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Built
from Icebreaker
RedRam is part of
the Icebreaker family. Back in 1994, Icebreaker pioneered the merino outdoor
clothing category when founder, Jeremy Moon, saw the opportunity to make
natural performance garments when everything else around was made from
synthetic fibres. Icebreaker invented the world’s first merino layering
system, and it was the first outdoor apparel company to source merino
directly and ethically from the growers.
|
BREATHABLE |
I want you to be perfectly warm, not hot
and sweaty. That's where RedRam shines. Merino thermal underwear stays
drier because it naturally absorbs perspiration from your skin and
releases it into the air. |
| NATURAL |
I like people warming, not global warming.
So RedRam couldn't be more natural. The ingredients are grass, water and
sunshine. I grow it and it's woven into your thermals. Unlike polyprop
underwear which is made from petrochemicals. |
| NOT STINKY |
You can ski, hike, or fish all day, or run
up and down the sideline, whatever the weather. No matter how active you
get in your RedRam, it won't get smelly. Synthetic fibres stink to high
heaven but Merino is far more efficient than other fibres at releasing
sweat and moisture. |
| WARM |
Put on a silky smooth, super light merino
garment and you'll enjoy the warmth of a heavy sweater. But you'll have
none of the bulk. That's because of merino's finely crimped fibres,
which create millions of air pockets to capture your body heat. |
| SUSTAINABLE |
No use making men's and women's thermal
underwear if there's not going to be a world left to wear it in.
Fortunately RedRam merino wool is renewable and biodegradable. We merino
are shorn each year, then we return to the mountains to grow more
underwear. Merino is biodegradable and unlike cotton and synthetics it
uses very low-energy production processes. |
| PURE MERINO |
I am pure merino. And we merino spend our
days roaming high in the spacious Southern Alps of New Zealand. Our
coats are designed to naturally handle all extremes of weather. And that
can mean -20 degrees celcius in winter. |

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