
Description
Options

Fabric

Fabric Story
The ancient meets the industrial to create a radically open yet opaque material. The fundamental differences between knitting and weaving collapse in this Japanese fabric that combines the rugged simplicity of a polyester mesh with the deep character and performance of linen. Open to the air so the skin can breathe, opaque to the eye so the mind can relax and injected with linen's dry touch and beautiful break in to create a remarkable summer fabric.
A super light polyester warp mesh is knitted around a linen weft insertion to combine the durability and stability of polyester with the cool wear and character of a bast fiber. The linen is 59% of the fabric weight and its slubby texture and elegant aging shine through. The polyester warp means it doesn't crease sharply like most linen but instead takes on a gentle waviness that makes it far easier to travel with.
Put this stuff on and it feels like almost nothing, the air just flows over you. Look at it and it’s as opaque as far heavier fabrics, other than in extremely backlit or near face situations you can’t see anything through it. In summertime this is pretty damn close to magic.
Fiber Content
- 59%Linen
- 41%Polyester
Fabric Weight
170GSM
Fabric Origin
Warp knit in Japan
Fabric Construction
Warp-knit, weft-insertion, “flatblind”
UPF
- Black: 50+
- Raw White: 20
Fabric Water Resistance
None
Breathability
Extremely High
Durability
Modest


Fit
Size Chart
in Inches | Measured Flat

Form
Made in
Manhattan
Hardware
- 3Bar adjust, made in Taiwan
- corelesscord
- Custom Italian Mombasa Poly Slot Buttons
Pockets
- Two front slash pockets made with Japanese powermesh
- Two rear welt pockets made with Injected Linen and Japanese powermesh
Construction Details
- Onethree closure system replaces a traditional button
- Black Lightning 30mm woven label on back pocket
Style Number
P267
Revision History
- June 2025:
- Initial Release
- Name: Injex Loose Onethrees
- Colors: RD Black, RDX Navylit

Care
Washing
Machine wash warm
Drying
Tumble dry low
Ironing
Iron low

Photography Credits
Photos by Jon-Paul Rodgriuez