Five environments.
One system.
The same four-layer stack, tuned to five spectral environments. The physics doesn't change. The signature target does.
Flooded Marsh
Wet vegetation has a characteristic UV signature — low, flat, organic. Layer 1 collapses the textile's UV reflectance onto that baseline so the wearer stops registering as a discrete spectral object against the marsh field.
Timber
Dappled canopy light is governed by a 1/f spatial-frequency distribution. Layer 4 matches that distribution as a statistical target — not a visual motif — so the silhouette dissolves into the canopy's reflection entropy from above.
Stubble & Field
Open agricultural fields offer no canopy and no cover. Layer 3 fragments the wearer's edges so the human silhouette stops resolving as a coherent object at the distance birds actually evaluate it from.
Open Water
Open water is a low-variance environment — any UV pop or hard edge is a high-information event in avian perception. The system collapses both spectral and geometric signal so the wearer reads as wave texture, not a discrete object.
Snow & Ice
Snow is bright in the visible band and flat in UV. Most white textiles are the inverse — visibly bright and UV-bright, which still registers as a spectral anomaly. Layer 1 matches snow's actual signature: high visible reflectance, suppressed UV.
One equation.
Five different fields.
Each environment is the same physics applied to a different spectral target. Marsh, timber, stubble, water, snow — the science doesn't change. The signature does.
Read the science →2026 first run.
Waitlist gets first access.
Limited 2026 allocation. Waitlist members are notified before the public release.