zeke
New member
I understand that The North Face was purchased by Vanity Fair and that a certain amount of fashion/consumer influence will be evident in the company's more popular jackets. But the Mountain Light jacket I recently bought was a joke. Its core-vent zips fall directly under your pack straps. Its exterior pockets fall directly under your pack’s waist belt. Advertising for the jacket notes its zip-in capability for existing TNF down and fleece pieces—not true. On all three of my existing TNF zip-in components, including one purchased just last year, the right side zipped in, the left didn’t. What a rip!
I bought this jacket online from EMS. It was on sale for $239 (instead of $299) with free shipping, etc. I knew TNF stuff had “gone consumer” to some extent, but I was buying partly based on my experience with the TNF Mountain Light jacket that I’ve used for the last six years and that has performed well for me. It didn’t look as fitted, it had regular GoreTex instead of XCR, and its hood didn’t zip off, but at least its pockets were usable and the pit-zips worked.
I don’t especially care that the company decided to change the jacket to appeal to a different market. That’s their prerogative. But to represent the current Mountain Light as a real mountaineering jacket is misleading. It’s a member of TNF’s “Summit Series” which in their words includes “our most technically advanced products. Designed for expedition use….” That is flat out false, at least in my experience with the jacket, which is now wending its way back to the EMS Returns Department.
I bought this jacket online from EMS. It was on sale for $239 (instead of $299) with free shipping, etc. I knew TNF stuff had “gone consumer” to some extent, but I was buying partly based on my experience with the TNF Mountain Light jacket that I’ve used for the last six years and that has performed well for me. It didn’t look as fitted, it had regular GoreTex instead of XCR, and its hood didn’t zip off, but at least its pockets were usable and the pit-zips worked.
I don’t especially care that the company decided to change the jacket to appeal to a different market. That’s their prerogative. But to represent the current Mountain Light as a real mountaineering jacket is misleading. It’s a member of TNF’s “Summit Series” which in their words includes “our most technically advanced products. Designed for expedition use….” That is flat out false, at least in my experience with the jacket, which is now wending its way back to the EMS Returns Department.