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Yoga

What to wear in Seoul — Spring (Merino guide)

In a warm summers, cold winters climate during spring, Merino and alpaca consistently outperform other fabrics for yoga for women. The recommendation is based on breathability, moisture management, and formality fit — calculated from climate norms and textile standards.

  1. IMerinoBreathability 80 · Moisture 83 · Wrinkle 85 · Warmth 55 · Formality 70+6.25
  2. IIAlpacaBreathability 58 · Moisture 78 · Wrinkle 75 · Warmth 88 · Formality 75+5.58
  3. IIIWoolBreathability 55 · Moisture 83 · Wrinkle 80 · Warmth 85 · Formality 75+5.54

What this climate and context demand

Wide seasonal swing makes layering the practical answer here: thin, stackable garments trap insulating air in winter and strip back for warm spells. Prioritise next-to-skin fibres with good moisture regain to manage sweat, and add wind-resistant mid-weights for the cold, dry, snowy stretch when still air loss drives most of the heat you lose.

Yoga demands fabric with mechanical stretch and recovery, so it tracks deep flexion and extension without binding or bagging at the knees and elbows. Prioritise high moisture-wicking and breathability to move sweat off the skin, and a close, non-restrictive cut that stays put through inversions.

In April this is spring on the northern side, and in a temperate continental climate that matters: mean heat sits at 0.38 but the year swings 0.37 to a 0.75 peak. Merino brings 0.80 breathability — that is the number that counts once the season turns.

Fabric priority — Adaptability across temperature extremes is the key property, since the same garment may face humid summer heat and dry sub-zero cold within one year.

What merino actually looks like, woven — medium hand, open weave, low sheen

How this drawing is built — merino (proteine)
PropertyValueDrawn as
Weight180 g/m²thread thickness & weave pitch
Breathability0.80gap between threads (open)
Moisture regain15.0% ISO 6741-1yarn saturation
Wrinkle recovery0.85thread waviness
Warmth0.55
Formality0.70
Sheen0.28 basis=conventionsurface highlight

The weave above is drawn from the fibre's measured properties, not an illustration: thread pitch follows weight, the gap between threads follows breathability, and yarn saturation follows moisture regain (ISO 6741-1).

How to build your outfit — layering guide

  1. Base layer — Start with a Merino shirt or tee — regulates temperature well.
  2. Mid layer — Add a Alpaca cardigan or light sweater for evening cool.
  3. Outer layer — A Wool jacket completes the outfit and blocks wind.

Recommended silhouette

Relaxed fit — Allows airflow while remaining smart enough for casual to business-casual wear. For temperate continental climate and yoga, a relaxed fit optimises comfort and appearance.

Colours that work together — spring · yoga

Wear together: Warm Red + Ivory — ΔE 88 in CIE Lab. Above 30 the two read as a deliberate contrast; below 12 they just look muddled.

Left out here: Pure White, Soft White — local custom in this region avoids white.

Ranked by seasonal fit and occasion, then checked for perceptual distance in CIE Lab (ΔE CIE76). Colour values are fixed sRGB references, not photographs — dye lots and screens vary.

How this colour reads on this fabric

Merino is low-sheen (lustre 0.28 on a 0–1 scale, basis = convention) — it reflects only a little light, so a colour stays close to true and picks up a soft highlight at the fold.

Local expectations for yoga in Seoul (KR)

Colour. Red and gold carries positive meaning; white is best avoided.

Coverage. Temples and shrines require covered shoulders and knees.

Register. Hierarchy is signalled through attire; business contexts lean conservative.

Local norms for the east asian region. Customs vary within any region and by family — treat this as a starting point, not a rule book.

Questions & answers

Why is Merino recommended for this climate and usage?

Merino scores highest across breathability, moisture management (moisture regain: 15.0%), and formality fit for a warm summers, cold winters climate — yoga context.

What are the top 3 fabrics for a warm summers, cold winters climate?

Based on our scoring model: Merino, Alpaca, Wool. Rankings combine breathability, thermal comfort, wrinkle resistance, and formality alignment.

How should I care for Merino garments in a warm summers, cold winters climate?

For Merino: follow label instructions; gentle wash and low-heat dry. Correct care preserves the moisture management and temperature performance that makes Merino effective in warm summers, cold winters conditions.