国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Image
Image

Published: 
Sponsor Content: Ice Breaker

Breaking the Ice

When Jeremy Moon founded New Zealand-based merino wool pioneer Icebreaker, he not only created a new category of apparel鈥攈e changed our entire relationship with nature

Like a lot of great ideas and adventures, this one began as a love story. It was 1994, and Icebreaker founder Jeremy Moon鈥檚 girlfriend at the time, a young American from Philadelphia, became smitten with a T-shirt. Not just any old shirt, but one made from merino wool, the top-shelf fabric most commonly used in men鈥檚 suits and sweaters. A sheep farmer in New Zealand鈥檚 Southern Alps had shown it to her鈥攁nd she couldn鈥檛 stop raving about how unique it was.

Icebreaker founder, Jeremy Moon
Icebreaker founder, Jeremy Moon

Moon鈥攁 newly minted, 24-year-old cultural anthropologist making a living in market research鈥攚as sufficiently intrigued. Although he had grown up in New Zealand, one of the world鈥檚 largest exporters of wool, he knew very little about the natural fabric.

A week later, he arranged to meet the farmer, Brian Brackenridge, for lunch. 鈥淗e threw this lightweight, woolen T-shirt across the table and asked me what I thought,鈥 says Moon. 鈥淚 pulled it on right there in the restaurant, and it wasn鈥檛 anything like what I鈥檇 expected. It was soft and silky and incredibly comfortable.鈥

Over the next few weeks, Moon didn鈥檛 take it off. He wore it running, mountain biking, out at night, and to work and bed. At the time, nearly all technical base layers were made out of synthetic fabrics, which Moon had recently worn on a rainy five-day sea-kayaking trip with friends鈥攚ith underwhelming results. 鈥淲e were wet and miserable and all stunk terribly after a few days,鈥 he says. Not only would the merino wool have performed (and smelled) better, he remembers thinking, but it also resonated with him on a more fundamental level. 鈥淚t seemed wrong to be wearing these plastic clothes to go out and enjoy nature,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut this shirt allowed me to wear something natural in nature. It synced with my values, and I had a hunch that it鈥檇 sync with millions of other people鈥檚.鈥

There was good reason to believe so. Up until the late 1970s, wool was considered the go-to performance fabric for the adventurous set, including pro cyclists and climbers. It stayed warm when wet, didn鈥檛 catch fire, and naturally wicked sweat away. But it was also itchy, bulky, and took a long time to dry, which is why lots of hikers and campers had switched over to synthetic alternatives.

Merino wool, however, was a different story. The fibers are longer and finer, which translates into a softer and silkier fabric. It鈥檚 also stronger and more durable, with a better warmth-to-weight ratio, than regular old wool. As Moon discovered, merino is the finest wool fiber around, and New Zealand, it turns out, produces merino sheep that arguably grow the softest wool fibers on earth. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 still a performance fabric,鈥 Moon says. 鈥淭hink about it: The wool is keeping the sheep alive in some of the country鈥檚 harshest conditions.鈥

鈥淚t seemed wrong to be wearing these plastic clothes to go out and听enjoy nature,鈥 Moon says. 鈥淏ut this shirt allowed me to wear something听natural in nature. It synced with my values, and I had a hunch that听it鈥檇 sync with millions of other people鈥檚.鈥

Moon was sold. He scraped together $200,000, and in 1995 began peddling an entirely new category of base layer and a big idea: to connect people to nature by wearing a product from nature.听Loaded with samples in his old Datsun, he traversed New Zealand. 鈥淚 was kind of flying blind,鈥 he recalls, 鈥渂ut I knew if I could just get people to wear it, they鈥檇 get it.鈥 Fourteen stores eventually booked orders.

On a lark, Moon set up the yachtsman Sir Peter Blake with a prototype of Icebreaker鈥檚 base layer for his world-record circumnavigation of the globe. Blake came back claiming that he鈥檇 worn the clothes for 40 days and 40 nights without it getting itchy or 鈥渨hiffy.鈥 As Blake鈥檚 accomplishments piled on鈥擜merica鈥檚 Cup winning skipper in 1996鈥攕o did Icebreaker鈥檚.

But just as Icebreaker was about to take off, things began to fall apart, literally, in 1997. Its shirts started shrinking and fraying.

Moon set out to find out why, tracing the root cause to a bad batch of wool. In doing so, he discovered a much bigger problem: New Zealand鈥檚 sheep farmers were being increasingly squeezed by bulk wool buyers. To keep their overhead low, farmers were being forced to run leaner operations, which was negatively affecting the sheep and their coats. 鈥淭he farmers were on the brink of going out of businesses,鈥 Moon says. 鈥淪o I worked with them to figure out how to produce the strongest wool possible, which, it turns out, is to have healthy and happy sheep.鈥

To ensure Icebreaker never suffered from poor fabric again, Moon did the unthinkable in the garment business: He secured long-term contracts with sheep farmers and paid them a premium to guarantee quality, going so far as to institute a tracking system鈥攃alled the Baacode鈥攖hat allowed consumers to trace the wool in a specific garment to the actual farmers who raised the sheep. The gamble worked. Today, New Zealand鈥檚 merino wool economy is thriving, and its approximately 3 million merino sheep (out of 40 million overall) are valued at more than $100 million, with roughly half of the country鈥檚 merino wool grown and sold through sustainable long-term contracts.

These days, Moon is pushing the limits of what merino wool can do in products, which now include everything from underwear and socks to cardigans and wool-insulated jackets. His team is blending it with silk to produce a line of summer-weight tops, developing a lightweight loft weave that can replace goose down in winter jackets (鈥渁nd avoid the whole animal-cruelty aspect of down,鈥 says Moon), and new this winter, Icebreaker鈥檚 BodyFit line features high-tech weaves to strategically boost insulation on certain body parts while breathing more on others.

To increase the durability and versatility of some garments, Moon a few years ago decided to weave small amounts of synthetic fiber into some of Icebreaker鈥檚 fabrics. But not that much, and the company remains firmly rooted in its commitment to merino. 鈥淲e won鈥檛 make something that鈥檚 less than 80 percent wool,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nything less than 80 percent wool compromises the fiber鈥檚 effectiveness.鈥

With each product, Moon has maintained his belief that, for maximum benefit, base layers should have a body-hugging design that is ergonomically made to move with the body. 鈥淲hen you step back and think about it, wool is just an adaptation of something natural:听hair,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o our fitted garments don鈥檛 interrupt the clothing鈥檚 relationship with the body.鈥 Icebreaker is not your grandpa鈥檚 shapeless hand-knitted sweater.

Women in particular have benefited from Moon鈥檚 approach; he sold a women鈥檚 line from the start, a decision that was partly by design and听partly to avoid grief at family gatherings.听鈥淚 have five sisters, my mom, and aunts to answer to,鈥 he says half-jokingly. But his real reason is a belief in the fact that both men and women can and do develop a better relationship with each other through nature. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see it as man versus听nature,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 see it as man and woman together with nature, together. And what we do at Icebreaker with wool, a natural product, reflects that belief.鈥

People get it. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always blown my mind the millions of dollars spent by companies trying to emulate the properties of wool with synthetic fabrics,鈥 says Moon, 鈥渨hen nature鈥檚 wonder fabric is already there. Why not use it?鈥


Icebreaker makes merino clothing for the outdoors, technical sports, and lifestyle, including underwear, midlayer garments, outerwear, socks, and accessories for men, women, and children. Icebreaker is based in Auckland, New Zealand, and is sold in more than 5,000 stores in 50 countries; at Icebreaker retail stores in New Zealand, Australia, Canada, and the United States; and online at .