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bae
12-3-14, 3:06pm
I love Filson clothing. It is well made, generally made in the USA from US materials, wears great, lasts forever.

My grandfather pretty much lived in an entire wardrobe of their products, then again he bought his in the 1940s, and my mother inherited his stash, and is still using it.

It has one major flaw in my opinion - it is priced incredibly dearly. The demand from fashionistas has driven up the cost of Filson clothing to insane levels. (And also forced them to put some urban-lumberjack-oriented products in their lineup, as true Filson clothing is meant for more robust environments.)

Anyways, I needed a new pair of all-wool pants for wilderness search and rescue. You aren't allowed to go out with any cotton clothing in your possession, it gets wet, you get cold, you die.

Filson makes the ideal pants for my need, the "Mackinaw Field Pants". They are alas $245. Too much for pants to wear for a specific, fairly rare purpose. And unappealing to my basically frugal nature.

Filson is based in Seattle. As it happens, they have a *real* factory outlet store about 60 miles north of Seattle, tucked into a hole-in-the-wall strip mall, too far from civilization for the wealthy hipsters of Seattle to bother driving up to. It is conveniently on the way to the dock that leads to my island however. Their selection is quite limited in size and style and color. It's all first-quality goods that aren't selling, or that they overproduced. I dropped by the outlet yesterday, and amazingly, they had just the correct pants, in exactly my size in waist and inseam, for 60% off, and the fellow threw in a sickeningly-overpriced $60 pair of Filson leather suspenders for $20. In-and-out of the store in 10 minutes, with pants that will last a good part of another century. (My $10 wool Austrian Army surplus pants finally met their end on a rescue last year, and they dated from the 1950s.)

http://www.filson.com/products/mackinaw-field-pants.14010.html

I suppose their stuff may be frugal even at list price, since it lasts multiple generations if cared for, but I have a hard time with the initial investment.

beckyliz
12-3-14, 3:17pm
I have to admit I've never heard of Filson - thanks for the history lesson! Glad you found a great deal.

Packy
12-3-14, 3:19pm
That's nice, BAE. Very Hip. :thankyou:But, did it occur to you that by purchasing these clothes, you might be taking the rice right out of the mouths of the children of garment workers in Asia and Central America?

bae
12-3-14, 3:24pm
But, did it occur to you that by purchasing these clothes, you might be taking the rice right out of the mouths of the children of garment workers in Asia and Central America?

Yes, and straight into the mouths of children of weavers and sheep farmers and garment workers right here in the State of Washington.

bae
12-3-14, 3:26pm
And related, and perhaps a factor in the pricing/supply issues of which I whine:

http://gearjunkie.com/the-rise-of-the-lumbersexual

https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-cny6DUg02cc/VEqeQWTYDDI/AAAAAAAAMSU/bkWM8EXeAiM/s720/Awesomized.jpg

KayLR
12-3-14, 4:25pm
Hmm..the local PDX hipsters have a store right in their Pearl District backyard!

Alan
12-3-14, 5:32pm
Lumbersexual, a term I heard for the first time just a week or so ago. http://time.com/3603216/confessions-of-a-lumbersexual/
Now twice in one week?

herbgeek
12-3-14, 8:38pm
Today was the first time I heard the term (here) and then again it was on Apartment Therapy. Weird.

iris lilies
12-3-14, 10:59pm
lumbersexual is hilarious as a term!

Me, I cannot stand even the idea of wool pants. oh, ugh. ack. itchy itchy, hot.

iris lilies
12-3-14, 11:02pm
lumbersexual is hilarious as a term!

Me, I cannot stand even the idea of wool pants. oh, ugh. ack. itchy itchy, hot.

But how pretty is this? Mama Mia. I like the look. Actually, I did not relate to metrosexuals, too much shiney.

http://gearjunkie.com/images/20001.jpg

bae
12-3-14, 11:14pm
Me, I cannot stand even the idea of wool pants. oh, ugh. ack. itchy itchy, hot.

In truth, these are quite non-itchy, the fabric is so densely woven so as to be wind and water resistant that it is almost like a fine felt. It wasn't terribly hot test-wearing them in a 65 degree house, I was concerned I'd never be able to wear them inside - they seem to breath reasonably well.

Normally I hate the wool for the same reason.

HappyHiker
12-7-14, 3:06pm
Thanls for the education about lumbersexual/lumbersexuality. New term/trend to me. The things you learn on Simple Living.

Upon first hearing the terms here, my literal mind went immediately to an image of a kinky person having sex with trees.

I was relieved to discover that it's just another clothing/grooming trend to balance our tech lives with the outdoors. Lumber wanna-be's, so to speak. Wonder what the corresponding look is for lumber dudettes?

Maybe I should dig out my old Doc Martens? Each one weighs about 22 pounds-- good for felling tall timber in the field.

Tradd
12-7-14, 3:59pm
You guys make me laugh!

JaneV2.0
12-7-14, 4:38pm
Iris Lily, I've lived in the PNW all my life and have never seen a lumberjack (or facsimile) remotely approaching that godlike being. Thanks for posting!

Molly
12-8-14, 1:59pm
Bae - Have you ever checked ebay? I get a lot of high end stuff by creating a want list. I get automatic emails when something I want becomes available. I've got my eye on a certain Filson sweater that they carried a year or two ago. It has appeared twice on ebay, but in sizes too large for me. One day I hope my size becomes available.

I've had really good luck with Pendleton items. I've got several sweaters within a season or two of being in their catalog.

bae
12-8-14, 2:28pm
Molly - thanks for the tip! I didn't even know there was a want list function!

Gardenarian
12-8-14, 3:01pm
I buy men's wool suit pants from the thrift store for cold weather hiking or camping. Not stylish, but they do the job.