โ€œDesigned By Adventure.โ€ Itโ€™s more than just an advertising slogan. At Outdoor Research, our products have been designed by adventure for more than 30 years, with features and fabrics imagined, tested and perfected in the wild. And like our products, our lives and the lives of our customers are sculpted by the experiences we have in the natural, unpredictable environments we love. We, too, are Designed By Adventure.

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Perfecting the balance between warmth and moisture management isnโ€™t easy, and getting it wrong can turn your stellar day in the mountains into an epic. Fortunately for us all, the design team at Outdoor Research got it right with the Men's Deviator Hoody and Women's Deviator Hoody, a lightweight, breathable active Insulation piece that was named a Backpacker Magazine Editorsโ€™ Choice for Spring 2015.

โ€œThe challenge of keeping certain areas of our body warmer and but avoiding excess perspiration and heat from too much warmth is a never ending one,โ€ says Jeannie Wall, an Outdoor Research Product and Marketing Consultant for Alpine and Rock Climbing with decades of experience competing and playing in the mountains. Itโ€™s a constant balancing act, and a challenge all too familiar for the designers at Outdoor Research.

Outdoor Research Deviator Hoody

Though the Deviator is lightweight, it is anything but simple. It begins with a hybrid-mapped design. This design philosophy obtains optimal performance by placing unique, technical fabrics in areas where their performance is best appreciated. While hybridized jackets have been in the Outdoor Research line for over a decade, โ€œThe Deviator reflects one of our most concerted efforts to put the right fabric in the right places for our athletes, regardless of previous convention,โ€ says Jason Duncan, Technical Apparel Product Manager at Outdoor Research. The imagination, innovation and effort paid off when the Deviator won the Backpacker Magazine Editorsโ€™ Choice Award. While the honor is substantial, the designers at Outdoor Research always return their attention to what matters most: the customerโ€™s needs.

The Outdoor Research Deviator Hoody


โ€œIt always culminates in trying to meet a functional need for our customers,โ€ says Wall. โ€œOften, however, ideas for solving these problems come from researching new fabrics.โ€ In the case of the Deviator, they set out to experiment with Polartecยฎ Alphaยฎ, a premier active insulation. As they worked with different constructions and fabrics, something became apparent.

โ€œWe had the opportunity to lose the bulk of a mid-layer fleece or wool by using this new super quick drying and breathable puff insulation,โ€ says Wall.

the Outdoor Research Deviator Hoody uses Polartec Alpha insulation

The team used the Polartecยฎ Alphaยฎ insulation in its lightest weight package. For the jacketโ€™s liner fabric, the team decided on a stretch mesh. This passes on the heat and moisture directly to the Alphaยฎ insulation without using, for example, a taffata inner layer. โ€œThis is one of the biggest benefits to our athletes,โ€ says Duncan, โ€œinsulation with maximum airflow.โ€

Finding the right lightweight shell to cover the Alphaยฎ insulation became the next challenge. The team went out on a limb. โ€œThere are not many 7D fabrics out there that work in the outdoor industry,โ€ says Duncan, โ€œbut ultimately we found one that met our high standards and it really keeps the weight down, while helping to add warmth by cutting drafts in the forward-facing torso area.โ€

Finally, to finish off the jacketโ€™s materials, the team chose the Polartecยฎ Power Dryยฎ Power Gridโ„ข fleece for the back, arms and hood because of its breathability and maximum wicking.

The Outdoor Research Deviator Hoody uses Polartec Power Dry High Efficiency fleece

Duncan originally targeted the Deviator for spring touring. However, during the testing phase, Martin Volkenโ€”an IFMGA guide and product development expertโ€”kept using the Deviator long beyond its perceived limitations. In fact, Volken said, โ€œI see this as a year round piece for a variety of applications.โ€ย  It was a wake-up call for Duncan and he began to reframe the design, by getting the jacket out to climbers, winter runners, cyclists and hikers for testing. They all had the same response to Duncanโ€”โ€œThis jacket is awesome.โ€

A few of the final challenges were fitโ€”how trim can you go to optimize performanceโ€”and color. โ€œColor isnโ€™t something most people worry about in design, but when you are hybridizing four fabrics,โ€ says Duncan, โ€œit is a challenge to execute it well.โ€

The last touch, as surprising as it may seem, was the thumbholes. While features this small donโ€™t usually go through so many iterations, the design team wanted to satisfy its most demanding users. โ€œSometimes when you know you have something special like the Deviator, you want to ensure you make every feature as perfect as possible, no matter how small.โ€

The time and energy the designers poured into this jacket helped it earn the 2015 Backpacker Magazine Editorsโ€™ Choice Award. However, as Duncan notes, if Outdoor Researchโ€™s customers donโ€™t also see the Deviator as something innovative and useful, wards mean little.

Wall agrees: โ€œWe're grateful to see our products get recognition from reputable sources like Backpacker, but ultimately the truest confirmation is our customersโ€™ satisfaction.โ€

Shop the Men's Deviator Hoody and the Women's Deviator Hoody now.

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