Equator T Shirt
Weighing just 130 grams it’s engineered to keep you cool in the heat.
Model is 6ft 2 / 188cm with a 39 inch / 99cm chest, and wears size Medium.
- Made from ultrasoft Pima cotton
- Lightweight t shirt weighing 130 grams
- Highly breathable and cooling
Home to some of the hottest and most humid places on the planet, the equator carves through dense tropical jungles, warm seas, and crowded cities. Instead of seasons or temperature changes you’re more likely to be hit by a wall of heat, sun, rain and humidity. But as global temperatures rise and climate zones shift, designing clothing for the equator is like designing for our future.
So our Equator gear is built to keep you comfortable in all 40,000km of one of the most extreme environments we currently inhabit, and one that’s set to grow. The Equator T Shirt is made from one of the lightest and softest fabrics on the planet – 100% Pima cotton. The silk-like fibres of Pima cotton are much longer and stronger than normal cotton, so they make a much softer, smoother, and more durable t shirt.
As temperatures rise, you’ll find it’s highly breathable, lightweight, fast drying and cooling next to your skin.
Eiderdown Winter Puffer - Fljót Valley Brown 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.

