100 Year Sweatpants
Ultra-soft sweatpants that keep out wind, fire, rain, and temperatures 4x hotter than the sun.
Model is 5ft 11 / 180cm with a 32 inch / 81cm waist, and wears size Medium.
- Fire resistant, water repellent and windproof
- Embedded with an abrasion resistant polymer coating
- Five pockets, including three zipped pockets
Our 100 Year Sweatpants have always been tough. But these sweatpants are the softest and lightest version we’ve ever made. They’re super stretchy, fleece-lined, breathable, and they come with five pockets to store all your valuables. But the pants are also windproof, abrasion resistant, water repellent, fire resistant, and can withstand temperatures 4x hotter than the sun. So it’s fair to say they’re an upgrade.
The sweatpants combine 4 different layers of technology. The inside of the sweatpants are made from an incredibly dense fleece that’s 4x more windproof than a regular fleece, while the outside of the fabric is a blend of modacrylic and aramid fibres for fire resistance. On top of that there are two coatings. One is a fluorocarbon-free treatment that helps it shed rain and snow. The other fuses high strength polymers directly into the fibres to make the sweatpants highly abrasion resistant.
Eiderdown Puffer - 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.

