
Injex Popover
A long sleeve popover with a subtle placket pocket, made from a fabric remarkably open to the air yet opaque to the eye. Linen's dry touch and beautiful aging character meets a radical warp-knit weft-insertion construction to create a light and elegant layering piece.

GDX Burgundy Feels

GDX Ice Breathes

GDX Isola Teal

FABRIC
INJECTED LINEN
59% Linen
41% Polyester
165gsm
Warp Knit in Japan


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 it's 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.

FIT
Loose fit. Buy true to size for intended effect or size down for a slimmer look.
Garment measurements in inches, measured flat
Size | XS | S | M | L | XL |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chest - measured 1" below armhole | 23¼ | 24¼ | 25¼ | 26¼ | 27¼ |
Shoulder - measured flat edge to edge | 19 | 19½ | 20 | 20½ | 21 |
Length - high shoulder to bottom | 28⅛ | 28½ | 29¾ | 30⅜ | 31 |
Sleeve length - center back to cuff | 34 | 34½ | 35 | 35½ | 36 |


Nick weighs 170 lbs is 6'2" and wears size M in GDX Isola Teal.


DETAILS
Made with Injected Linen
Total weight 350g (size M)
Made in Portugal with Japanese fabric

Injex Popover
- Open yet opaque structure made from a warp knit polyester with a weft injection of linen
- Custom Italian Mombasa buttons
- Hidden Chest Pocket
- Four button placket with box stitch
- Box pleat on back for added range of motion
- Back hang loop
- Machine wash warm with like colors and tumble dry low (do not use bleach)









Photos by Luis Alberto Rodriguez and Jon-Paul Rodriguez