鈥淯nder boob or over boob?鈥 That was the question co-founder Dan Abrams posted to Facebook in a fit of design frustration. The company鈥檚 designers had been working on a women鈥檚 ski bib for nearly three years. They were about to make samples and still weren鈥檛 sure what to do about the actual bib.
So Abrams turned to the Internet. 鈥淚t was the first time we used the community to give us data, and it was amazing how many women spoke up,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey knew exactly what we were talking about. Overwhelmingly, they said, 鈥業f you鈥檙e going to do a bib, give us one that covers our chest.鈥欌
Flylow聽had been procrastinating on making a women鈥檚 bib because it was worried about getting it wrong. The men鈥檚 version, the Baker, designed with help from the Mount Baker Ski Patrol, was one of the company鈥檚 bestselling pieces of gear. But women鈥檚 bodies generally vary in more directions, and women tend to be more particular about fit because of that. This made Flylow wary about committing to a women鈥檚 style.
鈥淣ow the women鈥檚 stuff is growing faster than the men鈥檚 stuff.鈥
Abrams says they wanted to have equivalent men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 gear in the line but weren鈥檛 sure many people would buy the women鈥檚 bibs. The women they knew, like Abram鈥檚 wife, former telemark freeskiing world champion and 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor , wanted bibs, but they weren鈥檛 sure if the niche was too small. Flylow went to retailers to see if women were actually buying bibs and received mixed answers. Some places said the audience was too small, while others said that really nice versions sold well. Abrams says聽they realized Flylow had to do something pretty specific, so they committed to doing a high-end technical version.
Then the designers started to work through the fit factors: hips, breasts, backcountry bathroom breaks. 鈥淎 size medium pant is going to have to fit a whole height range and a whole hip range, but with bibs, now we have to work with height, hips, and boobs. This is effing complicated,鈥 Abrams says. They cut the men鈥檚 bibs basically straight up and down, but for the women鈥檚 version, they had to account for waists and a wide range of midriffs, even within the same size range. They spent a lot of time figuring out waist taper and built a stretchy panel into the back to give it more flexibility. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 change the aesthetic, but it changes the fit,鈥 he says.
Beyond fit, the designers had to figure out functionality. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 even solicit this, but when we asked for beta, people were like, 鈥楤ibs are tough because they鈥檙e hard to pee in,鈥欌 Abrams says. They rejected the mountaineering-style drop seat鈥攖hey didn鈥檛 think it interfaced well with long underwear鈥攁nd finally settled on a side zip that creates a hole Abrams says is big enough to fit your butt through.
Then Flylow took beta testing beyond Facebook and into the woods. Athlete , the company鈥檚 fit model, helped them figure out how long the zipper had to be and where it should be placed. It took a lot of bathroom stops. 鈥淪he texted us from a photo shoot: 鈥業鈥檓 peeing in the bibs right now, and it works!鈥欌 Abrams says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we took an extra two years鈥攚e wanted to make something universal.鈥
And here鈥檚 the thing: after years of futzing with hip stretch and pee-ability, it worked. The final result, the , became the biggest thing Flylow put out this season. Turns out that making a tightly designed technical piece for women pays off. 鈥淲e are blowing the roof off the bib world right now,鈥 Abrams says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e never launched a product and had it go to the top of our direct sales before.鈥
He says they were worried that women wouldn鈥檛 buy a burly, expensive, backcountry-focused pair of bibs. It鈥檚 scary for a small company to branch out into highly specific pieces of gear. In the past, Flylow limited the number of women鈥檚 products because it was unsure about the marketability. 鈥淲e started out making simple products, and we just called them unisex because we could only make so many things,鈥 Abrams says. 鈥淭hen the women鈥檚 line chased the men鈥檚 line to get new styles. But now the women鈥檚 stuff is growing faster than the men鈥檚 stuff. It鈥檚 almost equal in numbers of products sold.鈥