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Three Wool Garments You Can Wear All Year

Mar 28, 2024Mar 28, 2024

This article originally appeared on Outside

Here's the problem with loving wool: You can have a wonderful cozy winter layered up with your long johns and sweaters and socks and mittens, and then-bam!--the snow melts and you have to pack it all away. But fear not! There are now more year-round wool options than ever, thanks to wool blends, lighter fabric weights, and (I like to think) a greater cultural appreciation for the fiber. If you've been dreaming of four-season wool in your life, here are three favorites that you'll never have to take off.

Sizes: XS-XXL

Leggings might or might not be pants--blah-blah, debate-debate--but wool long underwear, are decidedly not pants, thanks to their saggy knees and saggy butts. This is sad for me, because I live in wool long underwear all winter and don't like to give them up. Typically I throw a down skirt over them when I head to town, which works because I live in the Northwoods, where standards for formality are low. But in my heart, I know I'm pushing it.

Enter wool leggings. This pair from Woolly is 95 percent merino and 5 percent elastane, so they have a nice stretch but still feel firm and substantial. They hit around belly-button height, don't slip down (despite my many efforts to get them to do so), are machine washable, and feel equally wearable as a winter baselayer as they are with a tank top and sneakers on a sunny day. In fact, they're particularly nice on a warm day, because the fabric is highly breathable and doesn't get stinky even if you sweat all over them, which I did.

I'm now baffled that anyone makes long underwear that aren't also leggings, or leggings that aren't merino, especially considering that the price point here is similar to that of fancy non-merino leggings or non-legging wool long underwear. And if you can't stand the thought of covering your legs in summer, there's also a bike shorts version that's just as nice.

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Sizes: XS-2X

This is quite possibly the perfect travel dress, because it's packable, washable, versatile, layer-able, and not particularly wrinkly or smelly. But those are great traits for non-travel clothing, too, and I'm already wearing this dress more than almost anything else in my wardrobe. For one thing, it's super flattering: it has enough of a waistline to look nice dressed-up, but it's still incredibly flowy, and the wrap style looks equally at home with a cardigan as it does with hiking boots and a backpack. For me, at five-foot-eight-inches tall, the hem ends just below mid-thigh-- short enough to feel flirty, but long enough that I don't feel like I'm going to flash anyone in a strong breeze. (If you prefer more coverage, there's another version available that's three inches longer.)

The fabric is a little thin, kind of like t-shirt material, and feels cool and breezy on hot days. If you've tried other Wool& dresses, you'll know that some of them are made of a merino terry that feels substantial and has more weight for winter. This lighter fabric looks great, and is plenty opaque, but it rides up a little bit over tights and leggings. On the annoyingness scale, I'd categorize this as mild: it's not so frustrating that I'd avoid it, but you should expect to tug things into place occasionally. Still, that's a small price to pay for a dress you can truly wear year-round.

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Sizes: One

This poncho is somehow both the least and most practical garment I own, in the sense that wearing it at any time is a statement, and it's prone to getting in the way, but it also fits over anything and feels just-right in any temperature south of scorching. I have received countless compliments while wearing it, probably because people were staring at it anyway and didn't know what else to say.

Imagine a piece of thick, stretchy 100 percent alpaca, roughly the size of a twin sheet, with a generous hood in the center. Because it has so much material, you can wrap it around yourself to make it quite a bit warmer, or leave it hanging loose and catch a breeze through the sides. Need an emergency towel? Stargazing blanket? Mosquito deterrent? A cover-up to wear to the communal shower at the campground? Something to wrap around your date's shoulders before you lean in for a kiss? You're covered for it all.

I wore it for a week straight while recovering from surgery, and then another week straight while camping, and it performed equally well in both situations. It will smell like campfire smoke all year.

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