Titan Pants
Built with the extreme-strength parachute material used to land probes on Titan and Mars.
- Lined with space parachute material
- Outer material is waterproof and windproof
- Recycled synthetic insulation recreates the warmth of real down
Titan is Saturn’s largest moon. And one day it could be our next home. It comes with an atmosphere 4x thicker than Earth’s, and it’s only the second body in our Solar System known to have liquid on its surface – we live on the other one. So just like the Moon and Mars it has potential.
However, Titan is cryogenically cold. With average surface temperatures of -179°C, it’s twice as cold as anything recorded on Earth. It also has methane monsoons and cryovolcanoes spewing out jets of freezing hydrocarbon rain. So don’t book your flight just yet. As we continue to build clothing for planet Earth and beyond, embracing the challenges of Titan forces us to push the technological boundaries of extreme cold weather clothing.
It's why the Titan Pants come with an outer material designed to survive warzones and emergency pull cords for blizzards. The inside of the pants is made from the same extreme-strength parachute material used to land a probe on Titan and the Perseverance Rover on Mars. And they’re part of our Titan system, which we’ve tested down to -100°C in a liquid nitrogen chamber.
Technical Details
We test the Titan gear the way you test components in missiles. At -100°C in a liquid nitrogen chamber.
‘Earth’s twin’ is cryogenically cold
If you were to land on Titan tomorrow it has a geography you’d recognise, with clouds, lakes, rivers and mountains. It also has an atmosphere 4x as thick as Earth’s and a bit more surface pressure too. It’s why it’s known as ‘Earth’s twin.’ But in 2005 a NASA probe confirmed one more thing – Titan is cold. Cryogenically cold. So when we went to build pants for the most extreme cold imaginable, and with the most space age materials ever made, Titan was where we started. And it's why the Titan Pants use tech more used to landing probes on planets than building clothes.
It spent 15 years in R&D
With missions costing billions of dollars you don’t want the parachute to be the thing that fails. So an incredible amount of R&D goes into them. In this case the high-tenacity, heat-proof nylon took 15 years to develop. Spun at high speed before being washed, coloured and processed with a special finish to ensure rapid deployment, they are the lightest, strongest and most heat resistant parachute fabrics ever produced. They are baked at 275°F to kill any microorganisms that might contaminate other worlds, before travelling through space at temperatures well below freezing. And today you’ll find it lining the inside of the Titan Pants.
The pants are built with the deep space parachutes that landed the last Rover on Mars and the first probe on Titan.
Size + Fit
The Titan Pants are designed with a regular fit.
Size | XS | S | M | L | XL | XXL |
Fits waist | 71 - 76 | 76 - 81 | 81 - 86 | 86 - 91 | 91 - 96 | 96 - 101 |
Outside leg | 101 | 102.5 | 104 | 105.5 | 107 | 108.5 |
Size | XS | S | M | L | XL | XXL |
Fits waist | 28 - 30 | 30 - 32 | 32 - 34 | 34 - 36 | 36 - 38 | 38 - 40 |
Outside leg | 39.7 | 40.3 | 40.9 | 41.5 | 42.1 | 42.7 |