New Sale
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-gs
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-bs
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-fs
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-ns7
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-cs1
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-cs2
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-cs3
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-cs4
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-cs5
Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA-cs6
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image
Product image

Marmot

Sun Point Full Zip Hoody-DNA

Article no.: marm01-47460

Supplier information

Marmot

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections. 

 

Since a marmot is a small, sociable ground squirrel, it might be interesting to know how the company by the same name got its start. So off we go! In 1971, there were two University of California Santa Cruz students, Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley, who were involved in a Glaciology school project at Alaska's Juneau Icefield. Since glacial weather is unusually cold, these two put their heads together to develop their own down vests, sweaters, parkas and sleeping bags. The warmest sleeping bag, called the PIKA (now the CWM), kept human inhabitants warm at minus forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. 

After climbing the Grand Teton in Wyoming, Eric and Dave rented a 100-year-old stone building near downtown Grand Junction Colorado and started their own rental and retail store under the auspicious name Marmot Mountain Works. To make ends meet, they taught cross-country skiing. The Marmot company was launched in 1974.

A fortuitous Hollywood connection acted as a springboard when a Twentieth Century Fox movie called "The Eiger Sanction" (starring Clint Eastwood) needed 108 puffy, insulated jackets for crew and actors to brave the cold. The Marmot company rallied and designed and supplied the Golden Mantle jacket, its first big order. 

In 1976, Eric met Joe Tanner of W.L. Gore & Associates, the manufacturer of Gore-Tex outdoor performance fabric. Eric at Marmot was intrigued by the new fabric and within two weeks had sewn prototype Gore-Tex sleeping bags to field test. Eric and Dave spent the next seven nights in a frozen meat locker, were totally impressed, and started making all the Marmot items with Gore-Tex. Marmot is the longest-running customer of W.L. Gore in the world for outdoor products. Not too squirrely after all. 

Marmot has expanded since 1974, keeping their commitment to the highest quality standards for performance products, and Hisroom.com is especially pleased to welcome this adventurous outdoor brand to our collections.