One of the most common "techniques" of UL backpacking has got to be sleeping in all your clothes. The idea, of course, is that by integrating your daytime clothing into your sleep system, you can carry a lighter bag: dual-use gear, check and mate. I've dutifully followed this approach for some time, and I'm starting to think that maybe I've got it all wrong.
Here's why: I don't generally hike in my warmest clothes. Unless it's really, really cold out (and then this Florida boy is stayin' home), 30 minutes of intense walking/climbing has got me shucking clothes like they're on fire. Then they stay in my pack, to become part of my sleep system that night. But here's the thing: 12oz of warm jacket–which is lots of shell and some insulation–is way, way less efficient than 12 oz. of extra insulation in my bag. In other words, heavier bag ftw.
Now, it's true that your warm clothes are good for puttering around camp. You're not pumping out heat from exertion, and you're not sleeping in your bag. But I find that I want to spend less and less time "in camp." I don't cook, and I can eat in my bag. If I'm going to sit around for a while, I find it's more fun to do it at midday, when it's nice out and you can admire the scenery.
I'm sure I'm not the first person to have thought of this, and since no one else seems to do it, I reckon I'm missing something. So, any thoughts?

