ZIPPERS
I use the YKK number 10, molded-tooth zipper
for all my sleeping bags and outerwear garments. The reason is simple:
they are the strongest zippers you can buy.
When I became involved in the camping
equipment business in 1968, all of the quality sleeping bag manufacturers
used the number 10, molded-tooth zipper. Sometime in the mid-1970s they
all changed to the coil zipper. Why? Because it is lighter. (I weighed
one, cut the exact same length as what I use. The weight difference is
less than one ounce.) The sleeping bag manufacturers never considered the
durability of the lighter weight zipper. I've heard from many people who
are replacing whatever brand of bag they owned because these zippers
failed. The coil zippers, simply put, are inadequate for use on
sleeping bags.
I remember a fellow coming into Wiggy's, a
few years ago, with a North Face bag made between 1970 and 1975 when they
were still using Hollofil insulation. The bag was flat as can be. The
fellow said he
needed a new
zipper. He needed a new bag. The zipper was a number 10 YKK
molded-tooth zipper, and it was in perfect condition, all that was needed
was a new top slider. Today, look at any North Face bag and all you will
see is a small coil zipper.
When I was starting to solicit retailers,
they all commented that the zipper was too big. They said I should use
what every other company used, so my bags could be mated to other brands
of bags. My initial response was to say that a left zip Wiggy bag would
only mate to a right zip Wiggy bag! I then told them I wanted my customers
not to have to worry that the zipper might fail while in the field, as was
happening all the time to other manufacturer bags. Wiggy's is a mail order
business today because the retailers I tried to sell thought they could
tell me how to best make sleeping bags. If they knew so much, they should
have become sleeping bag manufacturers.
My customers are always telling me how great
it is to have these big zippers, on the bags. You would think the other
manufacturers would return to what once was-and still is-the best zipper
made for sleeping bags.
THE END IS NEAR
As you know, I have been writing since the
inception of my newsletter that "waterproof-breathable" fabrics are a
hoax. A company named W.L. Gore and Associates supposedly developed a film
that when laminated to a nylon fabric would allow body moisture out and
not allow rainwater in. They patented their idea, but fortunately
for them they never had to prove to the patent examiner it actually
worked; and then they set out to tell the world about their product.
Advertising dollars flowed like
water to any manufacturer who would use it.
A growing market for outerwear garments that
would perform like those made with Gore-Tex was ripe to buy these
garments. Because of the supposed success they were having other companies
in the textile business decided they could make a product that would
perform as well. The truth of the matter is, these competing
products were every bit the equal of the Gore product, at a considerable
savings. These products weren't waterproof-breathable either. Did they
sell as well? No, because these other companies wouldn't give as much away
in advertising monies.
So Gore had the lion's share of the
market.
For more than 20 years that the concept of
waterproof-breathable has been on the market. It's is now very much on the
decline because enough people have found that products made this way don't
perform as advertised. The unhappy owners of these items tell friends
about their lack of ability to perform, so the potential buyer is
forewarned.
Proof that waterproof-breathable garments
are losing favor with the public has been established by the fact that the
Gore Company is closing plants and not only eliminating factory workers,
but also eliminating in-house sales associates, as they refer to office
personnel.
It is my opinion that some outerwear
companies will continue to offer rainwear as being waterproof-breathable
and using their own name for the material. When the sales of these
products become low enough, those styles will go by the wayside for
good.
The end is near!
A QUESTION
The most often-asked question of me is how
or why I got into the sleeping bag business. I started in the
business world selling interlinings and interfacings, i.e., construction
fabrics used in the manufacture primarily of outerwear. All sewers will
know what I am talking about. One of the materials was insulation
made from reprocessed nylon. This was eventually replaced by polyester
fiber.
I was fortunate to work for people who
allowed me to experiment. I started experimenting with the lamination of
fiberfill to nylon. After about five years, I found that continuous
filament fiber worked best. I
knew
that by eliminating the quilt stitching the insulating properties of a
jacket or sleeping bag would be enhanced. With this knowledge I went to
all of the manufacturers of sleeping bags that were in business
between 1968 and 1973 to show and try to
sell them the on new way of using continuous filament fiber. I received a
universal NO for my efforts. The stock answer I received was "the consumer
will not buy a
synthetic sleeping
bag that does not look like a down bag." My response was, "even if it
performs as well as a down bag?" Still no!
Therefore, if I was to sell my laminated
insulation, later named Lamilite, I had to sell it as a finished product.
After a 13-month sailing sabbatical I went into business, a partnership
with a fellow who
was, as I learned
able to sew anything. That was when I learned, manufacturing, in my first
company known as Olam Outdoor Sports Products. The fiber we used was
Polarguard. The Olam bags were, and still are, better than anything the
other companies make today. They were made with laminated Polarguard, and
every now and then I will come across someone who still has one. The loft
is pretty much gone, so they use them for warm weather.
I sold out in 1977 and went into the
laminating business for the next nine years. I developed Lamilite at the
end of that time and then decided to make sleeping bags. The laminating
business wasn't doing well at the time, so I closed it, opened Wiggy's and
moved from the southeastern U.S. to Colorado. Best move of my life. I
decided not to show or sell the Lamilite to any other manufacturer of
sleeping bags, but instead applied for a patent, which I received, and
started to produce the bags, myself. By the way, there is an endless
demand for the production of Lamilite.
I started out in mail order and slowly I
received a call from a retailer here and there. Some were retailers that
carried the Olam line and others were new to me. There weren't many, but
it was a start. I put on sales representatives, and they all failed to
develop additional stores. The reasons were the same as those given by the
manufacturers: who will buy a sleeping bag that looks like yours? Some
said to stitch the fabric so it looks like it is quilted. I'm pretty
independent, so I told them we couldn't do business. I approached REI, and
the buyer at the time was quite emphatic; he said, "we will never sell a
bag that looks like yours." He was very prophetic, because I have no
interest in ever selling to REI. In any event, mail order sales kept
growing, so I terminated the sales staff and decided to stick with the
mail order business.
By 1991 Wiggy's was the single largest
quality producer of sleeping bags in the country. By 1995 Wiggy's was as
large as all of the other so-called quality producers combined. Today we
are significantly larger than all of the rest of the industry that is
left. Keep in mind that Caribou and Cascade Designs are completely out of
the sleeping bag business, which helped increase Wiggy's lead. The Cascade
Company decided to use the Wiggy's Inc. slogan "Simply the Best," in their
second season. I advised them they couldn't and they agreed not too. I
guess now that they are gone from the business they didn't make a sleeping
bag that would fit the slogan, but I knew that anyway.
I am happy to see companies in other
industries, which make good products, pick up on the slogan. I believe
very strongly that if you make a good product, you should be proud of your
accomplishments.
I constantly get
calls from retailers wanting to carry the Wiggy line of bags. The answer
is an unequivocal No! Where were they eight or so years ago when I needed
them, now I don't need them? I also think, as much go by out of business,
that there goes another dealer who won't burn me with unpaid bills.
Believe me, there have been enough to put many companies in serious
financial straight. All one needs to do is study the number of firms that
have either gone under or been sold. Very
often a Customer orders a product from a retailer and
then waits months. Why? Because the retailer hasn't paid off the
prior season's bills. Of course, the customer is given a song and dance.
This has been very helpful for Wiggy's, so I guess I have a debt of thanks
to the retailer after all.
I have just added 3,000 square feet to the
factory, which is allowing for as many as five more sewing lines. This
gives me the ability to stay ahead of sales, so we always have ready
inventory to ship without delay.
REVIEW IN BACKPACKER MAGAZINE
While writing this newsletter, I received my
copy of Backpacker. In it is a review of a sleeping bag by the sleeping
bag maven Kristen Hostetter. "A bag for soggy nights."
It is my understanding that a review of a
sleeping bag should concentrate on the bag's ability to keep you warm.
Focusing on this primary is not the case in her review of a Mtn. Hardwear
bag called the
2nd Dimension
Stormlight. The bag is insulated with Polarguard 3D, is rated to +10
degrees and weights three pounds, three ounces. That I call a crock. That
is the manufacturer's rating, not Kristin's. If she were to have used it
in that condition, she might very well never have returned to write her
article, so we know she didn't use it at a temperature even remotely close
to +10 degrees.
The thrust of the article is how wonderful
the shell material is. It is a "water-resistant, windproof, breathable
fabric. It is a new proprietary 30-denier ripstop nylon laminated to a
water-resistant membrane. She used the bag more than 30 nights in
conditions that were wet, and the moisture never got into the bag. She
always stayed warm and dry." At no point does she mention the ambient air
temperature. Very often she repeats how well the fabric worked to keep
moisture out and suggests that the moisture from her body got through the
fabric to the outside.
I have a question. Why doesn't Mtn. Hardwear
start to sell this material or film to all of the rainwear firms in th
world if it performs as Kristin claims? We know there is a waiting market
for waterproof-breathable fabrics. Mtn. Hardwear would make a ton of
money-as a supplier to the industry; they wouldn't even have to stay a
manufacturer.
Bottom line: the fabric doesn't do what it
is advertised to do, and the bag temperature rating is equally inaccurate.
Like I said in "The end is near," each manufacturer will come up with his
own name for a
waterproof-breathable
until nobody buys it any more.
WET IN A WIGGY BAG
I have published letters from many customers
attesting to the fact that they have stayed warm in a Wiggy bag even
though they were sleeping in a pool of water, caused by a leaking tent or
for some other reason. I was always happy to know they were warm, however,
it wasn't until recently that I realized why they were warm.
Have you ever experienced using a wet suit?
If so, you know that the water that gets trapped in the wet suit is warmed
by your body's heat. When the water is trapped in a Wiggy sleeping bag the
same thing
occurs. What sets the
Wiggy bag apart from all other brands of bags is the Lamilite insulation.
Its ability to retain the heat produced by your body is so efficient; that
the heat absorbed by the water does not get out. Therefore, you stay
equally warm in a Wiggy bag even if you have to share some of the space
with a little water, as you would if it were dry.
LETTERS
I receive letters every week from satisfied
customers. To state that it is gratifying is an understatement. I take
great pride in bring them to you.
E-mail received Feb. 4, 1999
Hiking on Mt. Jefferson in the White
Mtns. Of NH in January has generally excited us with sub zero
temperatures. Two of us set out on Jan. 15, 99 a day before the rest of
our group, to have an extra day on the Mt. (just can't seem to get
enough). We started out in sleet but the higher we climbed the warmer it
became needless to say we hiked several miles in a hard rain. Soaked to
the bone and totally spent we pitched our tent at dusk, looking very
forward to climbing into our new Wiggy's Ultima Thule bags which we
purchased the week before, which by the way had gotten wet in our packs. I
stripped of my outer layers and climbed into my bag still in my long
underwear, which I could have rung out. The
temperature went from 34 to 6 that night (perfect
hypothermic conditions.) Almost immediately the tent filled with fog that
was rolling out of our bags. We actually found this hysterical and were
thankful we decided to replace our old bags when we did. Within 4 hours I
was bone dry and enjoyed the most comfortable night's sleep I can remember
in the mountains.
I am a very skeptical person in believing
what is written about a product and this is what prompted me to write to
you. I have never been so impressed with any gear that I've purchased. I
will be on Mt.
Washington in
two weeks and hope that I can experience pushing the bag to its limits in
the temperature dept.
Thank you very much for an awesome
product.
Tom Scott
P.S. I'm very thankful I've entered into
the "WIGGY Zone"
E-mail received Dec. 29, 1998
Dear Sir:
I am an U.S. Marine First Sergeant and would like to
share my personal observations about your company's sleeping bags with
you. First I must make it clear that these are my "personal"
observations and are in no way the official views of the U.S. Marine
Corps.
To begin with I have twenty years of
active duty behind me as well as having been an avid outdoorsman/hunter
for over thirty years. Approximately two and a half years ago I was
issued the sleeping bag system your company is producing for our
Marines. I have used this system extensively in conditions ranging
from the dessert of Twenty-Nine Palms, California, in August/September
time frame to the cold of Bosnia in March/April as well as all manners of
conditions in between. I feel my experiences qualify me to state
that your sleeping bag is by far the best I have ever used in my more than
thirty years of being out in the elements. In the time I have used
this sleeping bag I can honestly state that is has never let me down, it
has always kept me warm and given me many comfortable nights of sleep,
something that is very precious to most Marines.
After the bag has been packed in it's
compression stuff sack all day it comes back to full loft in a matter of
minutes and is just as your product information claims, very easy to
maintain. After a six-month
deployment it took nothing more than a washing
machine and a clothesline to make it as good as new.
Soon I will join the ranks of the
civilian world and continue enjoy my love for the great outdoors, hiking
and hunting. I can assure you that you will hear from me again when
I am ready to order one of your
sleeping bags for my personal use, I won't be without
one ever again.
Thank you for a great product and keep up
the good work.
Semper Fi
L.J. "Holly" Hollingsworth
"We cannot fight against anything,
unless we fight for something-and
what we must fight for is the supremacy of reason,
and a view of man as
a rational
being."
Ayn Rand