Anonymous wrote:Any rec for a woman's tank top, with a wide neck, and wide arm holes? Length doesn't matter. I want it to be very breezy, but still have coverage.
Lululemn's sculpt tank is good, but it has a high neck. Is there something similar with a lower neck line?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I look for 100% cotton, which can be a challenge to find. I do find it at resale shops in good shape. I stay way from anything polyester in the summer -- whether I am working out, or not. Wearing polyester/rayon blends is like wearing a greenhouse, and can cause rash lines from sweat along the bra line and underwear line. You need to let your skin breathe.
We’re talking about clothing for exercise, not general summer apparel. Cotton is the worst thing you can wear for an outdoor workout in humidity. Synthetic fabrics have come a long way and absolutely help those of us who exercise outdoors in humidity feel less uncomfortable. I trained for a marathon here, in the summer, many years ago. My cotton shirts were sodden by the end of my training runs, with sweat pooling in my shoes. It was *awful*.
Anonymous wrote:I look for 100% cotton, which can be a challenge to find. I do find it at resale shops in good shape. I stay way from anything polyester in the summer -- whether I am working out, or not. Wearing polyester/rayon blends is like wearing a greenhouse, and can cause rash lines from sweat along the bra line and underwear line. You need to let your skin breathe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Outdoors, I run/walk/hike, depending on my mood or schedule. I'm out the door when it's still dark, but it's still effing hot and humid at 5am. I'll sweat when I run when it's 20 degrees, so I'm sweating as soon as I head out the door outside when it's 75+ (and 95% humidity).
I need something comfortable, breathable, fast drying, but not skimpy.
I’m 11:48 - I’ve logged tons of early morning miles in this area in the summer - what you’re asking for does not exist. The least bad options are things like compression leggings, running shorts with built-in underwear, and tops like UA Heatgear. Nothing dries quickly in hot, humid weather. The sweat is not going to evaporate in hot, humid weather. You need to find something that will minimize chafing and not be heavy material so as to hold the sweat (e.g., no cotton shirts).