List of ski brands
Skis
The following is a list of companies known primarily for their skis. Most existing companies produce boots and bindings as well.
Name of brand | Main products | Origins from | Established in | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
4FRNT | alpine skis, twin tips | United States | 2002 | Purchased by J Skis in 2018. |
Armada skis | alpine skis, twin tips | USA | 2002 | Armada was founded in 2002 by a group of professional skiers and the ski and snowboard photographer Chris O'Connell. Purchased by Amer Sports March, 2017. |
Atomic | alpine skis, cross-country skis, ski jumping skis, twin tips, bindings, ski boots, ski clothes | Austria | 1955 | Founded by Alois Rohrmoser. Major alpine brand, purchased by Amer Sports. |
Black Crows | alpine skis, touring skis, outerwear | France | 2006 | Independent freeskiing-oriented company based out of Chamonix, France. Founded by professional skiers Camille Jaccoux and Bruno Compagnet. |
Black Diamond Equipment | alpine skis, telemark skis, cross-country skis, ski boots, ski bindings | USA | 1989 | Formerly Chouinard Equipment (founded in 1957), Black Diamond first entered the ski market in the early 1980s with the XCD telemark binding. |
Blizzard | alpine skis | Austria | 1945 | Founded by Toni Arnsteiner. It is part of Tecnica Group since 2006. |
Bomber | alpine skis | Italy | Founded in Cossato by a group of ski enthusiasts including Olympic Champion Marc Girardelli and World Champion Bode Miller. | |
CRSP | Custom skis, Snowboards and splits | USA | 2021 | Founded in Winter Park, CO by Chris Peters making the most durable, high performance custom skis, snowboards and splits all in house. Chris grew up skiing and has worked in the ski industry in several jobs from ski school, terrain park, tuner, shop manager, ski tester, sales rep and several more before he decided he could make a better ski than the big brands and sell it direct to the consumer for the consumer to be consumed. CRSP |
DPS | alpine skis, touring skis | USA | 2005 | Founded by Stephan Drake and Peter Turner, DPS is known for using innovative construction methods and carbon materials. Based in Salt Lake City. |
Dynastar | alpine skis | France | 1963 | Launched as a joint venture between Dynamic and Starflex skis, acquired by Rossignol in 1967. |
Elan | alpine skis, ski jumping skis, touring skis, mogul skis | Slovenia | 1945 | Produced a variety of fiberglass products, including skis, then sailboats and sailplanes. Started winning on the World Cup circuit in 1964 and became famous as the ski of Ingemar Stenmark. Introduced the first widely used carving ski ("parabolic" or "shaped") in 1992, the Elan SCX. First brand used to ski from Mount Everest. |
Extrem | alpine skis | Sweden | 1993 | Started as a snowboard manufacturer and made their first skis in 1998. |
Faction Skis | alpine skis, twin tips, touring skis, mogul skis | Switzerland | 2006 | The ski manufacturer of choice for Candide Thovex known for revolutionising the freeski world throughout his ongoing career. |
Fischer | alpine skis, ski jumping skis, cross-country skis, ski boots | Austria | 1924 | One of the largest brands through the 1960s and into the 80s, and became a force in the downhill racing market with their C4 design in the early 1980s. Today Fischer concentrates on back-country and cross-country skis. |
Forest Skis | freeride skis, touring, telemark, alpine skis, twin tips | Slovakia | 2012 | Eco responsible brand of high-tech handmade skis. Known for freeride fullcarbon specials, ski tail customization, skitouring ultralights, innovative asymmetrical hybrid shape geometry or flax and wooden topsheet applications. |
Hart | alpine skis, mogul skis | United States | 1955 | Founded in St. Paul, Minn. by Harry and Hart Holmberg and Ed Bjork, to make metal laminate skis. After Head, Hart became the best-selling American-made ski during the 1950s and '60s. |
Head | alpine skis, ski boots, ski bindings, poles, helmets, goggles | United States | 1950 | Introduced the Head Standard, the first successful metal/wood composite ski, and took over the majority of the ski market in the US and UK in the 1960s. Was slow to move to fibreglass, and Howard Head left the company in 1969 handing it to AMF. AMF rebuilt the brand in the 1970s and became a force again, purchasing Tyrolia. Taken over in 1989 and currently owned by Head NV, a Dutch company. |
K2 | alpine skis, twin tip skis, snowboards, mogul skis | United States | 1962 | Founded by Bill and Don Kirschner to make fiberglass skis on Vashon Island, Wash. In 2001 manufacturing was moved to China and the executive offices to Seattle. In 2007, consumer products company, Jarden Corp, bought out K2 and its subsidiaries. Subsequently, purchased by Newell Rubbermaid. |
Kästle | alpine skis, touring skis, nordic skis | Austria | 1924 | Founded in 1924 by Anton Kästle. Headquarters in Hohenems, Austria. Kästle products are the result of 90-years of experience creating skis with Austrian Technology. |
Kneissl | alpine skis | Austria | 1861 | Started ski production in 1919 and becomes Kneissl Ski in 1921. Introduced the composite "White Star" in 1960, sparking a revolution in materials. Merged with Dachstein in 1991 and merged Raichle and Dynafit in 1996. |
Liberty Skis | alpine skis, twin tips, touring skis, freeskis, women's skis, bindings, ski poles | United States | 2003 | Founded by James Satloff and Dan Chalfant, and pioneered the use of bamboo in its full ski line. One of the largest independent ski manufacturers worldwide, with shops and distributors in the US, Canada, Europe, and Asia. |
Line Skis | alpine skis | United States | 1995 | Introduced a radical-sidecut mini-ski in 1995, and then developed this basic idea into one of the first twin-tip skis in 1999. Purchased by K2 around 2002. Continues to cater to the free ride market. |
Madshus | cross-country | Norway | 1906 | Only major producer left in Norway. Begins production of fiberglass skis in 1974. Purchased by K2 in 1988. Madshus becomes number two worldwide in Nordic sales in 1997. |
Maxel | alpine skis | Italy | 1967 | Maxel skis were made famous by Italian Olympic and World Champion Zeno Colò. |
Moment Skis | alpine skis, twin tips | United States | 2003 | Founded by Casey Hakansson, Moment Skis started after he decided to build a pair of skis for himself. He started building skis for family and friends and eventually turned it into a business. |
Nordica | alpine skis, touring skis, twin tips, freeskis | Italy | 1939 | founded in Montebelluna, Italy and part of the Tecnica group since 2003. |
Northland | alpine skis, carving skis | USA | 1912 | founded in St. Paul, MN, now handcrafted in Steamboat Springs, CO. [1] |
ogso | touring skis, powder skis | MALTA founded in CHAMONIX | 2015 | big collection for off-piste-skiing, superrocker and neoteric shapes from 70mm-115mm width under foot. available as ULTRALIGHTS and MEDIUMLIGHTS |
Olin | alpine skis | United States | 1960s | Major player in the 1970s and 80s with their Mark IV. Licensed their line to K2 in 1986 and exited the business, brand re-introduced in 2010 and then abandoned again. |
ORIGINAL+ | alpine skis | Austria | 2016 | Founded and owned by ski industry veteran Siegfried Rumpfhuber in 2016, the company started selling skis in October 2018. The company has a direct-to-consumer sales model, which includes skis customized for the user. |
Pamporovo-Ski | alpine skis | Bulgaria | 1975 | Produced skis under various brands, including Mladost, Dynasprint and Orion. Since 2008 owned by Amer Sports and producing Atomic and Salomon skis. |
Peltonen | cross-country | Finland | 1945 | Founded by Toivo Peltonen (1921–2007). Currently owned by Normark Suomi Oy, a Rapala VMC company. Produces competition level skis with advanced nanocarbon technology at the Heinola ski factory, but also markets cross-country skis for all price classes. |
Rocky Mountain Underground | alpine, freeride, park | United States | 2008 | Started off as a couple of guys with a ski press making skis for friends. Eventually the company, born in Colorado, transitioned into a 40 person company making some of the highest quality skis with innovative shapes. Now manufactured by Technica Group in Austria. |
Rønning Treski | cross-country skis, alpine | Norway | 1936 | Historic producer of mainly cross-country but also other types of skis such as Telemark, Big Mountain, and Hunter. Started production under the Rønning brand in 1936, and is currently the only producer of wooden skis in Norway. Still produces all skies by hand. |
Rossignol | alpine skis, ski jumping skis, cross-country skis, twin tips, ski boots, bindings, snowboards | France | 1907 | Introduced one of the first successful all-round fibreglass ski designs. Built a major conglomerate in the 1990s, including Rossignol, Dynastar, Lange, Look, Kerma and other brands. Taken over by Quiksilver in 2005 but lost money and sold only two years later to its CEO, Bruno Cercley. See 100 Years of Rossignol. |
Salomon | alpine skis, cross-country skis, ski boots, twin tips, bindings, snowboards | France | 1947 | Began as a family-owned shop making saw blades, then ski edges beginning around 1947. Expanded to make bindings (1955), then ski boots (1979) and cross-country ski gear, then golf (1985), the alpine skis (1989). Purchased by Adidas in 1997 and sold to Amer Sports (owner of Atomic, Wilson, Suunto and some other brands) in 2005. See Georges Salomon. |
Stöckli | alpine skis, ski clothes | Switzerland | 1935 | Established by Josef Stöckli. Made in Malters. |
Voile | alpine skis, touring skis, telemark bindings | United States | 1981 | Established by Mark Wariakois. Made in Utah. |
Voit | alpine skis | United States | 1966 | Used a new fibreglass/epoxy technique that was well-liked but very expensive. Exited the industry after only three years. |
Volant | alpine skis | United States | 1966–1989 | Introduced a stainless steel cap-ski in 1989, but was very expensive to produce and went out of business in 2001. Purchased by Amer Sports in 2003 and the brand abandoned around 2008. |
Völkl | alpine skis, twin tips, ski clothes | Germany | 1923 | Distributed in the 1960s by Sears in the US. Purchased by K2, and in turn, Jarden in 2007. Subsequently, purchased by Newell Rubbermaid. |
Boots
The following list consists of companies known primarily for their ski boots. Some entries are duplicated from above, but not all. Some, like Head, sell branded boots from other companies and are not listed here.
Name of brand | Origins from | Established in | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Black Diamond Equipment | United States | 1989 | Formerly Chouinard Equipment (founded in 1957), Black Diamond first entered the ski market in the early 1980s with the XCD telemark binding.[2] Today, Black Diamond designs and manufacturers a full line of skis, boots and bindings for alpine, telemark and touring pursuits. Black Diamond Equipment and Scarpa began a partnership in 1987 that ended in 2005.[3] |
Dalbello | Italy | 1974 | Dalbello is an Italian ski boot specialist founded in 1974 by Alessandro Dal Bello |
Hanson | United States | 1969 | Chris and Denny Hanson developed the rear-entry boot while working at Lange, and left to form their own company. Successful during the 1970s, mis-steps during the early 1980s led to their bankruptcy in 1984. Purchased by Daiwa and continues to exist in Japan. |
K2 | United States | 1962 | K2 launched its first boot production on Vashon Island in 1975. That effort failed. Purchased Raichle Flexon molds and started Full Tilt around 2006; launched a boot line under the K2 label in 2013. Sold to Jarden Corp. and then to Newell Rubbermaid. |
La Sportiva | Italy | 1928 | Founded by Narciso Delladio, La Sportiva has been producing footwear for mountain sports since 1928, specialising in mountain running, rock climbing, ice climbing, alpine climbing, and skiing. |
Lange | United States | 1962 | Introduced the first plastic ski boots in 1962, and followed up with a greatly improved model in 1965/66. After 1968, they were a must-have for racers, and rapidly took over the market. Remains a major player to this day, especially in racing. |
Nordica | Italy | 1939 | Nordica was formed in Montebelluna, the center of Italian ski boot manufacturing to this day. Entered the plastic ski boot market in 1968, following the lead set by Lange. Nordica pioneered use of the removable, customizable innerboot. Also produces skis and other equipment today. Part of the Tecnica Group. |
Rosemount | United States | 1965 | Another contender for title of "first plastic boot", Rosemount was an all-fibreglass shell with a unique side-opening design. Was in the process of introducing a rear-entry model in 1973 when they were purchased by G.H. Bass, then the United States distributor for Raichle. Rosemount ceased production around 1975. |
Roxa | Italy | 1980 | Established in Asolo as by four brothers to produce ski boots on behalf of other brands. In 1992 ROXA started to produce ice skates and in line skates under its own brand name. Since 2003 their ski boots are also branded Roxa. |
Salomon | France | 1947 | Introduced the famed SX series of rear-entry boots in 1979, and was a major success through the 1980s. When the rear-entry design rapidly fell from favour around 1990, they purchased the San Giorgio factory and turned to traditional front-entry designs. Salomon remains a major boot producer today. |
Scarpa | Italy | 1938 | Founded in Asolo, near Treviso by Rupert Guinness, 2nd Earl of Iveagh, SCARPA (Società Calzaturieri Asolani Riuniti Pedemontana Anonima) has been producing mountaineering and ski boots since 1938. |
Tecnica | Italy | 1960 | Formed in Montebelluna in 1960 to produce leather work boots, the company introduced the Moon Boot for apres-ski. They followed this with their first ski boots in 1973. Now controls a large number of brands including Nordica, Rollerblade, Dolomite, Lowa, Think Pink, Blizzard, Moon Boot, and others. |
References
- http://www.northlandskis.com/our-story/
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-09-30. Retrieved 2012-03-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "العاب رقص". www.al3abdance.com.
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