As a WIRED product reviewer, I am surrounded by at least a dozen backpacks at any given time. Most of them are astonishingly beautiful (to someone who likes bags, anyway), made from upcycled materials in eye-catching colors, or with Japanese-inspired architectural lines, or studded with gleaming buckles that parajumpers use on their harnesses.
But when I had to go to two trade shows in two weeks—events that require travel, a lot of walking, and working on your feet—the bag that I reached for was the Tom Bihn Brain Bag.
The Brain Bag isn’t the fairest of them all. In fact, my husband says that when I put it on, I look like a fourth-grader taking her Trapper Keepers to her first day of school. But this bag has everything you'd want out of a backpack—it’s capacious, has a lot of pockets, and can expand or compress as needed. Sometimes, fashion isn't so important, and the Brain Bag certainly puts utility first.
Tom Bihn has been making bags since 1972, tweaking each constantly to make them as durable, easy to use, and comfortable as possible. The bags are all manufactured entirely in the United States so that Tom can keep an eye on the manufacturing process, and from the highest-quality materials. The Brain Bag is one of the company's classic bags. It's made from 525-dernier ballistic nylon to reduce weight, with abrasion-resistant 1050-dernier ballistic nylon on the bottom.
You won't find any raw edges or unreinforced load-bearing seams here. As befits a bag designed in rainy Seattle, it has flaps to cover the zippers, treated with environmentally-friendly DWR, and with a urethane-coated interior. The only way this backpack should coming apart is if you stuff it in a trash compactor. And even if it did get snagged and torn, Tom Bihn has a lifetime guarantee.
The Brain Bag started as Bihn's take on his father's knapsack. Bihn Senior was a pilot for Pan Am and needed to carry a bunch of maps and charts to and from work. The bag has a 36-liter capacity, as much as a backpack that I would take camping for three or four days! It's divided into two main compartments. For travel and my daily commute, I pack my work items in one compartment and personal items, like my breast pump, toiletries, and lunch, in the other.
Organizing your items is a highly personal process that can take years, and lots of dolla bills. But even if you’re convinced that your system is the best for you alone, you have to admit that Tom Bihn's accessories are top-notch. In the back main compartment, I use the Freudian slip to organize my pens, steno pads, planners, Kindle, battery banks, charging cables, business cards, and pamphlets (twelve organizational pockets lets you store a lot of things).
I kept my MacBook in the 13-inch Vertical Cache. The laptop case hooks into Tom Bihn’s rail system, two pieces of nylon webbing that run down the back of the bag's main compartment. If you have to take your laptop out at security, you can slide the laptop out without detaching it from your bag.
Tom Bihn is also famous for peppering his bags with o-rings. These are tiny, O-shaped rings (duh) that are stitched into the top of every compartment, and they seem silly, until you actually use them. I relied on two O-rings in the main compartment keep clip pouches in place, one for my travel documents and one for receipts, so it would be easy to expense overpriced smoothies once I got home.
The small pocket at the front comes with a key strap, where I hooked my keys while traveling. Normally I keep my keys in a small pouch with other personal items. But this one detail instantly made that habit seem like too much work (I hate keys anyway, but that's another story altogether).