The Natural Sauna — Why Everything Should Come from the Earth
The Natural Sauna — Why Everything Should Come from the Earth
On the physical conditions of the sauna, what natural materials do inside them, and why the answer is always the same.
The sauna produces two conditions simultaneously: high ambient temperature and elevated humidity from steam. What is worn during a session interacts directly with both.
Against the body, the relevant question is moisture management. The body perspires in the sauna — continuously, substantially. A loose cotton or linen wrap worn against the skin allows that moisture to move away from the surface rather than pooling against it. The session continues without the fabric becoming a secondary problem. The full practical guide to what to bring is in what to wear to a sauna.
“In the sauna, natural materials reveal what they are made of. So does everything else. The difference is immediate.”
— Pieter Petros, founderAt the head, the relevant question is heat management. Temperature in a sauna is highest near the ceiling. A person seated on a bench has their body at a lower, cooler level — but their head at a higher, hotter one. A wool felt hat reduces the direct heat reaching the scalp. This is not a comfort detail. It is the reason the session can run longer: the head’s limit is raised, so the body has more time to reach the state the sauna is designed to produce.
The PP sauna hat addresses the head’s requirement specifically: natural wool felt, wide brim for face and ears, structured form for the scalp, loop handle at the crown. The body’s requirement is addressed by whatever natural wrap is already at hand — a cotton or linen towel, worn loosely.
The sauna is one of the few places where what you wear has a direct effect on what you experience. That is not a small thing. It is worth getting right.
The wool insulation guide explains the material science behind why wool felt is the correct choice for the sauna context.












