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The First Flag to Fly over Denali
Guest Curator Angela Linn examines the flag Robert Tatum made during the first ascent of Denali in 1913. Tatum used materials from the team’s gear — bits of silk, strips of cotton, even a shoelace. The flag was flown at the summit of Denali on June 7, 1913.
The artifact arrived at the museum last week, along with the letter from Hudson Stuck inviting Tatum to join the expedition.The flag was thought to have been lost, but Linn tracked it down through family members to Doug Tatum, the great grandnephew of the first ascent team member. The family had it professional conserved and mounted. It had been hanging in Doug’s office.
Four climbers reached the summit of Denali together: Stuck, Tatum, Walter Harper, and Harry Karstens. The museum will tell their stories in the special exhibit, Denali Legacy: 100 Years on the Mountain. It opens in May.
(via ladyinbluejeans)
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He must have been a hell of a trekker!
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70’s Synchilla
Patagonia Common Threads Initiative -

Dhaulagiri first ascent - Peter Diener and Ernst Forrer, 13th May 1960.
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John Roskelley and Ngawang Sanden on Dhaulagiri Summit, May 12 1973.
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Behind the Great Pacific Iron Works store near Ventura Point is the small tin shed where Yvon Chouinard set up his blacksmith shop in 1966. The shed once housed Bob Cooper’s Australian Surf Shop and Morey-Pope’s shaping room. The location was ideal for everyone’s passion: surf and building the finest mountaineering gear in the winter, climb and sell the gear in the summer. Chouinard Equipment Company went on to redesign and improve virtually every tool used in mountaineering, from carabiners to crampons. In 1973, the company branched out to make outdoor clothing under the Patagonia label.
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Mountain Of All Storms
The journey that started an American subculture. In 1968, five friends Yvon Chouinard, Doug Thompkins, Chris Jones, Lito Tejeda Flores and Dick Dorworth left Ventura, California in a Ford Econoline van. Three and a half months and 16,500 miles later, they arrived at their destination Patagonia. Their first ascent of Fitz Roy’s Southwest Buttress the so-called ‘Californian Route’ was not the only upshot of the trip. Thompkins went on to found Esprit and The North Face, and Chouinard founded Patagonia, providing inspiration for the generations of dirt bags who would follow in their footsteps.
Winner of the Best Film Award at the 1972 Trento Film Festival.
Director/Producer: Doug Thompkins/Yvon Chouinard.
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Chouinard
Posted on January 3, 2013 via WEFT with 34 notes
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The Grandfather
Yvon Chouinard, Ventura, California
Dear Patagonia,Little did we know this blue prototype fleece developed in ’76, which we referred to as rare Siberian blue poodle fur, would be the grandfather of all fleeces.
I knew that people like myself were seeking the joys of outdoor activities in greater numbers and they needed warmer, lighter, quick-drying clothes that did not bog down with moisture as did the cotton and wool garments then commonly in use. I came to believe that the solution was synthetic layers: a base layer to wick, a fleece layer for warmth and an outside layer for wind and moisture protection. Once we came to that conclusion, Patagonia’s team proved they were up to the task of creatively identifying and developing the necessary fabrics.
As they say, “necessity is the mother of invention,” the “necessity” in this case being the need for a nonabsorbent insulating layer and the “invention” representing the resourcefulness of my wife, Malinda Chouinard, who was willing to try even an ugly fabric intended for toilet seat covers because we suspected it best fit our needs. That’s how synthetic fleece was born. We made the first fleece jackets out of a near-bankrupt company’s left-over inventory of muddy, nondescript tan and bilious blue fleece, but it did indeed work, although it pilled badly, which made it look even worse. It has evolved, through trial and error, from that “base” into today’s fleeces.
This first fleece jacket hangs proudly on the wall at Patagonia headquarters, but I had to take it down and try it on for old time’s sake.
―Yvon
(via patagonia)
Posted on January 2, 2013 via Worn Wear with 282 notes
Source: wornwear






