Winter Socks
Thermal socks to keep your feet warm during the winter months, hiking, casual, work, and self heated.
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Thermal socks are a winter must-have when the temperature starts to fall. There's not much that is more miserable than having cold feet which can happen even if the rest of you feels warm.
Before you rush out to buy the first pack you see with pictures of flames (!) or words like "super-thermal" or "heated" on them, here's some things to take into account.
Insulation and Wicking
The job of winter socks is to provide extra insulation and warmth and also wick sweat away from your feet to keep them dry. You shouldn't wear more than two pairs of winter socks, and more often than not a single pair is enough. Modern winter boots come with varying degrees of insulation for different conditions and all are designed to be worn with one or maybe two layers of socks, or one layer of liner socks and a top layer of thicker, warmer socks. Long gone are the days when the only solution was to wear too-big boots and lots of socks.
If you always suffer from cold feet and can't ever find any warm enough socks, you probably need to get some better insulated boots too.
Materials
Unfortunately there is no perfect sock material, they vary in how hard wearing they are, how warm, how comfortable and how expensive, it's all a compromise.
Wool is the best material for warmth and merino wool is premium. Wool is an excellent insulator, it is soft and cushioning, naturally odor resistant and retains its insulator properties when damp or even wet. It is also very good at wicking sweat away from your feet keeping them dry. Look for socks that are 70%+ wool but avoid 100%. A percentage of synthetic fibres make the socks harder wearing and give elasticity to help keep them up and stop them going baggy.
Acrylic, a knitted synthetic and a good budget choice. Similar to wool in look and feel, but being a synthetic are not as odor resistant or as good at wicking moisture than wool, they can be cheaper though and harder wearing. May be vegan friendly if there's no wool mixed in.
Other synthetic fibres, polyester is sometimes used as a substantial constituent in a fibre mix and is similar in properties to acrylic and is particularly quick drying and so used in liner socks to quickly wick sweat away from the feet keeping them dry. Others such as nylon, spandex, and elastane are there in smaller quantities to increase durability and add elasticity.
Cotton, is the worst choice for a winter sock, though it is very commonly sold as such. It is not a good warmth retainer and doesn't wick moisture well at all, hanging on to it and drying slowly. Cotton can be looped or brushed to give a plush finish which feels like it will be warm and cozy.
Cotton is designed to help the plant spread seeds, wool is designed to keep warm-blooded sheep warm and safe in even the coldest and wettest conditions, it's not hard to guess which will be the best material for a winter sock.
Cotton is hardwearing and fairly cheap however which explains its popularity.
Sock liners made from synthetic materials are similar to cotton and much better because they are very good at doing what cotton doesn't do well which is wick sweat away, put a pair of thicker wool or acrylic socks over the top.
Circulation
You need to make sure the rest of your body is warm enough, there is much truth in the old saying
If your feet are cold, put on a hat
Your feet are an extremity and if you are losing body heat too quickly, the response of your body is to reduce blood flow to the extremities in order to keep the core warm. This means that your feet (along with hands) are often the first parts of your body to feel the cold. So make sure your body core temperature is warm and stable first and make sure you have a warm hat on. The effect won't be immediate but it will be real.
Another circulation issue is to make sure that blood can flow easily around your feet and legs by not wearing too close fitting pants and in particular don't try to force extra pairs of socks into already close fitting footwear. You will squash the air out (air is the real insulator) and reduce blood flow.
Recommended Winter Socks
Merino wool
socks
best overall performance
Acrylic socks
Work socks
warmth with durability and odor defence
Liner socks
waaay better
performance than cotton for inner socks
Heated socks
With rechargeable battery packs. Some socks
described as "heated" simply aren't,
they just insulate like any others, I don't
know how they get away with it. These actually do
what they say.
Warmth boosters
insulation and
heat pads
Thermal Insoles
Give an insulating boost
to the footwear you already have
Feet / foot / toe warmers
Air activated
heating pads
Toe warmers
extra insulation
where it's needed