Outdoor Research hopes to deliver its best warmth-to-weight ratio in a jacket ever, using new insulation it calls ‘SuperStrand.’ The brand also uses high-tech quilting and lightweight ripstop fabric to make a layer that retains the best of both worlds — down and synthetic.
Outdoor Research seeks to close the gap between synthetic and natural down with its new collection. VerticalX SuperStrand arranges synthetic fibers in strands instead of in sheets for a system it claims produces more loft.
The four-season jackets weigh just 10 ounces, and OR claims they’re “just as soft, light and lofty” as jackets that use its 700-800 fill power down. Ripstop nylon helps keep the insulation where it belongs, and a discontinuous quilting pattern aims to arrange the fibers to optimize comprehensive warmth.
All that and the jackets’ most impressive quality might be packability — they compress down to the size of your palm.
The key to the jackets’ effectiveness is that the polyester strands use air to increase loft, just like natural down does. SuperStrand mimics the shape of down clusters, which connect along strands.
The intended effect is to simulate down’s loose, soft, and supple texture. It also works around sheet insulation’s main drawbacks: stiffness, bulkiness, and resistance to compression when packed.