There was a time when you could walk into an REI and buy camping gear without boning up on terminology (what the hell is Cuben Fiber?!) in preparation. You could pitch your tent at the campground without your neighbor wandering over to geek out about his sleeping bag’s hydrophobia or how he managed to shave a couple ounces off his kit by using his trekking pole as a tentpole. Yes, it was a simpler time, complete with back-breakingly heavy gear made of simple leather and stainless steel. It didn’t keep you quite as comfortable as today’s gee-whiz wonder materials, but it also didn’t wear out after a season of hard use (sometimes).
But everything old is new again. Fueled by nostalgia, quite a few companies are now making classically styled camping gear that echoes the simple pleasures of being in the outdoors. This gear is the anti-ultralight camping setup. It’s best used for car camping only. Even then, you’ll want to be sure your shocks are in good condition. But hey — the Good Ole Days, right?
Kodiak Flex-Bow Deluxe Canvas Tent

Though it might look like your parents’ first canvas tent, this palatial Kodiak Canvas tent has a secret weapon — Hydra-Shield canvas. That’s custom-woven, double-fill canvas that’s bathed in a silicone-based dry-finish treatment to make it watertight and breathable. Even in a downpour, it won’t leak or gather condensation. As you’d expect from a 70-pound (!) tent, this 100-square-foot home away from home doesn’t skimp on creature comforts, including two huge doors with durable YKK zippers, four large windows and 6.5 feet of interior clearance. Perhaps the biggest surprise is that, thanks to the “flex-bow” design, one person can pitch it quickly and with relative ease.