for

gin synthetic fibers accounts for 86 percent of those emissions. The

example, use a large amount of foam in the back panels and shoulder

more recycled fabrics we make, the closer we’ll get to carbon neutrality

straps. There isn’t a good source of recycled foam at this point, so

across our entire business—from the farms that grow our natural fibers

instead we incorporate more spacer mesh or minimize foam in the

to the factories that make our textiles and finished clothing—by 2025.

design to reduce our dependence on it. Over the past three years,

(“Carbon neutral” means that we will eliminate, capture or otherwise

we’ve worked with Gore to develop recycled face-fabric options to

mitigate all the carbon emissions we create.)

be used in shells, a technology that’s now available to any brand that wants to use it.

Getting the final 31 percent of our styles to include recycled content comes down mostly to the little things. Trims are difficult, as are elastics,

We also built new supply chains and tested hundreds of recycled

buttons, waterproof/breathable membranes, zippers and threads. It

fabrics. Where we couldn’t replace virgin fabrics with recycled ones, we

seems like a small amount, but these elements add up. We’re also fac-

made sacrifices—dropping one of our founder’s favorites, the SST Jacket

ing a perception problem—the misunderstanding is that if it comes from

for fly fishing, until we could incorporate recycled content in it, too. (We

trash, it must be lower quality, which couldn’t be further from the truth.

aim to have that one back in 2020, in its recycled glory.) As of today, 69

Everything we make gets tested to ensure it meets our highest standards.

percent of our line is made with recycled materials, including every single waterproof shell we make (page 10) and every product in this book.

Our goal is for 100 percent of our line to include recycled content. It’s not a question of if, it’s a question of when and how.

We released our first postconsumer recycled product in 1993—a Synchilla® fleece made from recycled soda bottles.

Discussing product development and design. K YLE SPARKS


Virgin synthetic fabrics account for 86 percent of our total carbon emissions as a company. So using recycled materials doesn’t just cut down on waste, it also reduces emissions.

Top: Rolls of fabric at Patagonia’s Reno Repair Center. TIM DAVIS Bottom left: The Giotex factory in Mérida, Mexico, makes recycled cotton yarn out of factory scraps for Patagonia. KERI OBERLY Bottom right: Recycled wool at Bernardo Calamai’s facility in Prato, Italy. The Calamai family has been recycling wool since 1878. TIM DAVIS

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THE RECYCLING ISSUE

10

Good as New

Serious People

Getting recycled fabrics to perform in our most technical pieces

Serious about recycling

“Why recycle?” Wait, is that even a question? Right?! It probably shouldn’t be, but now that it’s clear that much of what you put in those blue bins doesn’t get recycled [page 4], there’s a lot of confusion out there about what’s working and what isn’t. We could easily devote an entire issue to it.

Really? Won’t that be depressing? Maybe. It doesn’t have to be. We actually have really good stories to share.

08

20

Marie-France Roy, snowboarder

46

Luke Nelson, ultrarunner

62

Liz Clark, surfer

42

Recycling Is Broken

Now what?

Hmm. I’m listening. Well, for example, our designers and chemists have found ways to make our most technical, high-performance jackets from recycled fibers. Sixty-nine percent of our line now uses recycled content, and 100 percent of our waterproof shells now have recycled content, too [page 10]. This is the milestone we’re celebrating this fall.

Shell, yeah! Funny. But seriously, there’s a lot to talk about. Recycled isn’t just about less plastic waste and keeping stuff out of the landfill, although it would sure help if everyone cut down on single-use plastic [page 42].


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Built to Endure

Recycled fibers that stand up to daily use

The vast majority of the carbon emissions we create as a company come from the manufacturing of products made with plastic-based fibers. By using recycled, we’re reducing the most harmful part of our business as far as global warming goes.

Shell, yeah! Some people still think recycled means it’s of lesser quality, too, and we can share how we’ve shown through our testing that just isn’t so.

100 102 Worn Wear

ReCrafted

Extending the life of old favorites

Clothes made from other clothes

CONTENTS Hole®

Our recycled Black bags are actually more durable than virgin ones. In fact, we could fill an entire Patagonia Gear issue with styles that have recycled content—front to back. Every single product would have recycled content. And if it doesn’t, well, it doesn’t go in the guide.

Shell, yeah! Will you stop?

Shell, no!*

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alpine

18

snow

26

midlayer

34

baselayer

46

trail

50

mountain bike

54

rock climb

62

surf

68

fish

74

sportswear

92

kids’

* Lightly edited transcript from the kickoff marketing meeting for this issue.

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100% Getting to

100% USE RECYCLED MATERIALS 100% FAIR TRADE CERTIFIED SEWN 100% PERFORMANCE ™

E V E RY WAT ER PR O O F S H ELL W E M AK E

The excuses: It’s too hard, it’s too expensive, nobody makes the fabric, it doesn’t perform. The reality: This is no longer true.

As a company, we strive to uphold an uncompromising dedication to quality. We make products that perform, in the conditions they were made for—from belay parkas like the Grade VII, to stormproof shells, to our Nano-Air insulation for moving fast in cold conditions. And we design our products to last, because the longer you can keep something, the less likely you are to replace it. An excerpt from our 1991 catalog highlights both points: “A person is not likely to fashion a spear for themselves whose point will break off in midflight: nor is someone who weaves their own basket likely to make it out of rotted straw. Similarly, if one is sewing a parka for a mate who is about to go hunting for the family with a temperature at 60 below, all stitches will be perfect.” Quality and performance have always been top priorities, but we also aim to make all of our technical products with recycled material. Doing this requires converting our virgin synthetic materials to recycled ones without compromising on performance. But first we had to prove to a wider audience what our rigorous lab and field testing showed—that the recycled fabrics we were using performed just as well as their virgin counterparts. We tested the hell out of hundreds of fabrics, and with the help of new suppliers, we’ve successfully converted over 300 products in our technical line to recycled materials—most of those in the last two years. Sam Lambert managing ropes while rappelling off Aguja de l’S in high winds. Patagonia. AUSTIN SIADAK

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And this season that includes the entire waterproof shell line (over 60 styles across our Alpine, Snow and Sportswear



First we had to prove to a wider audience what our rigorous lab and field testing showed—that the recycled fabrics we were using performed just as well as their virgin counterparts.

collections). That’s a big deal—not necessarily from a technical innovation standpoint, but in terms of capacity. In order to meet our 2020 goal, there has to be a ready supply of recycled fabrics. Luckily, relationships with our supply chain were strong and longstanding— we shared values, they trusted our direction and they were willing to figure out how to make it happen. Each shell is a multistage, multinational endeavor. It begins its life as recycled plastic chips that are collected in Italy and Slovenia. Yarn spun from these chips is then woven and finished in Japan, and the final garment is cut and sewn in Vietnam. The ability to collaborate with our worldwide partners and with every material type required for every waterproof shell has given us increased confidence that we can bring people together to get shit done. The conversion was slow and gradual for a long time, then sudden. Now we’ve reached a point where we can draw a line in the sand that every shell uses recycled fabrics—and is Fair Trade Certified™ sewn—or we simply don’t make it.

Shell, yeah! Three parties via two different routes converging on the summit of Aguja de l’S, Patagonia. Damian Mast, Conor Dysinger, Hjördis Rickert, Austin Siadak and Sam Lambert share the experience. Hell, yeah! BERND ZEUGSWETTER

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WHAT THE SHELL? What means what in the world of shells.

H2No® Performance Standard is our pass/fail test that guarantees every waterproof garment we make. In both our lab and the field, we rigorously test for the highest level of waterproofness, breathability, durability and comfort. This standard also means that recycled materials are always used. 3-layer shells consist of a waterproof/breathable membrane sandwiched between a durable outer fabric layer and an interior layer called the backer. The membrane makes the garment waterproof by acting as a barrier to prevent water from getting through the jacket to your baselayer and breathable because it allows body heat and sweat to pass through as vapor (you don’t want to get wet from the inside either). The outer fabric layer protects the membrane. The backer on the interior of the membrane helps manage moisture and improve comfort. All our 3-layer shells (including those with GORE-TEX fabrics) must pass the H2No® Performance Standard protection tests. DWR (durable water repellent) is a chemical fabric finish (we’re working on less harmful alternatives) that beads moisture on the outer layer of your shell, keeping it from getting saturated. When the outer fabric of your multilayered shell is dry, the breathable membrane works properly, moving moisture away from the body and keeping you comfortable longer. When the outer layer does wet out from snow or rain, breathability is reduced, but the membrane still acts as a waterproof barrier to prevent water from getting through the jacket to your baselayer. Postindustrial waste is created in the manufacturing­ process and can be made back into raw material. Another way to think of it? Stuff that gets swept off the factory floor and thrown back into the mix for later use. Postconsumer trash is created when we’re done with a product, or it’s at the end of its life cycle. Used plastic water bottles are a great example, but just about any old clothing or anything you throw in a blue recycling bin qualifies.

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ALPINE SHELLS

Triolet Jacket Jack of all trades Born from tradition and infused with modernity, our Triolet Jacket is a mountain-focused hard shell for heavy snow, driving wind and pouring rain. The 3-layer GORE-TEX fabric features a waterproof/ breathable membrane bonded between a robust lining and a durable 100% recycled polyester outer shell; a DWR (durable water repellent) finish further fends off wet weather. The helmet- compatible, two-way-adjustable hood with a laminated visor blends protection with optimal visibility; traditional cord locks in the hood and hem allow for quick adjustment; an interior stretch-mesh catch-all pocket stashes gloves or a hat; two vertical chest pockets and two handwarmer pockets stay clear of harness and pack lines. Other details include low-bulk, water tight, coated zippers on the pit zips and external pockets; low-profile cuff closures; full-reach gusseted underarm panels for mobility; an elasticized strap at the inside lower back attaches to pants to eliminate gaps on powder days; and a concealed RECCO® reflector. Imported. Recycled Materials 100% recycled polyester GORE-TEX shell

Women’s Triolet Jacket $399.00 I 83407 I XXS-XL Regular fit I 488 g (17.2 oz)

Men’s Triolet Jacket $399.00 I 83402 I XS-XXL Regular fit I 550 g (19.4 oz)

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FPO


Helmet-compatible, two-wayadjustable hood with a laminated visor blends protection with optimal visibility

3-layer GORE-TEX fabric features a waterproof/breathable membrane bonded between a robust lining and a durable 100% recycled polyester outer shell

Elasticized strap at the inside lower back attaches to pants and eliminates gaps on powder days

FAIR TRADE CERTIFIED ™ SEWN Fair Trade is our first step on the path toward paying living wages throughout our supply chain. We pay a premium for every Patagonia item that carries the Fair Trade Certified label. That extra money goes directly to the workers at the factory to supplement their wages.

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ALPINE SHELLS

Galvanized Jacket & Pants Built for the mountains Galvanized Jacket Combines stretch and solid protection for the worst conditions—striking a balance among weight, warmth and durability. This 3-layer H2No® Performance Standard waterproof jacket breathes and shrugs off heavy weather when you’re exploring the alpine’s boldest terrain. Pit zips enhance venting, the engineered pattern eliminates seams across the shoulders and back for reduced abrasion, and the jersey-knit backer on the interior wicks moisture for increased comfort. The Optimal Visibility Hood works with any helmet and adjusts with a single -pull Cohaesive® embedded cord-lock system. The handwarmer pockets ride high, above harness line. Minimal hook-and-loop closures secure the cuffs, which are lined with polyurethane to further eliminate gaps and maintain a seal. The hem cord locks adjust easily with one hand. Imported.

Galvanized Pants Also built from a 3-layer H2No® Performance Standard polyester/spandex fabric, these pants deliver full mobility and exceptional waterproof protection. A soft jersey-knit backer wicks moisture for enhanced comfort. A minimal, articulated pattern complements the fabric’s stretch to enable ease of movement, and the two low-profile thigh pockets have watertight, PU-coated zippers, strategically positioned for harness compatibility. The waistline has a zippered fly (with snap-tab closure) and a low bib height that stays above a harness (supported by adjustable, elasticized, removable suspenders), plus vents that double as a drop seat. The narrow lower legs are specifically designed to fit over alpine climbing boots with ultraminimal cuffs, shock-cord adjustments and tie-down loops to reduce bulk. Imported.

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88% RECYCLED POLYESTER FACE FABRIC in the Galvanized Jacket and Pants

Optimal Visibility Hood works with any helmet and adjusts with a single-pull Cohaesive® embedded cord-lock system

Stretchy, 3-layer H2No® Performance Standard recycled polyester/spandex fabric offers full mobility and exceptional waterproof protection

Men’s Galvanized Jacket $349.00 I 83147 I XS-XXL Slim fit I 527 g (18.6 oz)

women’s available online

Men’s Galvanized Pants $279.00 I 83157 I XS-XL Slim fit I 394 g (13.9 oz)

women’s available online

Next: Twenty-eight days when the glide was effortless. Alex Yoder deep in Jackson Hole’s “best month ever.” Wyoming. OLI GAGNON

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The Recycled House SN O W BOA R DE R

Marie-France Roy I felt that building a smaller home with local, natural and recycled resources would be a wonderful way for me to remain more connected and grounded. While recovering from breaking my neck in 2010, I enrolled in a cob house-building course (cob houses are built with lumps of earth mixed with sand, straw and water) with Mudgirls. The cob-making process doesn’t require any building experience; cob is so malleable, and it allows you to really personalize a space to your own taste. I used abandoned sidewalk concrete pieces to build the foundation—loaded them up in exchange for some beer at the local quarry, broke them into smaller pieces with a sledgehammer and stacked them 6 feet high in some places to form a solid foundation. Ucluelet, British Columbia, didn’t recycle glass in 2010, so I asked my friends to keep all their glass jars with lids. I collected a full year’s worth of jars and filled them up with anything nonrecyclable that would end up in the trash—plastic films, Styrofoam, plastic bags, dirty chip bags, old toothbrushes, foam pieces—and that’s what my walls are filled with, which saved me from making more cob. My entire roof insulation is made of foam boards that came from another building. All the windows and doors were either used or defective products; I got several light fixtures as antiques from old Vancouver buildings that were torn down. The bathtub is also a used vintage clawfoot. The stains, the chips in the enamel, the trash in the walls—it all just adds to the magic of my home.

Marie-France Roy in her 400-square-foot cob house near Ucluelet, British Columbia. Not pictured are the Marie-built chicken coop, greenhouse, sauna and bathroom, which is separate from the main house and boasts a rusty old tub next to a big window that makes it feel like bathing in a West Coast rainforest mist. GRAEME OWSIANSKI


SNOW SHELLS

Untracked Jacket & Pants Stretching their potential With the same much-loved benefits as their predecessors—they’re still soft and supple, tough and durable—we decided to drop in and add stretch to the face fabric of our Untracked Jacket and Pants. We also focused on simplifying the silhouette even more—fewer darts, fewer seams. It took two years to develop exactly what we wanted: a 3-layer 92% recycled nylon GORE-TEX face fabric treated with a DWR (durable water repellent) finish, which stops moisture and wet snow, keeping the outer fabric from becoming saturated and increasing durability. This is the only 3-layer recycled GORE-TEX fabric we use, and it’s the warmest 3-layer snow garment we make. The jacket’s low-profile powder skirt seals in your heat (plus a webbing loop attaches to any Patagonia Snow pants). Both the jacket and pants are perfect for cold-weather layering with a supersoft brushed lining that slides seamlessly over baselayers. The pants have a noticeably articulated fit and flexed pattern at the knees, making them easier to move in, and feature burly scuff guards. Both have ample pocketing and an embedded RECCO® avalanche rescue reflector. Imported.

Women’s Untracked Pants $499.00 I 29912 I XS-XL Regular fit I 581 g (20.5 oz)

men’s available online

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92% RECYCLED NYLON FACE FABRIC in the Untracked Jacket and Pants

THE BIN The Untracked’s nylon shell fabric is 92% recycled. We start the process of developing recycled fabrics for our garments by first looking at the fibers (nylon, polyester, cotton, etc.) used most so the change makes the biggest impact. That’s why we focused on finding a recycled nylon alternative for our Untracked fabric. The remaining 8 percent of the Untracked fabric—the spandex—is what gives it stretch. We’re working on postconsumer recycled spandex options, but until there’s a demand from other garment makers, there’s a lack in supply. Until supply increases, we’ll focus on converting fibers used the most in fabrics, like nylon, to recycled.

Pit zips allow a cooling airflow for sweaty days

Soft, moisture-managing lining increases warmth and feels good on the skin

Women’s Untracked Jacket $649.00 I 29878 I XS-XL Regular fit I 655 g (23.1 oz)

men’s available online

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SNOW KIT

64% RECYCLED CONTENT

in this entire kit*

Up at Dawn, Out till Dusk Layer up—in recycled materials Start your layering with the Capilene® Air Hoody and Bottoms to wick moisture, resist odor and dry skin-track sweat in a flash. When it’s cold enough for a midlayer, the Nano-Air® Hoody was made to be worn for start-and-stop line-searching missions, so you’re never slowed down by changing layers. Both the SnowDrifter Jacket and Bibs provide H2No® Performance Standard protection in a 3-layer, 70% recycled lightweight stretch shell fabric, which means you’ll be able to run around to every summit, col or couloir you desire, in a full spectrum of conditions, and do multiple laps. The fullcoverage bibs have a drop-seat configuration with two-way slider side zips for venting and convenient relief, and the suspenders detach in the front for quick and easy entry. Boot gaiters seal out snow; tough scuff guards protect the inside of the legs and bottom hem. The jacket features a helmetcompatible, two-way-adjustable fixed hood with a laminated visor for optimal visibility in bad conditions. Pit zips quickly release heat, and adjustable, low-profile cuffs secure over or under gloves. Both feature a concealed RECCO® reflector. The Snowdrifter Jacket and Bibs have 70% recycled polyester shells and a 63% recycled nylon soft-shell upper in the bibs

* By total material weight

Men’s SnowDrifter Jacket $399.00 I 30065 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 587 g (20.7 oz)

Men’s SnowDrifter Bibs $349.00 I 30075 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 584 g (20.6 oz)

Men’s Nano-Air® Hoody $299.00 I 84366 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 346 g (12.2 oz)

Men’s Capilene® Air Hoody $149.00 I 36495 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 196 g (6.9 oz)

Men’s Capilene® Air Bottoms $129.00 I 36555 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 167 g (5.9 oz)

all styles imported

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BETTER BIBS— THE SNOWDRIFTER Full-coverage, lightweight, recycled and breathable bibs During two seasons of development with at least 10 prototypes, our design team asked themselves: How can we make bibs that have the powder protection of full-coverage bibs, but are also lightweight and breathable enough for high-output backcountry touring? What steps are needed to develop a 3-layer stretch fabric that’s recycled and meets our performance standards? How high should the upper bib go? What should fit in the upper-front pocket? Everyone needed the bibs to thrive on long days setting skin tracks. One person on the team wanted a “burrito pocket,” so you could easily pack dawn-patrol breakfasts. And the bibs needed to utilize recycled materials. After an additional six weeks in the field to perfect them, including multiple days spent eyeballdeep in Japanese powder, the SnowDrifters were landed: They’re full-coverage bibs, with a highly breathable, soft-shell upper fabric (sans burrito pocket) that’s 63% recycled. They’re stretchy and light. They’re backcountry-ready.

Suspenders detach in the front for quick and easy entry

Zippered chest pocket with inside loop to secure valuables

Layered with Men’s Nano-Air® Hoody and Men’s Capilene® Air Hoody

ADDITIONAL KIT PRODUC TS

Capilene® Air Gaiter

Desert Sky Beanie

SnowDrifter Pack 30L

$49.00 I 22350 I 43 g (1.5 oz)

$45.00 I 33415 I 82 g (2.9 oz)

$169.00 I 48197 I S/M, L/XL I 1,190 g (2 lb 10 oz) 25




MIDLAYER

Macro Puff Jacket & Hoody Kind of like a doublestuffed Micro Puff The solution for colder conditions—particularly those days when you can’t quite stay warm. The Macro Puff is great as in-the-pack alpine or ski mountaineering insulation, or as a general cold-weather piece when there’s a high likelihood of getting wet, be it from meltwater or shifting weather. Revolutionary highloft PlumaFill insulation (the same insulation used in the Micro Puff) replicates the structure of down in a continuous synthetic insulation material, offering exceptional warmth with the packability of down and the warm-when-wet performance of synthetic insulation. The ultralight, recycled nylon ripstop shell is windproof and treated with a DWR (durable water repellent) finish to shed water. A quilted construction stabilizes the insulation and allows the PlumaFill to stay lofted with minimal stitching. The alpine-helmet-compatible, single-point adjustable hood, longer length and a dual-adjust cord-lock system at the hem seal out the elements. Imported.

Women’s Macro Puff ™ Jacket $349.00 I 80105 I XXS-XL Regular fit I 315 g (11.1 oz)

men’s available online

Men’s Macro Puff ™ Hoody $399.00 I 80110 I XS-XXL Regular fit I 434 g (15.3 oz)

women’s available online

Previous: Runway with a view. Colin Haley starts the descent off Cerro Fitz Roy after a blitz up the Afanassieff route. Patagonia. AUSTIN SIADAK 28


100% RECYCLED NYLON SHELL AND LINING in the Macro Puff ™ Jacket and Hoody

THE BIN It’s particularly challenging to convert lightweight materials from virgin to recycled. At these ultrafine weights, any impurities lead to weaknesses that cause products to fail. As a result, anytime we convert a lightweight product, we have to revisit the entire process from the sourcing at the chemical compound level to the manufacturing.

Innovative quilting construction complements the insulation by stabilizing and maximizing the loft of the PlumaFill strands with minimal stitching

Ultralight recycled nylon ripstop shell is water-resistant and windproof, and treated with a DWR (durable water repellent) finish

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MIDLAYER

The entire Nano Puff line has

82% RECYCLED CONTENT*

Nano Puff Styles

®

For the sun/shade line on pitch 13 Designed for chilly rock routes, the Nano Puff is windproof, water-resistant and heat-trapping. The 100% recycled polyester shell sheds moisture and fits easily in your layering system, while the low-bulk, hydrophobic, highly compressible 60-gram PrimaLoft ® Gold Insulation Eco warms with remarkable efficiency, even when wet. Iconic brick-like baffling (horizontal on side panels) keeps insulation in place; women’s styles have narrower horizontal quilting at the sides for shaping. All Nano Puffs have a soft, wicking interior storm flap and a zipper garage for comfort. Elasticized cuffs (armholes on vest) and an adjustable drawcord hem seal out wind and hoard heat. The zippered chest pocket (torso pocket on pullover) doubles as a stuffsack and has a carabiner clip-in loop. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn. Imported. Recycled Materials 100% recycled polyester shell, 100% recycled polyester lining, 55% postconsumer recycled polyester insulation

Women’s Nano Puff® Vest $149.00 I 84247 I XXS-XXL I Regular fit I 207 g (7.3 oz)

Women’s Nano Puff® Bivy Pullover $219.00 I 84196 I XXS-XL I Regular fit I 312 g (11 oz)

Men’s Nano Puff® Jacket $199.00 I 84212 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 337 g (11.9 oz)

Men’s Nano Puff® Hoody $249.00 I 84222 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 363 g (12.8 oz)

see the full Nano Puff collection online

* By total material weight

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FPO


12 MILLION PLASTIC BOTTLES r e cy cl e d i n t h e c r e a t i o n o f t h e N a n o P u f f l i n e

THE BIN Nano Puff was one of the first product families in the technical outdoor line that we were able to convert to recycled materials. The PrimaLoft® Gold Insulation Eco used in our Nano Puff line was our first recycled (and PrimaLoft’s highestperformance) insulation. It’s made from 55% postconsumer recycled content, and is water-repellent, highly compressible and maintains 98% of warmth, even when wet.

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MIDLAYER

Down Sweater, Vest & Hoody The right amount of warmth for just about everything The Down Sweater is lightweight and windproof with a 100% recycled polyester ripstop shell and 800-fill-power Advanced Global Traceable Down (goose down certified by NSF International from parent farm to apparel factory to help ensure the birds that supply it are not force-fed or live-plucked), stabilized with quilted-through construction. A drawcord hem tightens from inside the handwarmer pockets, and an interior chest pocket doubles as a zippered stuffsack and has a carabiner clip-in loop. Nylon-bound elastic cuffs (armholes in vest) seal in heat, and the DWR (durable water repellent) finish sheds moisture. Imported. Recycled Materials 100% recycled polyester shell and lining

Women’s Down Sweater Vest $179.00 I 84628 I XXS-XXL Regular fit I 221 g (7.8 oz)

Women’s Down Sweater Hoody $279.00 I 84711 I XXS-XL Regular fit I 371 g (13.1 oz)

Men’s Down Sweater $229.00 I 84674 I XS-XXL Regular fit I 371 g (13.1 oz)

Next: Colin Haley nears the top during his Afanassieff route speed record (10 hours, 40 minutes). Patagonia. AUSTIN SIADAK

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THE BIN Sweat, body oil and dirt can limit your shell’s performance, so machine wash your shell regularly on the normal setting (not delicate) in cold water, with mild liquid detergent and without fabric softener. Follow by machine drying on low heat to restore the water-beading performance of the DWR finish.

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100% RECYCLED POLYESTER in Capilene® Midweight

Brushed grid on the back of fabric aids in wicking as well as trapping warmth

Capilene Midweight ®

Comfort, breathability and warmth in cold conditions A versatile baselayer designed to be warm and breathable. Wear it alone or under layers to stay dry and comfortable during high-exertion activities in cool-to-cold weather. Capilene® Midweight has a smooth face for easy layering, a brushedgrid pattern on the back that aids in wicking as well as trapping warmth, and hollow-core yarns for breathability. Features include internal neck tape for chafe-free comfort, full underarm gussets for unhindered shoulder mobility, elastic thumb loops to cover your wrists, flatlock seams to minimize chafing, raglan shoulder seams and offset side seams that lie smoothly beneath pack straps, and a drop tail for additional coverage. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn. Imported.

Women’s Capilene® Midweight Crew $59.00 I 44437 I XXS-XXL I Slim fit I 153 g (5.4 oz)

Men’s Capilene® Midweight Zip-Neck $69.00 I 44447 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 204 g (7.2 oz)

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Underarm gussets for unhindered shoulder mobility

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BASELAYER

Capilene Baselayers ®

Start here, layer up Our Capilene® baselayers are the foundation of your cold-weather, out-all-day kit so that your variations in comfort have more to do with the exposure than whether or not you’re warm enough while you’re out there. Imported.

THE BIN

Capilene® Midweight

We started making recycled polyester

CL ASSIC AND QUICK-DRYING FOR MOST CONDITIONS AND ACTIVITIES

from plastic soda bottles in 1993. Today,

A versatile baselayer for cold conditions, with a brushed-

we still use recycled soda bottles, but

grid interior and hollow-core yarns for comfort in cold

we’re also sourcing materials from unus-

but not quite frigid weather. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

able manufacturing waste and worn-out garments, including our own.

Women’s Capilene® Midweight Zip-Neck $69.00 I 44457 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 170 g (6 oz) I men’s available online

Recycled Materials 100% recycled polyester

38


Capilene® Thermal Weight

Capilene® Air

LOFTED FOR ADDITIONAL WARMTH AND COMFORT

MERINO BLEND WITH MA XIMUM WARMTH AND BREATHABILIT Y

A warm, breathable polyester baselayer for cold conditions,

With its innovative, seamless, 3-D knit structure, our Capilene® Air

with minimal bulk and

HeiQ®

Fresh durable odor control. Fair

Trade Certified™ sewn.

Hoody offers amazing warmth and comfort range. An airy blend of 51% merino wool and 49% recycled polyester wicks moisture, resists odor and dries in a flash.

Women’s

Capilene®

Thermal Weight Crew

$89.00 I 43650 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 122 g (4.3 oz) I men’s available online

Recycled Materials 30%–92% recycled polyester

Women’s Capilene® Air Hoody $149.00 I 36505 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 164 g (5.8 oz) I men’s available online

Recycled Materials 49% recycled polyester

39


The entire Capilene ® Cool line has

75% RECYCLED CONTENT *

Capilene Cool Tech Tees ®

Comfort is Relative™ Our multifunctional next-to-skin Capilene® Cool tech tees wick moisture away from your skin, breathe efficiently and dry fast to provide a foundation of comfort and temperature regulation in hot conditions. Imported.

THE BIN The reason some of our Capilene® shirts have different percentages of recycled content basically comes down to the fact that our heathers are made with a polyester that isn’t yet available in recycled content. The virgin polyester, called cat-

Capilene® Cool Lightweight OUR LIGHTEST-WEIGHT PERFORMANCE KNIT DRIES FAST A technical, lightweight performance knit designed to wick moisture, dry fast and keep you cool on high-output days in

ionic, yarns are used to give the heather

hot conditions. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

effect. Some mills are experimenting

Women’s Capilene® Cool Lightweight Shirt

with recycled cationic yarns, but they are

$45.00 I 45765 I XS-XL I Slim fit I 60 g (2.1 oz)

very expensive since the supply is low. Men’s Long-Sleeved Capilene® Cool Lightweight Shirt $55.00 I 45690 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 94 g (3.3 oz)

Recycled Materials 37%–100% recycled polyester * By total material weight

40


BASELAYER

Capilene® Cool Daily A VERSATILE PERFORMANCE KNIT WITH 50+ UPF SUN PROTECTION A versatile performance knit that works everywhere from the

Men’s Capilene® Cool Daily Hoody

trails to the water, with 50+ UPF sun protection. Stretchy and

$55.00 I 45310 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 179 g (6.3 oz)

quick-drying for everyday comfort. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

Men’s Capilene® Cool Daily Graphic Shirt

Women’s Long-Sleeved Capilene® Cool Daily Graphic Shirt

$45.00 I 45235 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 128 g (4.5 oz)

$55.00 I 45205 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 136 g (4.8 oz)

Recycled Materials 50%–100% recycled polyester

41


Recycling IS BROKEN. NOW WHAT? Patagonia is no stranger to the difficulty of throwing stuff away. We take back 100 percent of the gear you return for recycling through our Worn Wear program. In 2018 we recycled 6,797 pounds of products. But we can’t recycle or repair everything you send us. Some of it was just too well-loved during use (you’re totally using it right—keep at it). Other products smell too bad to be repurposed (thank you, dirtbags, for keeping the spirit— and bacteria—alive). If we can’t find a market or if there isn’t yet a technology to repurpose this gear, we have to choose between sending it to a landfill, sending it to the incinerator

or holding on to it until we find a better solution. Since we chose the latter, our stockpile is taking up a room in our Reno warehouse. A lot of room, actually. Our own pile of unusable clothes could very well be a metaphor for the ocean of trash we’re drowning ourselves in as a global community. In 2015, in the United States alone, we generated 262 million tons of municipal solid waste (MSW). That’s the equivalent of 17.5 million conventional school buses packed at full capacity with passengers. Only 91 million tons, or 34.7 percent, of that was recycled and composted. The rest ended up in landfills and

Give us your dirty and your torn. Not all gear you send us for repairs or recycling can get a second life. The ones that are too dirty or destroyed are being piled up in our distribution center in Reno, Nevada. And that pile is growing. KEN ETZEL

42

combustion energy recovery, a dirty process that turns waste into heat, electricity or fuel. And in the past year, we’ve seen how China’s ban on importing most recyclables has revealed the blue bin as magical thinking. Typically, everything that you put into your blue bin gets collected and sent to a Materials Recovery Facility (MRF) where it gets sorted, compacted, shredded or melted, then turned into bales heading for domestic or foreign mills. Unless there’s a nearby mill that’s willing to accept your MRF’s recyclable materials, it’s heading somewhere else. Until recently, one of those “somewhere else”


We have to choose between sending it to a landfill, sending it to the incinerator or holding on to it until we find a better solution. Since we chose the latter, our stockpile is taking up a room in our Reno warehouse.

places was 7,000 miles away in China. But in January 2018, China stopped importing 24 kinds of solid wastes, including postconsumer plastics, unsorted wastepaper and waste textile materials. India followed suit, and in March 2019, completely banned solid plastic waste and scrap imports. The bans had an immediate seismic ef-

uct first,” says Leonard. “First, reduce: Don’t buy what you don’t need. Then, repair: Fix stuff that still has life in it. Also, reuse and share. Then, only when you’ve exhausted those options, recycle.” Some people and cities are living that ethos by going zero waste. The city of San Francisco is striving to become zero waste by

Wilson is not alone in her thinking. Zero-waste designers believe product design should be inspired by nature, where materials are recycled in a circular loop. But so much of what is being made today is built to be used and then thrown away. In 2016, the average person bought 60 percent more items of clothing and kept them for about half as

fect: Western countries started stockpiling recycled waste, diverting it to landfills and incinerators, or shipping it to countries in southeast Asia, like Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, as well as Turkey and South Korea. The increase in incineration of “recycled” stuff added to last year’s record-high human-caused carbon emissions. Animals and birds ranging from ravens and gulls to baboons and bears have all noticed, too, drawing closer and closer to cities to dig through our growing pile of trash.

2030 through programs like the mandatory composting collection and a zero-waste textile initiative that turns used clothes into toys, insulation and carpeting. But living a zero-waste life can be more difficult than it should be. And not for the reasons you might think. Take an everyday product we’re all familiar with: toothpaste. In 2018, one company alone sold 80.7 million tubes of toothpaste in the United States, according to Statista­. But these toothpaste tubes (like similar squeeze tubes) are made up of at least three different materials—such as plastic, paperboard, aluminum or another metal—that are hard to separate. The result? They can’t be recycled through your basic municipal recycling systems. If you don’t want your toothpaste tube to end up in a landfill, you could check Earth911.com to find a recycling solution in your area. Or you could start making your

long as 15 years prior, according to a study by McKinsey. “Designers need to think about what happens to a product at the end of its life,” Wilson says. “Companies are saying they are investing millions of dollars in recycling. Wouldn’t it be better if they designed their products better?” So far this year, none of the gear you sent back to Patagonia for fixing or recycling ended up in the recycling bin. And that’s a good thing. We repaired, upcycled, used toward DIY-repair education workshops, donated or resold on Worn Wear all your previously loved gear. And still, that’s not enough. Just take a tour of our Reno warehouse. To considerably shrink our stockpile of unusable gear in Reno, we are also investing in solutions that close the loop in the garment industry supply chain. The toughest nut to crack is the process of mechanically or

own toothpaste with help from zero-waste communities online. Or you could question where all the goods and services you use come from and make better choices. Monica Wilson, associate director at GAIA (Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives), thinks we should be demanding more from our favorite brands. “If a product is designed to be used over and over, that’s what will happen. If it’s designed to be used, thrown away, trashed and then burned, then that’s the fate it will have,” she says.

chemically recycling products made of mixed fabrics (like a cotton and spandex T-shirt) into materials that can be given a second life. Our goal is to use only recycled and renewable ones (any natural material that can be grown or harvested on an annual basis, like wool or organic cotton) in our products by 2025. Should we continue to recycle? Wilson says we definitely have to keep at it, but there are other things we need to do, too: “More people need to get involved in demanding better systems and asking more from brands.”

Fixing the problem There’s a hidden footprint to every product that is being made, bought and then thrown away. According to the World Resources Institute, for every can of garbage at the curb, there are 87 cans’ worth of materials that come from the extraction industries—such as timber, agriculture, mining and petroleum— that turn natural resources into finished products. Annie Leonard, Greenpeace USA executive director and creator of The Story of Stuff, an award-winning documentary about our consumption-crazed culture, believes we need to think beyond recycling. “That’s not to say we shouldn’t recycle,” says Leonard. “But we can no longer look at it as the fix-all. “Recycling is what we do when we’re out of options to avoid, repair or reuse the prod-

43


44


1.

REF US E. Turn down what you don’t need.

2.

Ditch plas tic bags for canvas totes.

3.

Buy in bulk and skip the packaging.

4.

Wrap food in beeswax paper.

5.

BYO reusable bot tle.

6.

Say no to disposable utensils.

7.

Borrow books from the library.

8.

REPAIR . If it’s broke, fix it.

9.

REU SE. Join swap groups in your area.

10. REC YC LE AN Y TH ING

ON EA RTH 911.CO M.

45


Competitive Advantage ULTRARU NNE R

Luke Nelson One of the things that was most shocking to me when I took over organizing the Scout Mountain Ultra was the amount of waste that we were creating. In a single weekend we were filling a large dumpster with trash from the race. It was significant enough that I wanted to reduce our impact, so we started by going cupless. We offered a reusable cup (HydraPak® SpeedCup™) for runners and took all the plastic cups out of the race. We went down to a small trailer of trash after the first year. The next step was to make an effort to sort trash for composting, recycling or sending to the landfill. We were able to feed my friends’ pigs for three weeks with the compostables from the first year we did this. It also took our trash down to 11 garbage bags. That’s significant considering our race hosts 300 runners and is 36 hours long. The initiative was all about changing peoples’ mindsets. Initially some runners were pissed off, and we lost a few people because we didn’t have cups at our aid stations. But we held our ground. Another challenge was getting the aid station captains to buy into the idea. We found a solution for this by bringing in a competition aspect. We started a challenge among our aid stations to see who could produce the least amount of trash, and they took it seriously. Now people come up to me and ask how we can get even better. At the end of the day my efforts may not save the planet, but if we all do small acts like this I think it could change the world.

Lactic burns are worth the views. Luke Nelson on a standard training run in the northern San Juans, Colorado. FREDRIK MARMSATER



TRAIL

Trail Running Bottoms

From the lunch run to the long run

Men’s Terrebonne Joggers Quick-drying, high-performing and supple, these joggers are made from a 100% recycled polyester stretch ripstop woven fabric and compress to fit in a back pocket. The fit is slim, with a stretch-knit waistband and cuffs, articulated knees designed for movement, a drawcord waist adjustment, and three pockets (two front side-entry and one back-right zippered). With a reflective logo and DWR (durable water repellent) finish. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn. $79.00 I 24540 I XS-XXL Slim fit I 170 g (6 oz)

Men’s Trail Pacer Joggers Stretchy, comfortable and lightweight performance pants for cool-weather runs. Made from quick-drying recycled polyester/spandex knit fabric that stretches and manages moisture, with HeiQ® Fresh durable odor control. The low-profile waistband has an elastic drawcord that ties on the outside and adjusts for comfort. Other details include two low-bulk zippered front pockets and a vented faux fly for breathability. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn. $99.00 I 24800 I XS-XL Slim fit I 252 g (8.9 oz)

all styles imported

The Terrebonne Joggers have 100% recycled polyester body, 91% recycled polyester waistband and cuffs

48

The Trail Pacer Joggers have 43% recycled polyester


Women’s Peak Mission Tights On frosty mornings, our Peak Mission Tights keep you warm without causing you to burst into a sweat. The blend of recycled nylon and polyester is soft against the skin, wicks and breathes. A microterry back adds warmth. The waistband is flat for comfort; a drawcord holds them up snug. A gusseted construction in the seat offers enhanced mobility. Details include a reflective logo for added visibility and a zippered center-back pocket for valuables. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn. $119.00 I 23990 I XS-XL Formfitting I 213 g (7.5 oz) men’s available online

Women’s Endless Run Tights The Endless Run Tights are perfect for days when the weather just barely starts to cool. Made with quick-drying 79% recycled polyester/21% spandex fabric for extended trail runs, these mid-rise running tights have a wide waistband that secures on the inside with a breathable, flat-elastic drawcord for a comfortable, flattering fit. Mesh at sides of lower legs and backs of knees offers additional breathability. With a semisecure center-back pocket on waistband and reflective logo on left hip. $99.00 I 24810 I XXS-XL Formfitting I 177 g (6.3 oz)

The Peak Mission Tights have 68% recycled nylon

The Endless Run Tights have 79% recycled polyester

49




MOUNTAIN BIKE

Mountain Bike Jerseys Good trails should be reridden; good materials should be reused Too much goes into building a good trail to abandon it after one ride; similarly, too much goes into making good plastic to throw it away after only one use. That’s why our entire line of MTB jerseys is built with recycled and/or natural materials, without sacrificing a vertical foot of performance. Each garment is tailored for a bike-specific, chafe-free fit, including contoured seams, longer back hems and printed, itch-free neck tags, while soft, stretchy and breathable materials like merino wool and Capilene® Midweight fabric stay warm and dry quickly, whatever the conditions. A good ride is always better the second lap—why not your jersey? Imported.

Women’s Capilene® Midweight Bike Jersey $79.00 I 23915 I XS-XL I Slim fit I 193 g (6.8 oz)

men’s available online

Men’s Short-Sleeved Merino Bike Jersey $89.00 I 23925 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 142 g (5 oz)

women’s available online

Three pockets at lower back carry tools, snacks and other ride essentials

52


Women’s Capilene® Midweight Bike Jersey has 100% recycled polyester double-knit midweight Capilene® fabric Men’s Short-Sleeved Merino Bike Jersey has 35% recycled polyester jersey fabric blended with merino wool

Soft, stretchy and breathable merino wool

Previous: Summer sunrises in Swedish Lapland start painfully early, as the sun only sets for a few hours. But if you can handle the 2:30 a.m. wake up, the reward is a warm, low light unique to such northern latitudes. Janne Tjärnström, Micke af Ekenstam and Carston Oliver take a morning pedal near Låktatjåkko Mountain Lodge. MAT TIAS FREDRIKSSON

Next: Birch Malotky tests the friction on the last pitch of Camber on Cathedral Ledge. Old rusty pitons provide some of the only protection on the route. New Hampshire. BRENT DOSCHER

53




ROCK CLIMB

84% RECYCLED CONTENT

in this entire kit*

Women’s Climb Kit What if your entire climbing kit was made with recycled materials? Recycling probably isn’t the first thing you think of when getting dressed. Other considerations likely supersede the less immediate benefits of recycling, such as, How does it fit? Does it stretch? Will it hold up to abrasion? Will I need an extra layer to go with it? Each piece in this kit has a technical fit so it’s close to your body and out of the way. They’re also built for mobility and stand up to rock. As for an extra layer—that depends on your exertion level and if you’ll be stopping a lot. Meanwhile, if every piece of clothing you wore climbing were made with recycled materials, that’s a lot of difference to make with a single outfit.

* By total material weight

Women’s R1® Pullover $129.00 I 40119 I XXS-XXL I Slim fit I 275 g (9.7 oz)

Women’s RPS Rock Pants $89.00 I 83076 I 0-22/even I Regular fit I 238 g (8.4 oz)

Women’s Houdini® Jacket $99.00 I 24147 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 96 g (3.4 oz)

all styles imported

56


UP FOR ANYTHING— THE HOUDINI

Weather-resistant 100% recycled nylon ripstop fabric blocks wind and withstands abrasion

Featherweight, wind-blocking 100% recycled nylon ripstop jacket Run, ride, climb—the Houdini® Jacket is up for anything. It encourages improvisation with its weather-resistant 100% recycled nylon ripstop

Layered with Women’s R1® Pullover

fabric, which blocks wind and withstands abrasion. The slim fit accommodates a baselayer or a light midlayer; the hood cinches with a single pull and won’t pinch your ears; cording, toggles and cuffs are all trim and lightweight. Half-elastic seals the cuffs, and a drawcord tightens the hem. The jacket packs snugly into its own small, vertically zippered chest pocket, which has a reinforced clip-in loop for attaching to your hydration-pack straps. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

shown stuffed into chest pocket

The Houdini® Jacket has 100% recycled nylon

ADDITIONAL KIT PRODUC TS

Women’s Cross Beta Sports Bra

Women’s Fleur Tank

$45.00 I 32090 I XS-XL I Formfitting I 74 g (2.6 oz)

$49.00 I 54933 I XS-XL I Slim fit I 94 g (3.3 oz) 57


with confidence in what you carry.

Recycled Black Hole® Bags

14

PLASTIC BOTTLES

used in the creation of this bag

all styles imported

FP

Black Hole® Pack 25L Burly daypack with just the right amount of space to haul your daily essentials; protects your gear from year after year of rough handling.

Brett Lotz and Nate Greenberg absquatulating the roadless Hornstrandir peninsula wilderness after a rainy week of sea kayaking to ski lines; a dryish moment during an otherwise soggy sojourn. Westfjords, Iceland. KEN ETZEL

58

Black Hole® Pack 25L $129.00 I 49297 I 650 g (1 lb 6.9 oz)


2-in-1: a tough-as-nails gear hauler and a bag that reduces the amount of waste being thrown into landfills.

33

PLASTIC BOTTLES

used in the creation of this bag

52

PLASTIC BOTTLES

used in the creation of this bag

PO Black Hole® Duffel 55L Midsized duffel organizes your

Black Hole® Duffel 100L Largest Black Hole® duffel;

gear and has enough space for a fun-hog weekend or a

lives for rugged, extended and gear-intensive travel.

well-organized extended trip.

Black Hole® Duffel 55L $139.00 I 49342 I 1,165 g (2 lb 9.1 oz)

Black Hole® Duffel 100L $179.00 I 49352 I 1,640 g (3 lb 9.9 oz)

59


Zippered U-shaped lid

This season’s Black Hole® collection used 10 million discarded plastic bottles to build the 100% recycled main fabric, lining and webbing of these durable travel companions.

has a pair of zip-closing mesh pockets on the underside for easily lost items

Padded, removable shoulder straps

Recycled Black Hole® Bags Our go-to duffel—the Black Hole® 55L Our midsized Black Hole® duffel is highly weather-resistant, stubbornly tough and protects your gear from travel and rough handling. The main compartment opens via a zippered U-shaped lid, which has a pair of zipclosing mesh pockets on the underside for easily lost items like earbuds and a phone charger. A zippered exterior pocket holds all the stuff you need to access quickly. The padded bottom panel adds structure and helps cushion the load when your duffel gets the baggage-handler treatment.

Carrying options include padded, removable shoulder straps, webbing handles with a snap closure and haul loops at either end that facilitate linking multiple bags. Four daisy chains let you lash additional gear to the outside. Made with a burly 100% recycled polyester outer fabric and lining, and 100% recycled nylon webbing—all of which matched or improved the durability and abrasion and tear strength of these gear haulers. Outer fabric and lining have a DWR (durable water repellent) finish. Imported.

Black Hole® Duffel 55L $139.00 I 49342 I 1,165 g (2 lb 9.1 oz)

The entire Black Hole® collection has 100% recycled body fabric, lining and webbing

The Extended Black Hole® Family Available online at patagonia.com

Black Hole® Wheeled Duffel 70L

Black Hole® Mini MLC®

Bomber midsized duffel has a large

Three carrying options: backpack with

opening to its main compartment;

ergonomic shoulder straps that tuck neatly

reinforced haul handles and a stout

into a zippered compartment; shoulder

wheelset make for smooth, comfort-

bag with comfortable shoulder strap;

able travel. $329.00 I 49381 I 3,550 g (7 lb 13.2 oz)

all styles imported

60

briefcase with two carry handles. Meets strict carry-on requirements. $169.00 I 49265 I 1,200 g (2 lb 10.3 oz)


FPO

Padded bottom panel adds structure and helps cushion the load

Black Hole® Gear Tote

Black Hole® Pack 32L

Black Hole® Cube - Large

Burly oversized tote with a durable,

Midsize workhorse pack has an easy-access

Superburly gear cube features

reinforced double haul handle swal-

main zippered compartment with interior

a simple zip-opening design,

lows all your gear; large opening

zippered mesh pockets, a TSA-approved

an exterior daisy chain that

to main compartment, zippered

padded laptop pocket, large front and top

lets you lash it to the outside

external side pocket and reinforced

stash pockets and an air-mesh back panel for

of bags and a large, glove-

daisy chains for lashing.

comfort and increased ventilation.

friendly grab handle.

$99.00 I 49275 I 800 g (1 lb 12.2 oz)

$149.00 I 49301 I 810 g (1 lb 12.6 oz)

$49.00 I 49371 I 250 g (8.8 oz)

61



Boat Life

SUR F E R

Liz Clark On a boat, all your resources are precious, so I’ve learned to make use of things I would’ve thrown away before. When something breaks and I don’t have the exact part I need, I dig into my box of odds and ends to reuse an old bike tube for a gasket, fashion a mount out of scrap metal, or rebuild a part that most people would just toss out and replace. I like the challenge of getting creative with what I have—old sails become shade tarps, old wetsuits become chafe guards, old hoses get new roles in the water catchment system or as rope protection. Straps from old backpacks are repurposed, clothing sewn, broken flip-flops repaired. Even plastic I find floating in the lagoons can often be repurposed as a dinghy bailer or storage container. I keep everything else that can be recycled aboard Swell until I find a place where recycling is available. This lifestyle has helped me develop a true ­appreciation for the resources that sustain me, and since there’s often nowhere to dispose of trash, it makes me think hard about anything I buy—will it last, and is it something I really need?

Limited in space, unlimited in possibility. For Liz Clark, living on a 40-foot sailboat has been an exercise in freedom—with tasks like soldering Swell’s wonky fridge serving as a constant reminder that hard work and creative thinking can help get more use out of the resources at hand. BALI STRICKL AND


SURF

Swimsuits & Boardshorts All our swimsuits and boardshorts are made with recycled fabric blends The best boardshorts are defined by the details— and recycled content is definitely one of them. But how they feel and work in the water is just as important, so these three Hydro Series designs all feature performance fits, dynamic four-way stretch and fused waistbands that stay snug to the hips through a full range of motion. And another notable detail? Like all our women’s swimsuits, they’re Fair Trade Certified™ sewn. Fair Trade is only a small part of the bigger shift our planet needs, but every choice makes a difference. Besides, we get to use our own recycled gear to swim, dive and ride waves, which restokes us on the beauty of our oceans—and reminds us why they’re so worth working to protect. Imported.

Women’s Glassy Dawn One-Piece Swimsuit $129.00 I 77295 I XS-XL I Formfitting I 156 g (5.5 oz)

Women’s Bottom Turn Top $65.00 I 77198 I XS-XL I Formfitting I 68 g (2.4 oz)

Women’s Sunamee Bottoms $55.00 I 72157 I XXS-XL I Formfitting I 68 g (2.4 oz)

64

FPO


Men’s Stretch Planing Boardshorts - 19" $79.00 I 86612 I 28-40/even + 29, 31, 33, 35 Slim fit I 119 g (4.2 oz)

Men’s Stretch Hydroflow Boardshorts - 19" $119.00 I 86570 I 28-40/even + 29, 31, 33, 35 Slim fit I 125 g (4.4 oz)

Men’s Stretch Hydropeak Boardshorts - 18" $59.00 I 86695 I 28-40/even + 29, 31, 33, 35 Slim fit I 130 g (4.6 oz)

65


SURF

Yulex Wetsuits ®

You don’t have to choose between performance and the planet It’s often assumed that you can get a thing that’s better for the environment—or you can get a thing that works better. You can go for the electric car that can’t tow a trailer, or the oversized 4x4 that can do almost anything. The brightly colored, superfoamy dish soap, or the biodegradable, ocean-friendly one that smells like seaweed and doesn’t make suds. Through the years, however, we’ve learned that maximum performance and minimum harm can, in fact, go hand in hand. Our newest generation of Yulex® wetsuits are at the forefront of that design philosophy. By replacing conventional, nonrenewable neoprene with renewable natural rubber* from hevea trees, we’ve reduced CO2 emissions by up to almost 80% in the wetsuit-manufacturing process. And they’re also lighter and 20% stretchier. Light, warm, ultrastretchy and made in a Fair Trade Certified™ facility, these suits are setting an entirely new standard for the surf industry—and we’ve been happy to hear that they’re changing some minds, too. Imported.

*Made from 85% Yulex® natural rubber blended with 15% synthetic rubber by polymer content

The Lineup All weights of wetsuits contain 85% Yulex® natural rubber/15% synthetic rubber by polymer content.

66 66

65°_ 75° F 18° _ 23° C

_ 60° 65° F 16° _ 18° C

R1® LITE: 2 MM

R1® : 3 / 2.5 MM

Recycled Polyester Content

Recycled Polyester Content

Face: 88%; lining: 100%

Face: 85%; arms/legs (lining): 100%; torso/thighs (lining): 51%


THE BIN There’s no effective way to recycle neo-

prene, which is one of the reasons we’ve put so much effort into replacing it with

natural rubber. But there are other materials in a wetsuit, too—the rubber foam

that keeps you warm needs to be lined with fabric for comfort and durability.

So to further reduce our environmental

impact, we incorporate as much recycled content as possible into the linings. The exteriors are 85% recycled polyester/​ 15% spandex, while the high-stretch

interiors of the arms and legs are 100%

recycled polyester. Through the torso, our warmer suits have a thermal grid material made from 95% polyester (51% recycled) blended with 5% spandex for stretch.

WETSUIT DETAILS We also incorporated a few other changes, like a lower-profile seam tape that’s smoother against the skin and water-based AquaA™ glue. And since it’s almost always better to conserve a resource instead of having to recycle it, we switched to a solution-dyeing process for the linings. By directly infusing the fibers with color instead of soaking them in a dye bath, we save 26 gallons of water per suit compared to conventional dyeing processes.

55° _ 60° F 13° _ 16° C

48°_ 55° F 9°_ 13° C

38°_ 48° F 3° _ 9° C

_ 32° 38° F 0° _ 3° C

R2 ® : 3.5 / 3 MM

R3 ® : 4.5 / 3.5 MM

R4 ® : 5.5 / 4 MM

R5 ® : 6.5 / 5 MM

Recycled Polyester Content

Recycled Polyester Content

Recycled Polyester Content

Recycled Polyester Content

Face: 85%; arms/legs (lining):

Face: 85%; arms/legs (lining):

Face: 85%; arms/legs (lining):

Face: 85%; arms/legs (lining):

100%; torso/thighs (lining): 51%

100%; torso/thighs (lining): 51%

100%; torso/thighs (lining): 51%

100%; torso/thighs (lining): 51%

67 67




FISH

Rugged, 4-layer waterproof/breathable H2No® Performance Standard fabric (55% recycled) for the most challenging conditions

Fish Shells Catch. Release. Recycle. Reuse.

In 1936, conser vationist and angler Lee Wulf f announced that a gamefish was “too valuable to be caught only once.” The idea made too much sense to be ignored and from that moment, the notion of catch and release underscored the conservationist spirit among fly anglers. That commitment is as vital today as it was more than 80 years ago, and at Patagonia, we believe that fly fishing and conservation are inexorably linked. That’s why we’re building some of our toughest fishing gear—like our Women’s River Salt Jacket and our game-changing Middle Fork Packable Waders—using recycled face fabrics. We haven’t made this commitment because it’s trendy or fashionable or cheap, but because these materials are dependably durable, breathable and water-repellent—and they work. When it comes to making fl y fishing gear, we never skimp. When it comes to protecting our home planet, we are all in.

Previous: The cure for cold feet. Emily Gribble warms her toes next to a thermal hot spring on Yellowstone’s Firehole River. JOHN JUR ACEK

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Women’s River Salt Jacket

Women’s Tough Puff Hoody

A purposeful, athletic wading jacket engineered with intuitive,

With a stretchy, female-specific fit, our Women’s Tough

angler-forward features, the River Salt is fundamental gear

Puff Hoody delivers smart, fish-first features and excels

for female anglers who wade into the surliest conditions. The

at the essentials: warmth, breathability and freedom of

4-layer, wader-fabric shell is 55% recycled and has passed

movement. Whether you’re wearing it as an outer layer

our rigorous H2No® Performance Standard for durability,

or under a wading jacket, the Tough Puff is designed to

waterproofness and breathability.

keep you casting all day.

$349.00 I 81888 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 530 g (18.7 oz)

$249.00 I 81766 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 524 g (18.5 oz) I shown with River Salt Jacket

men’s available online

men’s available online


Waterproof pocket provides protection for camera or cell phone

THE BIN When we designed our Middle Fork Packable

Waders, we wanted to create the lightest, most durable and most packable waders available. We also wanted an alternative to toxic and

energy-intensive materials, such as Teflon™ ,

often used in waders construction. To execute

this vision, we started from the ground up, designing and building new waders face fabrics that were lighter, offered better mobility and

met our industry-leading H2No® Performance Standard for waterproofness and durability.

The results are the 3- and 4-layer face fab-

rics used in our Packable Waders. The upper

body of the Middle Forks is constructed out of

a densely woven, 3-layer, 100% recycled nylon face that’s incredibly light yet waterproof, breathable and puncture resistant. Down

below, the seat and legs are constructed out of our 4-layer wader material. Tested in some of

the world’s most extreme conditions, this fabric is engineered using a 70% recycled polyester

microfiber face along with two membrane lay-

ers and a DWR (durable water repellent) finish.

Middle Fork Packable Waders Designed for backpackers, hot weather and exploring, our versatile, minimalist Middle Forks are

Seamless wader

the most technically advanced waders we’ve ever

booties Waders roll into their own compact 8" x 13"

made. River-tested and built for the wild, the durable Packables roll up into their own grande burrito-sized

stuffsack and weigh in

stuffsack and weigh in at just 26 ounces.

at just 26 ounces

$349.00 I 82330 I S-XL I Regular fit I 740 g (26.1 oz)

all styles imported

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FISH

Fish Midlayers Clean getaways When everything comes together, fly fishing can be remarkably intuitive—water, fish, flies and not much else. Those moments of magical simplicity are one reason we only build the gear we believe is essential. We engineer it to perform. We design it to last. We build it to help you spend more time getting up close and personal with a fish or two. Our fishing midlayers are made to move athletically, shrug off weather tantrums and keep you warm, dry and casting. Sturdy, fish-forward features—handy tool docs, oversize pockets and durable finishes that shed water—are easy to access when you need them and won’t get in the way when you don’t.

THE BIN Our new Early Rise fishing shirt is constructed from recycled PET (polyethylene terephthalate) soda bottles, unusable manufacturing waste and wornout garments. Using recycled polyester lessens our dependence on petroleum as a source of raw materials. It also removes these bottles and other polyester products from the waste stream where they’d either end up in the landfill or the incinerator. In the United States alone, approximately

Men’s Long-Sleeved R1® Fitz Roy 1/4-Zip We began making recycled polyester from

1.5 billion pounds of used polyester bottles and

plastic soda bottles in 1993. Our R1® 1/4-Zip

containers are collected each year for recycling,

is created from stretchy, moisture-wicking

making it the most recycled plastic in the country.

Polartec® Power Grid® 93% recycled polyester/

That’s good news for the planet and a perfect

7% spandex fleece for one good reason—it

fit for anglers looking for a Fair Trade Certified™

works. A time-tested, do-it-all workhorse, the

sewn fishing shirt that dries quickly and functions perfectly as a midlayer or outer layer.

R1 is built for layering while also overachieving as a solo piece with its reinforced shoulders, forearms and hem, as well as a DWR (durable water repellent) finish. $169.00 I 52721 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 936 g (33 oz) all styles imported

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Men’s Tough Puff Shirt

Men’s Tough Puff Hoody

Men’s Long-Sleeved Early Rise Snap Shirt

The breathability of a baselayer and the easy

A no-excuses essential that insulates, breathes

Made from 100% recycled polyester Micro D®

movement and ruggedness of an outer layer

and moves easily when the fishing gets tough

microfleece and Fair Trade Certified™ sewn,

make the Tough Puff Shirt a distinctively reli-

and the mercury takes a dive, the Tough Puff

the Early Rise looks snappy and does double

able fishing pal. Built with our lightest-weight,

Hoody features a 100% recycled lining, breath-

duty as a technical piece of outerwear. With

best-wicking 100% recycled polyester

able stretch insulation and an outer shell with

two fly-box pockets, an internal security

Capilene® lining and a stretchy insulation that

a DWR (durable water repellent) finish. Details

pocket and tool-attachment loops, the Early

won’t hold water and stays warm when wet,

include two large, zip-closure fly-box pockets,

Rise answers the call as a go-to fishing shirt

the versatile Tough Puff boasts an abrasion-

two handwarmer pockets and tool-attachment

or as part of a layering system when there’s a

resistant shell and a moisture-shedding DWR

points. Excels under a wading jacket when

chill on the water.

(durable water repellent) finish.

weather goes from bad to worse.

$199.00 I 52730 I XS-XXL I Relaxed fit I 527 g (18.6 oz)

$249.00 I 81761 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 624 g (22 oz)

$129.00 I 52225 I XS-3XL I Relaxed fit I 346 g (12.2 oz)

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Hand­-Me-Downs We’ve taken what we’ve learned from making clothes that stand up to extreme conditions to help the rest of our line last longer under more normal ones The average American throws away 80

which come from our obsession with mak-

pounds of used clothing every year. Much

ing gear that will perform when things get

when your product is done,” says ­Wash­burn.­­

of what we put in the recycling bin also ends

iffy—and last forever. “We build our rainwear

it in the field and find a problem, we do

up in landfill (page 42). From fast fashion

to the same standard as our alpine and arc-

some detective work to re-create that issue

to water bottles—this disposable culture is

tic tundra gear, and we test it to perform in

in the lab, put it under a microscope and

contributing to climate change.

the most extreme environments. It’s more

go all the way down to the fiber to solve

“It’s kind of like MythBusters. After we test

To avoid all that, and have a more posi-

expensive and time-consuming, but it’s this

it.” We submit our products to such rigor-

tive impact, we’ve focused on building more

testing in the field that sets us apart,” says

ous testing and dissection, Washburn adds,

recycled fibers into our highest-volume

Annika Washburn, Patagonia’s manager of

“because not only will we make something

sportswear styles. We now use recycled raw

quality insights and strategy. Beyond the

that lasts longer and can be passed down

materials for six previously virgin ones that

baseline tests that other quality brands put

for generations to come, but that will also

make up most of our line: polyester, cotton,

their clothing through in a lab setting, we

be worth repairing.”

nylon, down, wool and cashmere. By divert-

put every new product to work in the field.

“We know the world doesn’t really need

ing everything from old cashmere sweaters to

Every new item is tested at the same stan-

more clothes,” says Helena Barbour, vice

down bedding to water bottles from landfills,

dard of quality by people we ask to try to

president, global sportswear. “But if we can

we can repurpose this waste into something

destroy it.

make clothing with recycled materials that

useful—something that will endure.

“In aeronautics, you use the mean time to

lasts a lifetime and is equal in quality to what

Our performance and quality standards

failure to determine the life expectancy of

we make with virgin materials, we can con-

are some of the highest in the industry,

a product. Whatever link breaks first, that is

tribute to solving the waste problem.”

After her first sledding face-plant, Rosie regroups for the next run. Mazama, Washington. MICHELE BIANCHI

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LIFESTYLE

70 MILLION PLASTIC BOTTLES recycled in the creation of the Better Sweater line

Better Sweater Pullovers ®

The only part of our Better Sweater that isn’t made from recycled materials? The zipper teeth. (We’re on it.) We made one of our best even better. Taking the body fabric of the Better Sweater from zero to 100% recycled polyester was no easy task. It took years to create a new material that achieved the same quality, identical hand feel and aesthetic—and we didn’t quit until it was impossible for our own product team to tell the difference. Our beloved Better Sweater is just as soft, warm and durable as it has been, with all the virtues of wool but none of the liabilities. In the process we were able to improve the yield with pattern refinements, which means we use more of the fabric and generate less waste. And we were able to dye them with a process that uses fewer dyestuffs and less energy and water compared to conventional dyeing methods. But when we found out that our supplier couldn’t find a viable recycled solution to the zipper teeth, we knew we had more work to do. Imported. Women’s Better Sweater® 1/4-Zip $99.00 I 25618 I XXS-XXL I Slim fit

Men’s Better Sweater® Rib Knit 1/4-Zip $119.00 I 25300 I XS-3XL I Regular fit more styles available online

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The Better Sweater has

100% RECYCLED CONTENT


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LIFESTYLE

Recycled Cashmere Transforms excess into exquisite comfort Made with scraps collected from European garment factories—plus 5% virgin wool for strength—these cozy, durable sweaters and accessories have a much lower ecological impact than products made with virgin cashmere. They’re made from preconsumer cashmere waste that’s sorted, mechanically broken down and spun into new yarn. Cashmere was once a luxury fabric but now demand outpaces supply, which has led to overgrazing in Mongolia’s delicate grasslands. By using recycled cashmere, we lessen the demand for the virgin variety to bring you warm, durable clothing you’ll value for years. Imported. Recycled Cashmere Beanie $69.00 I 22285

Recycled Cashmere Scarf $99.00 I 22195

Men’s Recycled Cashmere Crewneck Sweater $199.00 I 50525 I XS-XXL I Regular fit

Women’s Recycled Cashmere Turtleneck $249.00 I 50715 I XS-XL I Regular fit more styles available online

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LIFESTYLE

Uprisal Sweatshirts Made with recycled cotton and recycled polyester Some sweats work harder than others. These soft yet durable favorites feature a blend of 95% recycled natural and synthetic materials with 47.5% heavyweight recycled cotton/47.5% postconsumer recycled polyester/5% spandex fleece fabric for cozy warmth. The 95% recycled Uprisal Hoody is a classic pullover hoody with a kangaroo-pouch pocket to warm cold hands. It was made using 14.9 plastic bottles and 0.82 pounds of cotton scrap, saving 184 more gallons of water than a conventional cotton hoody. Original artwork is screen-printed using PVC- and phthalate-free inks. The 95% recycled Uprisal Crew Sweatshirt features classic crewneck pullover styling with a regular fit and just enough stretch. It was made with 10.8 plastic bottles and 0.6 pounds of cotton scrap, saving 143 more gallons of water than a conventional cotton sweatshirt. Woven label logo features original Patagonia artwork. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

Men’s P-6 Logo Uprisal Hoody $79.00 I 39539 I XS-XXL I Regular fit

Men’s P-6 Label Uprisal Crew Sweatshirt $65.00 I 39543 I XS-XXL I Regular fit

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LIFESTYLE

Woolie & Woolyester Blending the best of old and new worlds Striving for a zero-waste apparel industry, we took two classic styles and modernized them by changing the fabric content. By blending recycled wool with polyester, nylon and recycled cotton, these everyday, all-around layers are a better choice when buying new. The Woolie Fleece is made from a progressive blend of recycled wool and recycled cotton fabric that’s cozy and resilient. The easy-towear Woolyester Fleece partially replaces polyester (which is the industry standard for synthetic fleece fabric) with recycled wool for warmth and softness, reducing our reliance on petroleum-based fibers. These styles dry quickly, manage moisture and feel soft-to-the-touch to keep you warm and comfortable across a wide range of conditions. With heritage design lines from our traditional fleece patterns, combined with the future of recycled fabric blends, these functional fleece styles are an instant classic. They’re also Fair Trade Certified™ sewn, which means the people who made them earned a premium for their labor. Imported. Women’s Woolyester Fleece Jacket $159.00 I 26945 I XS-XL I Regular fit

Men’s Woolie Fleece Pullover $159.00 I 26906 I XXS-XXL I Regular fit

Women’s Woolyester Fleece Pullover $139.00 I 26950 I XS-XL I Regular fit more men’s and women’s styles available online




LIFESTYLE OUTERWEAR

100% USE RECYCLED MATERIALS 100% FAIR TRADE CERTIFIED SEWN 100% PERFORMANCE ™

E VE RY WATE RPROOF SHE L L W E MAKE

Frozen Range Parkas 100% recycled, warm, insulated jackets that do it all There are few things in life that will stay with you forever. If you only buy one jacket in your lifetime, the Frozen Range is it. Made of 100% recycled fabrics inside and out, our most pinnacle jackets to date are also our warmest. You can’t turn off the cold and wet of winter, but inside these jackets, it feels like you’re living in balmier climes. Designed for tough, frigid winters, they’re built to keep you sheltered no matter what weather conditions come your way. The Women’s Frozen Range 3-in-1 Parka features a fully removable, hooded, down-insulated liner with 700-fill-power 100% Recycled Down (duck and goose down reclaimed from down products), and a shell made of soft and supple 100% recycled polyester GORE-TEX 2-layer fabric to keep you dry and protected. The Men’s Frozen Range Parka is a warm, tailored, thigh-length jacket made of 100% recycled polyester GORE-TEX 2-layer fabric that’s windproof, waterproof and insulated with 700-fill-power 100% Recycled Down. Both are Fair Trade Certified™ sewn, which means the people who made them earned a premium for their labor. Imported. Women’s Frozen Range 3-in-1 Parka $799.00 I 27980 I XS-XL I Regular fit

Men’s Frozen Range Parka $699.00 I 27975 I XS-XXL I Regular fit more men’s and women’s styles available online

Previous: Painter and climber Emilie Lee making friends at a lobster market in the Lower East Side of New York City. FOREST WOODWARD

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The entire shell line has

65% RECYCLED CONTENT* Adjustable, fully insulated snorkel hood for when it’s dumping

Weather-shedding 2-layer shell made from 100% recycled polyester plain-weave stretch GORE-TEX fabric

* By total material weight

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LIFESTYLE OUTERWEAR

Waterproof Shells Women’s Vosque 3-in-1 Parka When conditions fluctuate from a steady drizzle to uncomfortably cold, the H2No® Performance Standard Vosque 3-in-1 Parka is a master adapter. This 3-in-1 jacket has a tweed-like appearance and is made from a recycled nylon/polyester shell with a waterproof/breathable barrier, a DWR (durable water repellent) finish and a separate liner insulated with 100-g THERMOLITE® ECO92 100% polyester (92% recycled). Above-the-knee length. $449.00 I 28567 I XS-XL I Slim fit

Men’s Tres 3-in-1 Parka In those situations where you’re not sure what to expect, you’ll want to bring the ready-for-anything Tres 3-in-1 Parka. The durable 2-layer H2No® Performance Standard 100% polyester (50% recycled) shell has a waterproof/breathable barrier that adds mountaineering-level storm protection. The 100% recycled polyester inside lining wicks moisture, dries quickly and glides smoothly over layers. Removable liner is insulated with 700-fill-power 100% Recycled Down (duck and goose down reclaimed from down products). $599.00 I 28388 I XS-XXL I Regular fit women’s available online

Men’s City Storm Parka A very warm, waterproof/breathable, thighlength jacket, the City Storm Parka provides warmth on even the coldest winter days. We make the H2No® Performance Standard shell from tough 2-layer 100% nylon (35% recycled) with a DWR (durable water repellent) finish for complete waterproof, windproof and breathable performance. Finely tuned for callous weather, it has a clean design and ultrawarm 700-fill-power 100% Recycled Down insulation (duck and goose down reclaimed from down products). $499.00 I 27895 I XS-XXL I Regular fit women’s available online

all styles imported 88


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LIFESTYLE OUTERWEAR

90


Really Soft, Really Warm Women’s Arctic Willow Parka For those breezy days when you’d rather stay under your down comforter than face the cold, this midthigh-length parka is ready for the elements. With a contemporary silhouette made of soft and supple 100% polyester (70% recycled) Silent Down fabric and 700-fill-power 100% Recycled Down (duck and goose down reclaimed from down products), it’s a first choice for cold-weather missions. $399.00 I 27960 I XS-XL I Regular fit

Women’s Arctic Willow Jacket We took all the same features of our Women’s Arctic Willow Parka and shortened it to hip length for a wear-every-day-it’s-a-bit-frigid new favorite jacket. Made of the same soft and supple 100% polyester (70% recycled) Silent Down fabric and insulated with 700-fill-power 100% Recycled Down (duck and goose down reclaimed from down products), it’s just right to keep you warm and functional out in the cold. $299.00 I 27955 I XS-XL I Regular fit

Women’s Silent Down Jacket One of the softest and most supple down jackets we have ever made. Designed with comfort and warmth in mind to be the ultimate everyday, travel jacket. We combined a stretchy 100% polyester (70% recycled) shell with 100% Recycled Down (duck and goose down reclaimed from down products) insulation. $249.00 I 27935 I XS-XL I Regular fit

all styles imported

91




KIDS’

Kids’ Snow Kits We make tough gear look like child’s play To make long-lasting kids’ snow jackets and pants, we draft off our gear for adults and build them with hard-wearing, weather-resistant shell fabrics and waterproof construction. We use recycled materials where we can and when our performance standards will allow. Our kids’ clothes are repairable, so when the shredders shred, we can stitch, patch and fix things up—and it’s all backed by our Ironclad Guarantee. But how can clothes keep up with growing kids? For an extra season or so of wear, kids’ snow styles have our grow-fit feature, which adds 2 inches in length to sleeves and pant legs.

THE BIN Sometimes the solution is hiding in plain sight. That was the case with Q253, the 100% recycled polyester lining in the jackets and pants shown here. Smooth and lightweight, Q253 allows these garments to slide easily over layers. We use Q253 in everything from waders to snow parkas, but we haven’t always done so. Although Q253 is made of 100% recycled polyester, that wasn’t enough to make it our go-to taffeta. A few years ago, our material innovations team identified Q253 as a replacement for some of

all styles imported

our nonrecycled fabrics. Because Q253 was tried, tested and already in use in some of our gear—as lining for sleeves, for example—we

Boys’ Snowshot Jacket and Pants

increased efficiency and our use of recycled

Our premium ski/boarding kit is waterproof and warm—

materials when we switched some nonrecycled fabrics to recycled Q253. The answer to our nonrecycled-fabric problem was—ahem—right up our sleeves.

but not bulky—for long days on the slopes. The durable shell fabric meets our rigorous H2No® Performance Standard for waterproof/breathable protection and is made of 100% polyester (47% recycled). Inner cuffs with thumb holes and a full powder skirt keep out snow. Insulation is warm-even-when-wet 150-g (80-g in pants) Thermogreen® polyester (92% recycled).

Previous: Doggles—they’re a thing. Kit Roy takes a ride with her furry friends in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. DREW SMITH

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The Boys’ Snowshot Jacket and Pants have 47% recycled polyester shells


Kids’ outerwear has

92% RECYCLED INSULATION

Girls’ Pine Grove Jacket and Snowbelle Pants Our most versatile snow kit combines the insulated

Boys’ Snowshot Jacket

Pine Grove Jacket and the waterproof/breathable

$199.00 I 68480 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 734 g (25.9 oz)

Snowbelle Pants. The Pine Grove Jacket is made of

Boys’ Snowshot Pants

100% recycled polyester and is our Jack Frost-of-all-

$139.00 I 68490 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 499 g (17.6 oz)

trades winter coat, working both for every day and ski/boarding—its powder skirt snaps out of the way as needed. Jacket and pants insulated with warmeven-when-wet 200-g (80-g in pants) Thermogreen® polyester (92% recycled). The Girls’ Pine Grove Jacket has a 100% recycled polyester shell

Girls’ Pine Grove Jacket $159.00 I 68590 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 590 g (20.8 oz)

Girls’ Snowbelle Pants $139.00 I 68495 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 499 g (17.6 oz)

The Girls’ Snowbelle Pants have a 47% recycled polyester shell

95


KIDS’

Kids’ Outerwear

Well-made kids’ clothes beg to be handed down

Girls’ Reversible Snow Flower Jacket

Girls’ Tres 3-in-1 Parka

For cold-weather options: an insulated jacket with a water-resistant

Versatility and maximum protection from wet and cold all in one, our

side that reverses to cozy fleece. The 100% recycled polyester shell

H2No® Performance Standard 3-in-1 parka combines a waterproof

is quilted to keep

100-g THERMOLITE®

ECO92 100% polyester (92%

shell with an insulated zip-out jacket. For weather protection, the 100%

recycled) insulation in place. For a different look, reverse it to the fleece

recycled polyester shell has a fleece-lined hood, an external storm flap,

side, which is made of 100% polyester (35% recycled). Cozy, tricot-lined

and handwarmer pockets. The 100% recycled polyester zip-out jacket

handwarmer pockets (shell side) and on-seam handwarmer pockets

is insulated with 600-fill-power Recycled Down (duck and goose down

(fleece side) keep hands toasty.

reclaimed from down products).

$99.00 I 68050 I XS-XXL I Regular fit

$249.00 I 68030 I XS-XXL I Regular fit boys’ available online

The Girls’ Reversible Snow Flower Jacket has a 100% recycled polyester shell

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The Girls’ Tres 3-in-1 Parka has a 100% recycled polyester shell and zip-out jacket


THE BIN Hand-me-downs are some of the best kind of recycling around

recycled materials, think how those raw-materials savings compound

because reusing and buying less saves resources and energy. Our

when you pass them along to new owners. Keep finding young ones,

warm, hard-wearing kids’ jackets and parkas—with hand-me-down

siblings, cousins, neighbors and favorite friends to share outgrown

labels inside—use tough fabrics and sturdy construction to stand up

gear with, and we’ll keep making long-lasting clothes with classic,

to what kids dish out, plus they have wear to spare when they’ve

enduring styling—and recycled materials.

been outgrown. Since all our kids’ outerwear styles are made with

All kids’ styles have a hand-me-down label inside.

Boys’ Insulated Isthmus Jacket

Boys’ 4-in-1 Everyday Jacket

For changeable weather, this hooded jacket has a water-resistant 100%

In rainy, cold, blustery weather, our 4-in-1 comes through: The waterproof

recycled nylon shell and THERMOLITE® polyester (92% recycled) insu-

H2No® Performance Standard shell and reversible zip-out jacket can be

lation (100-g in body, 80-g in sleeves) that stays warm even when wet.

worn together or separately. The hooded shell has warm front pockets

For extra warmth, the hood and upper torso are also lined with 100%

and adjustable cuff closures to keep drafts out. The water-resistant zip-out

polyester (35% recycled) fleece. To resist drafts, there’s a wind flap that

jacket (100% recycled polyester with 60-g THERMOLITE® ECO92 poly-

secures at the bottom with a snap. Two tricot-lined pockets warm cold

ester (92% recycled) insulation in the sleeves) reverses to a fleece side

hands. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

(torso only) made of 70% recycled polyester. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.

$119.00 I 68045 I XS-XXL I Regular fit

$169.00 I 68035 I XS-XXL I Regular fit girls’ available online

The Boys’ Insulated Isthmus Jacket has a 100% recycled nylon shell

The Boys’ 4-in-1 Everyday Jacket has a 50% recycled polyester shell

all styles imported

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KIDS’

Baby ® Retro-X Vest & Jacket Windproof, warm and recycled Our Retro-X® fleece is known for its recognizable half-inch pile, which is cozy, warm and makes babies look like bear cubs. It’s less well known that the Retro-X is also windproof. The vest and jacket are lined with a lightweight, recycled polyester fabric that’s woven so tightly it blocks blustery weather—there’s also an internal wind flap behind the center-front zipper for extra protection. Babies like the Retro-X because it’s soft and the tapered collar doesn’t bother their chins. We’re fond of the Retro-X because it reminds us of our heritage fleece styles with its fuzzy texture and nylon chest pocket. Imported. Recycled Materials 75% recycled polyester fleece, 100% recycled polyester lining

Baby Retro-X® Vest $69.00 I 61035 I 6M-5T I Regular fit

Baby Retro-X® Jacket $79.00 I 61025 I 6M-5T I Regular fit

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THE BIN This season 59% of the clothing we make for babies, boys and girls is

crafted from recycled materials. We fully expect three-quarters of our kids’ styles

to be made of recycled materials by fall

2020. And while we do have a penchant for polyester with a past, we like nylon, down and wool with past lives as well.

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Stories You Wear A look back at six years of Worn Wear, and why we still think it’s worth repairing your clothes for free Worn Wear was born in 2013 from the realization that, no matter how responsibly we build our products, nothing can beat keeping gear in play as long as possible. Clothing is not usually the first thing that comes to mind when we think about waste, but in 2015, landfills received 10.5 million tons of textiles. Not to mention the energy footprint required to create new stuff to replace the old. Repair is radical because it directly opposes the linear economy’s dependence on disposable products and planned obsolescence. Worn Wear promotes a circular economy: keep an object in use for as long as you can, get the most value out of it, then recover and repurpose the material at the “end” of its life. We believe in this so strongly that our team has been continuously cruising around the country in a fleet of mobile repair shops with the mission of fixing your stuff—or teaching you how to fix it—for free. We see it as a small investment in a habitable planet. According to our customers’ Worn Wear® blog posts, there are other reasons for holding on to well-used clothing, and they have nothing to do with landfill statistics. Folks say that clothes tend to jog their memories about good times they’ve had while wearing them. There’s the twinkle-eye joy of passing them on to the next generation. They are,

100

after all, the stories we wear.

4.93

6.6

The Worn Wear cycle: Use. Abuse. Care. Repair. Despite all the distractions, Austin Stubbs works to make something better than new. Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah. KERN DUCOTE

Kilograms of CO2 equivalent on average saved per Worn Wear piece

Gallons of water saved on average


100,000 10,909

54,833

84

Pieces of clothing fixed

Pieces of clothing and gear repaired in 2018

Employees in the Reno repairs department (59 new employees since 2015)

Items repaired on the road

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102


Second Stories One woman’s solution to the problem of too many clothes Lindsay Rose Medoff wants you to wear your garbage— or, more specifically, a mashup of repurposed Patagonia clothing that she and her team have transformed into

“I would say that it’s impossible to do and that we’re actually doing the impossible.”

something original and beautiful. That’s the idea behind ReCrafted, a line of clothing created by Medoff and designed with the help of Pata-

tic with metal twine, and when you pop them open, what

gonia’s Kourtney Morgan, which draws upon the scraps

seemingly looks like something manageable becomes

of used garments collected at our Worn Wear facility in

like five times that size,” she says. From there she and her

Reno. It’s premium, Patagonia, upcycled. A second life

team start sorting. Could this be a pocket? Then it goes

for products that might not otherwise get it, accom-

in the pocket box. Could this be the back of a sleeve?

plished on a large scale, at least when compared to oth-

Things get sorted by denim, cotton and down products.

er upcycled initiatives. And Medoff believes it’s a step

Things get sorted by color. Every piece is also handcraft-

toward a zero-waste world.

ed on site at Suay. Master seamstresses and cutters, who

Medoff has been working on remade products for

have worked in the garment industry for years, create

18 years, though she took a break to farm in New Mexico

14,000 individual pieces of clothing specifically for the

in between. She attributes her love of cutting up fabrics

ReCrafted line (they also sew thousands of other prod-

to her punk rock youth, and her passion for repurposed

ucts from discarded fabrics).

clothing to a love of thrift stores she discovered in sev-

Medoff is frantically optimistc about the possibilities

enth grade. “Worn-in or used or cared for has always

of remade clothing. “In my 18 years of experience, I’ve

been at the heart of how I felt like I exist in this world,” she

never seen this done before,” she says. “I would say that

says. The ReCrafted process looks something like this:

it’s impossible to do and that we’re actually doing the

Customers send back old or damaged clothes, many

impossible.” If you consider that there might be enough

of which get repaired and sent back. If they’re deemed

fabric on Earth right now to dress the whole world, Re-

too damaged to work with, they get bailed and stored.

Crafted clothing really is a radical act. That’s certainly

These are the pieces Medoff and her team are now re-

how Medoff sees it. “You’re asking people to create a

purposing at her sewing shop, Suay, on the banks of the

new habit of what their voice is when they’re spending

Los Angeles River.

their dollars out in the world. And what they’re putting

“Usually there are two bails on a pallet that have to be lifted up and down off a truck. They’re wrapped in plas-

on their bodies. You’re asking people to do something that’s different.” It’s a quiet revolution, but when clothes, like food before it, represent the values we stand for, then what you wear really is revolutionary. As Medoff puts it, “It evokes

For Lindsay Rose Medoff, the idea for ReCrafted has been a dream 11 years in the making. L AUREN ROSS

a sense of belonging to change.” ReCrafted styles will be available this fall at wornwear.com.

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“You’re asking people to create a new habit of what their voice is when they’re spending their dollars out in the world.”

Each piece of ReCrafted clothing is made from used Patagonia garments that can’t otherwise be repaired. L AUREN ROSS

104


This is just part of the team at Suay sew shop in Los Angeles, California, that has brought the idea of ReCrafted to life. L AUREN ROSS

105


Photo: DONALD L. HEDDEN

NEED Do you really

any of this?

If you don’t need it, don’t buy it. If you do, look for it used. Can’t find it used? Buy recycled.

106

In the last 105 pages, we’ve carried you through our imperfect pro-

and when we must buy, only spend money on items that live up to

cess of striving to make garments that give you a choice. Recycled

our ethos. The planet shouldn’t be a victim to a dizzy preoccupation

over virgin materials. Durability over the fastest of fashion. But

with the need to consume, the desire for everything new. Even if

our efforts are still only a small blip in the gargantuan signature of

it’s too late and we humans are a mere blip between epochs, the

environmental degradation by way of human hands. Unless, as indi-

only right thing to do is try. The attack on the natural world is per-

viduals, we buy recycled over new, petroleum-intensive garments will

sonal. It’s every human’s burden. But we can unravel the unraveling

continue to pile up. Our demands are in our dollars. A reimagined

collectively. Get inside our own heads—examine our choices. Know

way of living on this planet can start with a different approach to

when buying feels wrong (or better yet, when it is right). Maybe we

buying that helps repair our high-consumption human experience:

can make those who inherit this planet proud? They are inevitably

Purchase fewer things, own multifunctional and high-quality items,

bound to our actions.


107


patagonia, inc.

Prsrt. Std. U.S. Postage PAID Patagonia, Inc.

8550 White Fir Street Reno, NV 89523-8939

Unwanted Mailings If you are moving, send us your old and new addresses. If you’ve received this catalog in error, received a duplicate or want to remove your name from our mailing list, please call us at 800-638-6464. 100% Recycled Paper This catalog is made with FSC®-certified 100% postconsumer recycled paper. Not a single tree was cut to produce it. For over 25 years, we’ve printed our catalogs on recycled paper; we switched to 100% postconsumer recycled paper in 2014.

100% PCW

This catalog refers to the following trademarks as used, applied for or registered in the U.S.: 1% for the Planet ®, a registered trademark of 1% for the Planet, Inc.; AquaA™; a trademark of Shei Chung Hsin Industrial Co., Ltd; Cohaesive®, a registered trademark of Cohaesive Garment Technology Inc.; Fair Trade Certified™, a trademark of TransFair USA DBA Fair Trade USA; FSC® and the FSC Logo®, registered trademarks of the Forest Stewardship Council, A.C.; HydraPak ® and SpeedCup™, trademarks of HydraPak, Inc.; GORE®, a registered trademark of W.L. Gore & Associates, Inc.; HeiQ®, a registered trademark of HeiQ Materials AG; Polartec ® and Power Grid®, registered trademarks of MMI-IPCO, LLC; PrimaLoft ®, a registered trademark of PrimaLoft, Inc.; RECCO®, a registered trademark of Recco Invest AB; Teflon™, a trademark of The Chemours Company; THERMOLITE®, a registered trademark of INVISTA North America S.a.r.l.; and Yulex®, a registered trademark of Yulex Corporation. Patagonia® and the Patagonia and Fitz Roy Skyline® are registered trademarks of Patagonia, Inc. Other Patagonia trademarks include, but are not limited to, the following: Better Sweater ®, Black Hole®, Capilene®, H2No®, Houdini®, Macro Puff ™, Micro D®, Micro Puff ®, MLC®, Nano-Air ®, Nano Puff ®, R1®, R2®, R3®, R4®, R5®, Retro-X®, Synchilla® and Thermogreen®. Prices are valid through January 31, 2020. © 2019 Patagonia, Inc.

This season’s Black Hole® collection used 10 million discarded plastic bottles to build the 100% recycled main fabric, lining and webbing of these durable travel companions. Check out a close-up of the main fabric here and on the cover.


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