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Here we are talking about 80 or more) T-shirts, so this is a valid question. I think Merino T-shirts are worth investing. They offer significant benefits from cotton and other natural fibers, as well as synthetics. Merino offers great temperature regulation, excellent wicked moisture and do not smell, which means you can wear them anymore and you don’t need more than them. Three Merino T-shirts in your wardrobe will take you as many days as well as 10 cotton shirts, so it is with a financial angle that is washing.
Here is a quick drop in some advantages of Merino wool:
Scent-resistant: One of the superpears of Merino wool is that it is naturally resistant to odors. This means you can wear Merino T-shirt repeatedly before you need to wash it. How many times? I’d say it depends where you are and what you do, but usually three to seven times. Our top choice is, after all, called 72-hour T-shirt, because it is how long you can carry it before washable.
Thermoregulation: Merino wool can warm you in cold weather and cool in warm weather. Yes, there are limitations on it – no shirts to cool you on a hot summer day in the tropics – but Merino is far outdated cotton and synthetics.
Humidity Vicking: This is important for everything you wear while hiking or at the gym. Merino wool is excellent in starting moisture away from your skin, through the fabric, where it can evaporate quickly. That is why it makes such a good basic layer.
Versatility: T-shirts from Wool Merino are great for traveling, hiking, backpacks and as everyday T-shirts for the city. Can also be used throughout the year, even in the cold, as part of a good layer system.
Package: T-shirts Merino wool tend to pack less than cotton and many synthetics, which means they take fewer rooms in your bag when traveling. Combine this with the upper resistance of the odor and your commission for superior travel.
The free cotton and shirt of the nylon blends can have the edge is a durability. Merino wool is not very much durable in my experience, but it can pill, which wool fibers take a break and plug together in tiny nodes, forming small balls on the T-shirt. Some piling is not a big deal, but if a lot of shirts are much you know that it is made of very made of short woolen fibers, not longer continuous fibers.
Unfortunately, most producers do not advertise the length of their gutter fibers, which enters our testing. I hate peeling, and I eliminated all the shirts that I broke, except for one, which I love anyway, which I don’t like (peeling is not so bad anyway).