Companies haven鈥檛 always put a lot of time and energy into courting female athletes. At least, that鈥檚 how it seemed to these four women. As competitive skiers and cyclists, they鈥檇 spent years wearing boring, ill-fitting gear, until they decided to take matters into their own hands. Each founded a company dedicated to making great sporting apparel for women. And as their gear proves, true passion makes perfect.
Kari Traa

You can鈥檛 mistake 鈥檚 base layers for anyone else鈥檚: her Nordic-inspired patterns are playful without falling into a听stereotypically girly trap. And her base layers are far more flattering听than most. Her 100-percent merino听 ($100)听places contrast panels of darker fabric along the outer leg that are also thinner and more breathable听for ventilation while skiing (they parallel the side zips on most shell pants). 鈥淲e care about making girls feel and look their best in our gear,鈥 says Traa.
A moguls skier and from Norway, Traa hated how her base layers fit. 鈥淚t was apparent that they weren鈥檛 designed for a female body,鈥 she recalls. And they looked so boring and aggro. 鈥淚 was tired of everything being communicated so seriously, with a 鈥榯ough sport鈥 message all the time, and I wanted to spread happiness and to show the fun part of it,鈥 she听says. Part of her motivation was to entice more women into her male-dominated sport. 鈥淎drenaline rush, and the experience of pushing your own limits, isn鈥檛 reserved for men. I wanted to create feminine designs that could inspire and motivate women to pursue adventures and be active while looking their best.鈥
She makes sure that her tops fit and flatter athletes with breasts. Traa is also working with breast movement specialist at Portsmouth University to develop her own line of sports bras, and her line of training apparel is growing, too. 鈥淲e know what women prefer and need, which makes us think of details that a unisex company might overlook,鈥 says Traa. 鈥淲e are solely focused on women.鈥
Kristy Scrymgeour

A former pro cyclist, Scrymgeour wore men鈥檚 kits with too-long jerseys听that bagged in all the wrong places. 鈥淐ycling is traditionally a men鈥檚 sport and it鈥檚 dominated by the men鈥檚 market, so companies were focused on making apparel for their biggest market,鈥 she says. But it wasn鈥檛 until she 鈥攁nd had to outfit racers with apparel worthy of elite athletes鈥攖hat听her frustration with the lack of great women鈥檚 options bubbled over.
So in 2013, she co-founded , a brand of men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 cycling apparel that gives both sexes equal attention, though the company launched with just women's kit.听鈥淔it was the most important factor,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e wanted the clothing to be made specifically for women鈥檚 bodies, rather than using a slightly edited men鈥檚 fit.鈥 Scrymgeour and her designers also prioritized great-feeling fabric, and they tackled functional problems too: the ($229), which makes it easier for women to make a quick toilet stop, quickly became Velocio鈥檚 best-selling item.听
And yes, women鈥檚 gear can turn a profit. 鈥淭he women鈥檚 market is听the biggest growth market, and brands are starting to react,鈥 says Srymgeour, who is no longer alone in her quest to make great women鈥檚 cycling apparel. 鈥淭hings have come a long way,鈥 she says.听
Katy Hover-Smoot

Growing up near听San Francisco, Katy Hover-Smoot spent most of her weekends at Lake Tahoe鈥檚 ski resorts, and eventually moved there in 2013 to spend all day听skiing the Sierra backcountry.
But mountain-town life emphasized how stale women鈥檚 technical apparel really was. The zip-T鈥檚 she wore for skinning up mountains weren鈥檛 what she鈥檇 prefer for听apr猫s. 鈥淢ost large companies focus their R&D budgets on outerwear and hardgoods, but often overlook softgoods, especially on the women鈥檚 side,鈥 says Hover-Smoot. 鈥淎s a result, we haven鈥檛 seen significant design innovation in the softgoods categories over the last decade.鈥
So Hover-Smoot co-founded to offer cool-looking women鈥檚 technical apparel. She started in 2016 with bike shorts, and recently expanded to women鈥檚 base layers. The ($109) is a scoop-neck pocket tee that looks a lot like my favorite cotton shirts (it even feels like cotton jersey). But it鈥檚 made of a startlingly soft merino/nylon blend that wicks sweat and dries faster than any all-cotton fabric. It immediately became my wear-everywhere shirt. The ($99) is fun too, with a whimsical polka-dot waistband, contrast seams across the thighs, and a three-quarter听length that pairs perfectly with ski boots.
鈥淲e want to create design-forward softgoods for women that perform during our mountain pursuits听and听have character,” she says.听
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Corinne Prevot

If you鈥檙e a Nordic skier, or have spent much time among 鈥淣ordorks,鈥 you鈥檝e noticed that the cross-country ski aesthetic is particularly dark and intense鈥攄reary for a teenage girl.听
As a high-schooler and Nordic skier at Burke Mountain Academy, Corinne Prevot spent one of her Christmas breaks sewing the kind of accessory that no Nordic skier had ever been spotted in before: a colorful, flower-print Lycra hat. 鈥淚 wore it to a race in Rumford, Maine, and all the girls from Stratton started flocking around, asking, 鈥楥an I buy one of those?鈥欌
So Prevot and her mom stitched up a bunch more, and started selling them at that season鈥檚 comps and at Burke, where she also offered neck gaiters for the Alpine racers.
A decade later, 鈥攖he hat company she eventually founded鈥攊s still known for its , says Prevot, who now produces her distinctive toppers in a Vermont factory. Skida hats continue to enjoy a cult following, just as they did among the teens on New England鈥檚 competitive ski circuit, only the line has grown to include hats for men, kids, and听babies. Last January鈥檚 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 March in Montpelier 鈥渨as a sea of Skida hats,鈥 says Prevot. 鈥淚t was like the uniform for the day, the style piece.鈥