MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies sold by Earth Studies
MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies sold by Earth Studies product image thumbnail 1MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies sold by Earth Studies product image thumbnail 2MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies sold by Earth Studies product image thumbnail 3MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies sold by Earth Studies product image thumbnail 4MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies sold by Earth Studies product image thumbnail 5

MP-103 Field Pant 18east + Earth Studies

$250
USD
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Product Description

Experience innovative design with the MP-103 Field Pant 'Willow', a unique blend of brutalist architecture and workwear influences. Crafted by Jaipuri artisans with hand-stitched details, these pants boast a roomy, oversized fit, ensuring fluid mobility for any adventure. Featuring multiple pockets and a built-in webbing belt with aluminum hook closure, they combine practicality with striking aesthetics. Perfect for those seeking style and comfort in everyday wear. From the brand: A deconstructed study in brutalist architecture, French workwear and S.T.S. era spacesuit design. Patterned around the unique shape of human bodies for terrestrial excursions and inner discovery. Made from: The MP-103 Field Pant “Willow” shows the delicate handiwork of Jaipuri artisans with hand-stitched embroidery throughout, paneled with a low tension cotton sateen. Fit: -Four-dimensional patterning enables fluid mobility -Oversized fit; roomy through hips, thighs, and calf -Model is 5’ 10” and wearing a size 34 Notations: -Three pockets, back pocket features snap closure -Two additional interior mesh pockets -Zip-fly with snap closure -Built-in webbing belt with aircraft aluminum hook closure -Clean finish interior seams -100% cotton Khadi main with human-made trim fabrics -Made in Jaipur, India *Earth\Studies Archives are final sale. Please consider this when making your selections *We utilized a number of non-mechanized processes (hand-stitching, hand weaving, and undyed yarns), and the resulting pieces are alive with the idiosyncrasies of humanist practice. No two are exactly alike.