Built for the Worst So You Can Enjoy the Best
As we head into winter, we want people to understand what their outdoor apparel is made from—and how the technology behind it really works. At Terracea, every seam, zipper, and fabric choice serves a purpose: to keep you warm, dry, and comfortable, no matter what the day throws your way.
While we’re proudly based in New Hampshire, our gear is built for wherever adventure takes you. The Granite State gives us an edge—because if your jacket can handle New England weather, it can handle anything. One day it’s sleet and freezing rain on Mount Washington; the next, it’s a biting wind sweeping across Lake Winnipesaukee or a snow squall rolling in from the coast. Our designs are tested through it all.
That testing matters—because winter here doesn’t ease you in. From icy morning commutes to white-out hikes, the weather can change in minutes. That’s why our winter collection combines waterproof protection, breathable insulation, and adaptive warmth. You’ll find technical three-layer shells built to block wind and rain without weighing you down; responsibly sourced down and recycled synthetic fills that trap heat while staying lightweight; and water-repellent finishes that help snow and sleet roll right off.
We choose fabrics that work hard—durable face materials with eco-friendly DWR coatings, weather-sealed seams, and linings that move moisture away from your body so you stay dry from the inside out. Even small details, like magnetic closures, stretch panels, and glove-friendly zippers, are tested to perform when conditions are less than ideal.
The collection is built to handle the extremes: the kind of cold that numbs your fingers on the summit, the slush that soaks through city streets, the sideways rain that catches you mid-trail. We design for those moments because they’re the ones that prove what good gear is really made of.
When your jacket can handle freezing rain one day and biting wind the next, you know it’s ready for anything—on the mountain, in the city, or anywhere in between. If you need more convincing, just ask Henry!