
Why Merino? A Shackleton Guide to Fibres
Today’s Merino wool brings a suite of properties to active wear that’s yet to be bettered. In base-layer terms, it’s the Boss.
It’s the next-to-skin layer of choice on both cold starts and cool descents, but also has your back in the high-pulse times between. It regulates body temperature like the kind of climate control systems we humans only learned to invent in the last few decades: warming when required, cooling when things heat up.
Merino is also top of the class when it comes to moisture wicking, as its naturally hygroscopic fibres allow it to absorb 30 percent of its weight in liquid before feeling wet. As a bonus, this ability to retain moisture also makes it resistant to static, and very fire-safe compared to synthetic materials.
Merino’s elastic property means shirts and sweaters won't wrinkle or crease. They pack tight, then bounce right back into shape when shaken and worn.
It’s non-allergenic and antibacterial, so any lurking sweat attracts none of the bacteria that lead to odour. “Wear it all day, sleep in it, repeat” is not just for solo Antarctic expeditions. We do it in the Alps, in Finse, in Svalbard, even in Arabia and Africa. Its range of appropriate habitats and use cases is close to miraculous.
HOW MERINO WORKS ITS MAGIC
Under a microscope, all wool fibres reveal kinks. Coarse wool may have just one or two of these “crimps” per inch: Merino has up to 30. This allows the fibres to lie so loosely on top of each other that tiny air chambers form between them, supplying the wearer with excellent natural insulation.
These extra-wavy, extra-fine Merino fibres – around a third the diameter of a human hair - bend out of the way when in contact with skin, making the best Merino base layers feel almost uncannily unobtrusive. Pick the right quality, weave and weight and construct it properly – ideally with no internal seams – and a Merino base layer can feel like wearing nothing at all.
HOW MODERN MERINO CAME ABOUT
Centuries ago, selective breeding of Spanish and north African sheep created a much prized premium wool. So much so that for centuries, sneaking out a breeding pair from Spain was effectively treated as treason, and punished with extreme prejudice.
The world moved on. By the 18th century, Merino had spread across Europe and then to Australia, where the fibre became even finer and more uniform.
These days it accounts for under 1% of the materials we wear, much sought-after by active types across the globe. As ever, this has led to wide differences in quality of yarn
BLENDING MERINO WITH TENCELTM
As adept as pure Merino is, for certain high-pulse applications we’ve found it performs best in partnership. Tencel is another all-natural marvel; sustainably made from wood pulp, it adds more durability and for some, a cooler feel against the skin. It’s not as odour-resistant as Merino and doesn’t trap heat in the same way, so a judicious blend of the two fibres creates a unique sweet spot for active exploits in warmer climes.
After extensive testing in the wild, our optimal Merino/Tencel range breaks down as 56% Tencel, 37% Merino and 7% Elastane. This blend is capable of blocking 98.9% of UVA rays and 99.5% of UVB rays, almost five times more effective than a cotton equivalent, while feeling cooler in use.
OUR MOST POPULAR MERINO LAYERS
Pure Merino





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