Protect the ocean so it can protect us

Our future is tied to the ocean. Its shared seas connect us through food, culture and sport. The home of amazing, abundant life, it’s also a powerful climate solution. Yet the practice of bottom trawling threatens to destroy this precious resource—bulldozing our ocean floor, undermining small-scale fisheries and deepening the climate crisis. Let's end this destructive practice, starting with an immediate ban in marine protected areas and inshore zones.

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Shipping Information

We do our best to process and ship orders within 1-2 business days (Monday-Friday, excluding holidays). We kindly ask that you choose standard shipping where possible to reduce our environmental impact. If you have any questions about your order, you can reach out to our Customer Service team and we will be happy to help.

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Returns

Unsure of the right size? Can’t decide between jackets? Our Customer Service team is here to help—the less unnecessary shipping, the better. We have no time limit on returns and accept both current and past-season products.

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Recycled Polyester

Recycled polyester decreases our dependence on virgin petroleum-based materials.

Why

An important fiber in our line, polyester allows us to build lightweight materials that dry quickly and can be used in a variety of applications, including trail-running tops and yoga leggings. Polyester also blends well with natural fabrics like cotton. But virgin polyester is derived from petroleum, which comes at a high environmental cost.

Recycled polyester, which has been available since the early 1990s, is now similarly priced to its virgin counterparts. Using recycled polyester reduces our reliance on petroleum as a source of raw materials, utilizes waste and reduces greenhouse gas emissions from manufacturing. Plus, by using recycled polyester, we can promote new recycling streams for polyester clothing that is no longer wearable.

We’re making progress

We’re decreasing our dependence on virgin petroleum as a raw material source.
95%

The percentage of polyester fabric by weight we made with recycled polyester in Fall 2023.

Where We Are

We began making recycled polyester from plastic soda bottles back in 1993—the first outdoor- clothing manufacturer to transform trash into fleece. Almost 30 years later, we’ve incorporated recycled polyester into our hard shells, boardshorts, fleece and Capilene® baselayers, and overall have only 5% virgin polyester (by weight) left in our line. We’re actively working to convert that remaining amount to recycled material.

When sourcing recycled materials, we ask our supply chain partners to be certified to approved third-party standards, including the Recycled Claim Standard (RCS) and Global Recycled Standard (GRS) certifications. These standards ensure robust chain of custody practices are in place and reduce the risks of unauthorized mixing or swapping of materials. We are committed to achieving RCS or GRS certification at 100% of our eligible fabric mills by 2025.

We’re also investing in secondary waste streams beyond plastic bottles, including post-consumer textiles through JEPLAN's chemical recycling program, which helps address our own waste. To address harder-to-recycle materials, we’re working with a supply chain partner that turns cafeteria trays and other pigmented plastics—which are more difficult to recycle than clear types—into recycled polyester.

And we’ve recently introduced new products that contain recycled polyester that’s OceanCycle®-certified and sourced from plastic bottles collected from coastlines that lack waste management infrastructure. Having a third-party certification like OceanCycle gives us trust and transparency in the recycling system, and the confidence that waste management networks can benefit from community improvement programs.

For the Fall 2023 season, 95% of our polyester fabrics by weight are made with recycled polyester. As a result of not using virgin polyester, we avoided emitting more than 20.5 million pounds of CO₂e into the atmosphere.

What’s Next

We’re looking to the next generation of potentially recyclable materials. Long-term, we’re also considering more chemical-recycling technologies that might allow us to reuse recycled garments and get us closer to a “circular” manufacturing process.

Recycled Polyester
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