This is part of #国产吃瓜黑料FlannelWeek, a celebration of the fabric we all know and love.
Fall is here. Yes, there鈥檚 a nip in the air, yellow aspen leaves flutter聽to the ground, and the days grow shorter. But the real harbinger of fall is this聽undeniable phenomenon:聽when more than half of the people I encounter on a daily basis are wearing flannel.
Cool guy walking down the mixed-use path in skinny black jeans, smoking a cig, wearing an airy open flannel?聽Check. That lady mountain biker raging past聽me in a cloud of dust wearing her tech checks?聽Boom. My wife, in yoga pants and a classy green and orange number, also wearing our months-old baby in a chest carrier?聽Yep. And, as I'm writing this, at least 50 percent of 国产吃瓜黑料聽staffers at our Santa Fe HQ聽are wearing flannel, or thinking about doing it tomorrow.
One of those people is me. Usually I go to great lengths to avoid what other people are doing (long story short: I'm a snob),聽but with flannel I just don鈥檛 give a shit. They鈥檙e too practical, comfortable, and good-looking for me to worry about it. Plus, wearing flannel is part of my heritage.
I grew up in a logging and fishing town on the south coast of Oregon, where flannel聽is as ubiquitous as water falling from the sky. Loggers wore classic red and black checks. My father sported聽wool Pendletons under his sports coat in the doctor鈥檚 office. I wore them to work in the yard, check the surf, and go on hikes, rain or shine, all year long. When we'd go to the big city of Portland, well, you know鈥攆lannel works for hipsters, too.聽
I鈥檝e made a聽trip to Scotland鈥攏ot far from where flannel was originally conceived in Wales鈥攖o hold the real deal in my own hands. I鈥檝e buttoned that lamb fiber against my skin. Yes, flannel is a material, not a pattern and it is traditionally made of wool. I believe that construction聽is superior to other iterations, but my love for flannel runs so deep that I do not care what it's made from. (I also harbor a weakness for the plaid pattern itself.)
I own the heavy duty wool stuff聽and the cozy cotton knock offs. I have a thin, linen-feeling polo that is definitely not flannel, but it鈥檚 wonderful as a flannel accent during the long days of summer. Yes, I鈥檒l even admit I once owned a pair of real flannel pants鈥攂ut we don鈥檛 have to talk about that.聽
I liken flannels to jeans. They鈥檙e both so omnipresent that no one thinks twice about them, whether you鈥檙e in a meeting (at least here, at 国产吃瓜黑料's HQ)聽or amongst the trees. That鈥檚 because the shirts are so versatile and practical. Wool flannels are superb in wet weather. The velvety cotton versions are comfy house layers in winter. Tech flannels are made specifically for most outdoor sports and add a dose of style to our open spaces. And thanks to lumbersexuals, they鈥檙e totally acceptable in any U.S. city.
When I slide on my favorite patterned shirt and I know I look good, there鈥檚 no stopping me, whether I鈥檓 heading to work or the crag. Usually it bothers me when I show up somewhere and there鈥檚 somebody wearing the same thing as me. But when I arrive at the trailhead and I spy one of my square-wearing brethren, I nod to their fine taste. I'm in good company.