Curious about people’s read on this. I see a lot of people dissing softshell jackets. At the same time I see a lot of people using “windshirts” like the BD Alpine Start Hoody. Ive seen it enough that Im curious what people see as the difference between a windshirt vs a softshell.
“Softshell” was originally a stretch woven nylon fabric that was somewhat wind and lightly weather resistant. Most of the popular hunting pants now are “softshells”, just think of that fabric in jacket form. It was only later that membranes and fleece linings and such were added to try to make them more weather resistant or warmer in order to appeal to a less technical audience. Jackets like the BD alpine start hoody are precisely what I mean when I use the term “softshell”. I cut my teeth in the late 80’s and early 90’s when softshells first took off, and it was lightweight stretch woven pants and jackets like the alpine start that found their way into my kit. More recently it seems this type of lighter, more breatheable type of softshell is harder to find in jacket form, but I still havent found anything better for a lot of conditions.
But now I see people calling jackets like this a “wind layer”. Some of those folks Im fairly sure Ive heard say they dont like softshells. I think we must be using the term differently? As far as I can tell, most of these folks DO like softshells, they’re just calling it a wind layer. But even BD refers to their alpine start hoody as a “softshell”.
So is this purely semantics due to the prevalence of heavier, non-breatheable “softshells” having corrupted the term beyond repair?
@mtwarden Im particularly curious to hear your take on this.
“Softshell” was originally a stretch woven nylon fabric that was somewhat wind and lightly weather resistant. Most of the popular hunting pants now are “softshells”, just think of that fabric in jacket form. It was only later that membranes and fleece linings and such were added to try to make them more weather resistant or warmer in order to appeal to a less technical audience. Jackets like the BD alpine start hoody are precisely what I mean when I use the term “softshell”. I cut my teeth in the late 80’s and early 90’s when softshells first took off, and it was lightweight stretch woven pants and jackets like the alpine start that found their way into my kit. More recently it seems this type of lighter, more breatheable type of softshell is harder to find in jacket form, but I still havent found anything better for a lot of conditions.
But now I see people calling jackets like this a “wind layer”. Some of those folks Im fairly sure Ive heard say they dont like softshells. I think we must be using the term differently? As far as I can tell, most of these folks DO like softshells, they’re just calling it a wind layer. But even BD refers to their alpine start hoody as a “softshell”.
So is this purely semantics due to the prevalence of heavier, non-breatheable “softshells” having corrupted the term beyond repair?
@mtwarden Im particularly curious to hear your take on this.