Sitewide Sale! 20% Off Men's + Women's Apparel | Details
New Arrivals! Stay Cool + Sun-Smart | Shop Now
$6 Standard Shipping—No Minimum. Details
Save 20% sitewide on Men's & Women's apparel. Prices as marked. Exclusions apply. See orvis.com/exclusions for details. This offer is valid for purchases online at orvis.com only. Not valid at Orvis retail or Orvis Outlet stores. Not valid on previous purchases. Cannot be combined with any other promotional offer. No cash value. Offer ends April 28, 2025 at 11:59pm ET.
$6 Standard Shipping is valid on merchandise orders of any amount after promotions and discounts are applied. Shipping applies to standard shipping to a single address in the United States only. Not valid on oversized or special-delivery items.
Success Success has been added to your cart
Merino wool is the exquisite, finely spun fiber from the Merino sheep, practically beyond reproach when it comes to insulating the body from the cold—and incredibly, the heat, even when it’s wet. It has been around for centuries, its rich history steeped in warfare and politics unbeknownst to quietly grazing flocks of sheep dotting the landscape, but only lately has it come into its own as a thoroughly modern performance textile, one that moves and breathes as do the very animals who wear it to begin with. And we love knowing part of the Merino story unfolded right here in our home state of Vermont. We’re not being sheepish: read on to learn all about this winsome material that is somehow at once both elegant and utilitarian.
Strictly speaking, wool is a general term describing fibers spun from the hair of any of several mammals—sheep to be sure, but also alpacas, goats, llamas, vicuñas, and even rabbits (think Angora). Lambswool specifically is produced from a lamb’s first shearing, which usually happens around seven months. It can come from any variety of sheep. But Merino wool can come only from the fleece of a Merino sheep. An adult female sheep is called a ewe, an adult male a ram. The coat of wool shorn from a single adult sheep is called a fleece: one ewe yields between 10 and 18 pounds of wool, rams more because they are larger. This is enough to make four or five sweaters after washing and processing the wool.
Merino Sheep = a specific breed of sheep that originated in Spain via North Africa
Merino Wool = the wool from a Merino sheep
Wool = spun fibers from any of several types of animals
Fleece = one coat of wool shorn from one sheep
Lambswool = the wool from the first shearing of a lamb of any breed of sheep
The size of the fiber determines the quality of the wool—the smaller the fiber, the higher the quality. The diameter of a wool fiber is measured in microns; a single micron is one millionth of one meter. To put this minuscule number in perspective, consider this: a single human hair is 40 microns in diameter. Insofar as wool is concerned, the number of microns describes the degree of refinement; the smaller the number, the softer and more expensive the wool. Garden variety Merino wool measures about 23 microns; “fine” Merino wool measures 18, “superfine” 16 to 17, and the ultimate—“ultrafine”—is anything under 15.5 microns. Wool between 11.5 and 24 microns is used for clothing, and the rest is consigned for use in blankets, insulation, and furnishings.
Merino was developed in Spain between the 13th and 14th centuries when local sheep (which the Phoenicians had introduced via Asia Minor) were bred with sheep from England. But an especially meaningful chapter in the history of Merino wool was written right here in our home state of Vermont, and it all began with Napoleon. Prior to his invasion of Spain in 1808, the Merino sheep had been highly prized there, representing a substantial part of the country’s revenues—so much so it was a capital offense to export one. Faced with the decimation of its Merino flocks as a consequence of war, Spain thought better of this policy and lifted the blockade.
There were no Merino sheep anywhere in the U.S. before 1801. Then one William Jarvis, a successful American merchant and the former United States Consul to Portugal, took advantage of the sea change in Spanish policy and began introducing the sheep to the U.S., and to Weathersfield, Vermont in particular. Merino sheep are hardy and will graze on just about anything; they took to Vermont’s cold climate and its many thousands of acres of poor, rocky soil, which suited them just fine. This “invasive” species also dovetailed with an American desire at the time to establish manufacturing that would compete with and break our dependence on the Brits.
By 1837 there were over a million head of sheep in Vermont, but the boom was relatively short-lived, ending only a decade or so later when tariff laws changed, and when farmers in the American West began raising sheep for a much lower cost per head. But during its heyday, Merino farming made Weathersfield one of Vermont’s most prosperous towns.
Australia was already producing Merino wool by the 19th century, but in a gesture of goodwill Vermont gifted the Aussies with a pair of Merinos that would ultimately stir controversy. The Vermont Merino was different: it had heavier, coarser wool with more lanolin. Neither did it possess the smooth, tight-fitting skin of its Australian Merino counterpart, but instead was wrinkled from head to toe.
When the Australian sheep were bred with the Vermont sheep the result was a more wrinkled Australian variety, a trait which was later difficult to breed out when it was deemed undesirable. The Australians held Vermont in disdain for some time after this controversial genetic change that ensued from a gift, calling the Vermont sheep a “white elephant.” Australia had banned the import of foreign animals prior to the introduction of the Vermont sheep for a skin disorder known as “scab,” but the Vermont Merino was ultimately seen as its own kind of scourge.
Here are five excellent reasons Merino wool is so desirable:
The end result is a beautiful, functional textile.
Naturally biodegradable and renewable, Merino wool treads softly on the environment. Wool decomposes in the soil in a matter of years when disposed of, slowly releasing valuable nitrogen-based nutrients back into the earth, acting as a natural fertilizer.
This versatile textile comes in several smart iterations:
Merino wool is hands down the most luxurious wool in the world, the finest and softest grown by sheep. And while some insist cashmere is the most refined textile (and it is refined, to be sure), those in the know understand ultrafine Merino is more sublime still. It is warm, naturally insulating, water-repellent, and extremely durable, the modern go-to textile for the impeccably dressed, but also for the outdoors enthusiast, and even the athlete: versatile Merino wool knows no bounds.
Shop Men’s Merino Wool Sweaters
A Comprehensive Guide to Men’s Leather Jackets