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How to Choose Riding Gear That Works from 60° to 100°F

Motorcycle gear for 60 to 100 degree days: a temperature-band matrix for vests, gloves, and layers so one kit covers the whole summer swing.

Sixty to one hundred degrees is the real operating range of an American summer riding day — not the single number the forecast gives you. Wind chill at 65 mph makes the morning 60s feel like the low 50s; pavement radiation makes the afternoon 90s feel worse than the thermometer admits. The kit that covers the whole band is not a closet of options. It is a few adjustable pieces chosen deliberately. Here is the matrix.

The Constants

Three pieces stay on through the entire range. A wicking base layer — it warms you in the 60s by staying dry, and cools you in the 90s by feeding evaporation. A leather vest — closed it is a wind-blocking warm layer, open it is a ventilated utility garment; the laced-side designs in the vest collection tune across the whole band. And thin deerskin gloves — the hide breathes at 95 and blocks windchill at 62, which is exactly why one good pair covers what two synthetic pairs cannot.

Deerskin motorcycle gloves that perform across a forty-degree temperature band
Natural hide self-regulates across the band synthetics split into two products.

The 60s: Wind Is the Opponent

At speed, 62 degrees is a cold ride. Vest closed, long-sleeve mid layer underneath, full-coverage gloves. If the 60s last more than the first hour — coastal or mountain riding — this is jacket weather, full stop. The fleece or shirt that fills this slot packs down to nothing for the rest of the day.

The 70s: The Sweet Band

The range the whole system idles in. Vest closed or open by preference, base layer alone underneath, gloves on. You should make zero adjustments for hours at a time here — if you are fiddling with gear in the 70s, something in the kit is wrong.

The 80s: Open Up

Vest open at speed, sleeves gone, and the glove choice splits by exposure: full coverage for long sun, or fingerless deerskin for urban work. Hydration discipline starts here, not in the 90s — the 80s are where riders quietly fall behind on water.

The 90s and Above: Systems On

Everything from the hot-weather playbook: vest open over a soaked or wicking layer, wet neck wrap, scheduled stops, water on the bike. Resist the urge to strip coverage — bare skin in 95-degree wind dehydrates you faster and adds sunburn to the bill. The thin-leather-plus-airflow formula keeps working past 100; riders who run the desert have proven it for a century.

Buying for the Band, Not the Day

Shop with the swing in mind and every piece earns its price across forty degrees: base layers on the two-pair system, one vest with real adjustment, one or two pairs of deerskin gloves from the USA-made glove collection, and the packable warm layer that lives in the saddlebag all season. No single-temperature purchases, no closet of almosts — just a small kit that is never wrong by more than one zipper.

Frequently Asked Questions

What gloves work across the widest temperature range?

Unlined full-coverage deerskin. The hide breathes enough for the 90s and blocks windchill into the low 60s, a band no single synthetic glove covers. Add fingerless deerskin as a second pair if your summers run extreme.

When is it too cold for just a vest?

Sustained riding below the mid 60s at highway speed is jacket territory for most riders. The vest-plus-midlayer combination buys you the morning hour, but a planned cold leg deserves the real thing.

What is the most common mistake riders make dressing for summer?

Dressing for the afternoon high and suffering through the morning — or the reverse. Dress for the band: constants plus one packable layer, adjusted at stops, beats any single-temperature outfit over a full riding day.

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