The Great Outdoors – July 2019

(Ben Green) #1
NOTES: - All base
layers tested are
women’s specific.


  • Weights are from
    my digital scales


Photo: Shutterstock

78 The Great Outdoors July 2019

Base layers


Judy Armstrong assesses the most versatile tops for all year round


L


Let’s talk about lightweight base layers.
No, don’t yawn; these things are awesome.
It’s rare that you will pause in an outdoor
store, reach out to touch one and know,
deep in your heart, that you absolutely must
have it. But if there is one garment that
you cannot do without, it’s a really good,
lightweight, long-sleeved, next-to-skin top.
It is versatile for every season: as a single
layer in warm weather, or layered when it’s
cold. It’s even a ‘must’ for safety: keeping
skin dry is vital to comfort and, in extreme
conditions, your life. Hypothermia is never a
problem for walkers who are warm and dry.
While features are relevant, they’re
fairly basic. What matters more is fabric.
The main fabric groups – polyester,
polypropylene, nylon, merino wool – have
different performance characteristics.
Often they fly solo but increasingly they
are combined – for example, polyester with
polypropylene or wool – along with less
traditional components, such as activated
carbon embedded in fibres, bamboo and
silver salts – and even coffee grounds, in the
case of Helly Hansen’s Lifa Active.
Here’s a summary of the most common
fabrics; for blends, you can work out

Check for this


WOMEN’S


the likely characteristics based on the
percentage of each fibre.
Polyester is the most common base
layer fibre. It is relatively inexpensive, wicks
sweat rapidly and dries quickly. It gets
smelly, although some odour resistance
treatments (especially those with a silver
salt base) definitely help in the short term.
Polyamide (nylon) is less smelly than
polyester. It too wicks sweat but is slower
to dry.
Polypropylene is hydrophobic, pulling
sweat away from the body and pushing it
to the next layer. Lighter weights dry very
quickly. It does get smelly but modern long-
chain filaments are more odour-resistant
than the old-style tops that gave polypro a
bad name.
Merino wool varies between brands.
I haven’t included it in this test because I was
focusing on lightweights for summer, but
relevant factors include the weight, fibre
softness and diameter (coarse wool causes
itching) and fibre treatment (eg chlorine-
free wool). Wool is naturally odour-
resistant but is slow to dry and, when damp,
feels clammy against the skin. See the panel
on the facing page for more info and tips.

Gear comparative review



  1. A close fit picks up and moves moisture
    more efficiently than a relaxed fit. Tight tops
    need stretch to avoid being restrictive. In warm
    weather, a looser fit allows airflow but is slower
    to move sweat.

  2. Flat-locked seams are more comfortable
    against bare skin than raised seams. Exterior
    stitching, which is the norm with flat-locked
    seams, has the potential to snag or abrade at
    rub-points like rucksack straps, but it is rare
    this affects seam integrity.

  3. Tops should be long enough to tuck into
    shorts or trousers, or under a rucksack hipbelt,
    and stay there. Plus, tight, stretchy tops that
    are too short tend to roll up from the hips to the
    waist, like a rubber ring.

  4. Women’s lightweight base layers differ
    from men’s: they have more shaping, often
    through curved or offset side seams. They have
    narrower shoulders, more waisting and hip,
    and can be slightly shorter.

  5. Anti-odour treatments have become more
    effective but the fibres are more relevant:
    wool resists odour best, followed by nylon,
    bamboo-related fibres, with polypropylene
    and polyester fairly level.

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