Great apparel starts with athlete feedback and ruthless testing, not guesses. Here’s how a performance suit takes shape from sketch to start line.
From problem to prototype
- Athlete interviews reveal pain points: heat build‑up, fabric creep, seam hot spots
- Requirements: breathable trunk support; zero restriction at hips/shoulders; stable under sweat
- First prototypes favor fit and range over looks—ugly is fine if data is good
Lab and field testing
- Fabric: airflow (CFM), moisture management (vertical wicking), stretch recovery cycles
- Garment: station blocks (sleds, lunges, wall balls) in heat/cold; measure split stability
- Abrasion: targeted knee/hip tests + laundering stress
Iterate where it matters
- Trunk panel mapping for subtle compression and posture cueing
- Seam reroutes away from friction paths; fewer panels where motion is high
- Finish tweaks for glide where bar or sandbag rubs
Sizing and fit
- Trunk fit first. If the torso is right, limb freedom follows
- Deep‑knee and overhead tests before sign‑off; no bunching in the hinge
What athletes report back
- Less fabric migration when sweaty; fewer hot spots; easier pacing because comfort improves
Sustainability lens
- Durable yarns and finishes extend lifecycle; transparent suppliers; repair over replace
Bottom line The “perfect suit” is a moving target. We get closer by listening to athletes, isolating problems, and iterating on what the clock and comfort tell us.



