Cold highland mornings and layering
At four thousand feet above sea level on the southern highlands of Madagascar, mornings start with temperatures that can drop below ten degrees. Wesley leaves the house fully dressed: shirt, vest, coat. The shift between the cold at seven and the heat at noon is abrupt enough that clothing has to work in layers. The coat comes off mid-morning. The vest stays on because the mediation room, with its windows open — always open, Wesley needs the air to circulate — never quite reaches a comfortable temperature before eleven.
That layering logic is what shows in the portrait. The clothes you need when you work in a stone building with no heating, in a city where altitude dictates how many layers you put on leaving the house and how many you're carrying when you come back.
The sweatshirt in front of you works on the same idea. Soft fleece lining that traps warmth. Cotton-polyester exterior with a feel that holds up with daily use. What season does it work for? Any one where you need an in-between layer that warms without weighing you down: fall, winter, indecisive springs, office air-conditioning in July. Sizes from S to 5XL, with a relaxed fit that doesn't pinch at the shoulders or the hips.







