Cagoule

The cagoule, impermeable wind-cutter, were invented in 1965 by the manufacturer of French pants Leon Claude Duhamel, which had the idea to make a light clothing to protect itself from the bad weather. Initially imagined for the children, it threads by the head and lines up in a small pocket banane.
L.C. Duhamel initially calls it “In-case” (of rain) before naming it “Cagoule”.

See too

  • Marks used as names

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