Sashiko Jacket
Reinforced with 1 million high-strength stitches, using the ancient Japanese art of sashiko.
Model is 6ft 2 / 188cm with a 38 inch / 96cm chest, and wears size Large.
- Material made in Japan
- Reinforced with 5.5km of meta-aramid thread
- Built from 100% high-grade jacquard cotton
Reinforced with 1 million high-strength stitches, the Sashiko Jacket pioneers a completely new approach to creating highly durable clothing, inspired by the ancient Japanese art of sashiko. The technique of sashiko, or ‘little stabs,’ is a highly resilient form of embroidery developed during the Japanese Edo period, where worn out garments were repaired using decorative hand stitches. Clothes would be mended again and again as they passed down the generations, getting stronger as they got older.
Rather than waiting until an item of clothing needs to be repaired, we’ve simply applied sashiko-style stitching in super-strong meta-aramid thread over the entire jacket at the start of its life. By combining high-grade jacquard cotton with 5.5 kilometres of high-strength stitching, we’ve created a jacket that’s as soft and comfortable as it is tough and durable.
Eiderdown Vest - Exosphere Blue edition
Filled with the lightest, warmest, rarest down on Earth.

Technical Details



Eiderdown is the lightest, warmest, rarest, most high performance down on Earth.


It takes 65 man hours, and 66 nesting ducks, to generate a single kilo of eiderdown.


The eiderdown is hand collected by third-generation eider caretakers, after moulting from the birds’ underbellies.

It’s dried using volcanic water
After the eiderdown is collected it’s cleaned in custom-made machines to remove any impurities, then dried on racks in ‘down houses’ heated by volcanic water held at a steady 55°C. Iceland’s abundant geothermal and hydroelectric energy reserves allow them to sustainably pump 1 tonne of water through this room every 24 hours to maintain the temperature needed to dry the eiderdown.



Our eiderdown comes from a small area called Hraun in the remote Fljót Valley in Northern Iceland.

