Flying home from a ski trip a few weeks ago, I put my keychain, wallet, and sunglasses in the dog dish, then聽sent them down the conveyor belt聽into the bowels of the TSA X-ray machine. When the dish came out the other side, the glasses were gone. I begged, cajoled, and attempted to bribe the agents to find them. I even offered my incredibly bright FourSevens Mini Mk2 to aid in the efforts. But they were gone, eaten by bureaucracy.聽
I was distraught. Not only were they my favorite glasses of all time鈥the Aether Explorers鈥攂ut this was my third pair, after breaking one (well, Wiley broke them) and losing the other while paddling the Sea of Cortez. At $600 a pair, I couldn鈥檛 justify a fourth.
After a suitable period of self loathing, I set out to find a replacement. I鈥檇 fallen in love with the Aether鈥檚 glare-blocking side shields, their incredibly clear Zeiss glass lenses, and the light weight. So I knew I wanted similar features, just in a much more affordable package.聽
I looked at Revo, but most of their glasses are just too flashy for the city. Then I remembered the classic Julbo Vermont鈥攂asically the original mountaineering glasses.

Julbo remains an independent brand聽based out of Chamonix, France. I liked its history, and the functionality and quality of its products, but otherwise聽excellent products like the Explorer 2.0 just look a little too Dame Edna for my taste. The leather shields on the Vermont had always appealed, but the round lenses gave them a mad scientist air I wasn鈥檛 sure I could pull off. They also came only with extremely dark lenses designed to cut the brightness of high-altitude snow and ice, which means they鈥檙e too dark for most mundane situations, like driving my truck.
I was playing around on Julbo's website, wishing for a better looking version of the Vermont, when I saw . And they were exactly what I was looking for. Leather shields? Check. Lenses suitable for sub-alpine wear too? Check. Good looks? Double check. $170 price? Sold.
My biggest concern while I waited on the Amazon delivery was that the polycarbonate lenses wouldn鈥檛 be as clear or as nice to look through as the Zeiss glass I鈥檇 gotten used to with the Aethers.

The package arrived the afternoon before a 4×4 trip to Death Valley. So, I threw them in my old Land Rover, and put them on for聽first wear as the sun rose over the Mojave desert. I was immediately taken aback by my vision clarity, and also by how much light they cut. They鈥檙e every bit as clear as the Aethers, but where those glasses had perforated shields that still allowed some light through, the leather on these totally seals out all light that doesn鈥檛 come through the lenses. The effect was transformative鈥攚hen I wear them I can feel my eyes being more open and more relaxed, without even the tiniest bit of squinting in bright desert light.
When I ordered them, I hadn鈥檛 really understood what the flexible temples were, but that part has really helped improved both comfort and retention. The back half of each temple is covered in grippy black rubber, and flexes like heavy-gauge wire. You can leave them fairly flat, for easy on-off through casual wear, or twist them tightly around your ears. Doing that holds them tightly to your face through physical activity, meaning not only will they not fall off, but also that they won鈥檛 shift. After the looks, this is my favorite thing about the Chams.

So far, they鈥檝e worked great while driving, hiking, doing some moderate rock scrambling, and even skiing. I鈥檝e also gotten compliments on them from virtually everyone, with the notable exception of my girlfriend. Her specific objection is to the leather shields鈥攎y favorite part鈥攚hich is why I haven鈥檛 yet told her that they detach.