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"...the elements of cyberpunk have dissolved into the whole SF genre, so it’s hard to find anyone writing who doesn’t owe serious debts to Gibson and his crew."
- Richard Morgan

Space Overalls  
  Light-duty space suit.  

Why does NASA fool around with all that bulky Michelin-man style apparel? Just use space overalls.

He had found some concentrated rations meant for the cell occupants, a full tank of water, and four space overalls, complee with magnetized boots and glassite helmets...

Murkitt went to the place where the space overalls were spread out, and donned one of them. He tightened the joints at his boot tops, zippered and sealed the front, fastened his gauntlets. He paused, holding the cloudy sphere of glassite that did duty as helmet.

"...I'm going outside," ...and on went the helmet.

In a moment he was out on the hull, standing erect upon it in the airless darkness."

From Lost Rocket, by Manly Wade Wellman.
Published by Astounding Science-Fiction in 1941
Additional resources -

Compare to these other early space suit references; the air-tight suit from Edison's Conquest of Mars (1898) by Garrett P. Serviss, the pneumatic suit from The Shot into Infinity (1929) by Otto Willi Gail, the space suit from The Emperor of the Stars (1931) by Schachner and Zagat, the altitude suit from The Black Star Passes by John W. Campbell, the Osprey Space Armor from Salvage in Space (1933) by Jack Williamson and the space overalls from Lost Rocket (1941) by Manly Wade Wellman.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Lost Rocket
  More Ideas and Technology by Manly Wade Wellman
  Tech news articles related to Lost Rocket
  Tech news articles related to works by Manly Wade Wellman

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