What a tog rating actually tells you The first frost of the year is usually when the question arrives. The heating clicks off overnight, the bedroom drops a few degrees, and a duvet that felt perfectly comfortable in October suddenly leaves a cold gap along one shoulder. The instinct is to reach for "something warmer" …
Read MoreOne word, two completely different beaches On a Sydney morning, "grab your togs" means dig the swimsuit out of the drawer before heading to Bondi. On a Bradford evening, "what tog is it?" means checking the warmth rating printed on a duvet before deciding whether the bed will be warm enough for winter. Same four …
Read MoreTwo Sydney labels at opposite ends of the rack Seafolly and Zimmermann both grew out of Sydney, both built their reputations on Australian beach culture, and both sell swimwear most of the country recognises on sight — yet a Seafolly one-piece and a Zimmermann one-piece can be separated by several hundred dollars. That …
Read MorePicking a 13.5 tog duvet for a genuinely cold bedroom The decision usually comes down to one thing: a bedroom that gets cold overnight once the heating goes off. A 13.5 tog duvet is the standard UK winter weight, and for most people in an unheated or poorly insulated room it is the right call. But "13.5 tog" only fixes …
Read MoreBuying at City Beach: the sale rack versus the new-season wall The same pair of togs at City Beach can carry two very different price tags depending on when you walk in. A current-season Billabong or Roxy bikini at full price sits at one number; the same style, a few months later on the sale rack, can be a third off or …
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