Ausverkauft
The Rolling Thunder 36 exists for the trip that's too long for a backpack and too rugged for a regular suitcase. It gives you thirty-six litres of capacity in TPE-laminated Base Camp material that will survive the kind of handling that would finish a standard wheeled bag inside a season. In-line skate wheels handle rough terrain better than standard luggage wheels – anything from cobblestones and gravel to the gap between the train and the platform – while the stowable padded backpack straps allow you switch to haul mode as required.
The best way to clean your bag or backpack is to spot clean with a damp cloth, then let it air dry. We do not recommend fully submerging it in water.
For an outdoor behemoth, The North Face has pretty humble origins. It was founded in San Francisco in 1966 by a couple of committed climbers who simply thought the outdoor gear available at the time wasn't good enough. Nearly sixty years on, much of the brand's range is less about the summit and more about everything that happens around it. The iconic Half Dome logo has become one of the most recognisable in outdoor lifestyle fashion – and the brand's cultural footprint now extends well beyond the mountains.
Core heritage pieces like the quarter-zip and pile fleeces now make great grab n' go layers for daily wear, while a bag like the Borealis remains one of the best-designed EDC packs ever made. There's still plenty of innovative thinking going on at TNF HQ too, of course – such as the Base Camp Voyager Pro modular travel system, designed to reflect how people actually move through modern urban environments like airports and cities.
And to be fair, the technical gear continues to deliver when it matters – from 3L DryVent hiking shells to down puffers that deliver superb warmth for weight. But the honest picture is a brand whose best work right now sits at the intersection of outdoor credibility and everyday wearability. It's gear you'd wear on a sunrise hike, then to lunch at a pop-up taqueria afterwards too.