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NUMBERED HELMET CAPS/COVERS
Any color, For numbered cover. Numbers are
approximately 3" high in black or white.
$25.00 |
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SKINSUIT PRICES:
SUITS (base
price):
Long Track $119.00 Short Track $119.00 Built-in Knee/shinpads =$40.00
Padding is one solid pad, no breaks between knee
and shin, of 1/2" protective closed-cell foam.
Will not absorb water. |
EXTRAS
-including stirrups, stripes, lettering, artwork, printing, or last minute design changes, etc.
SCREENPRINTING: $65 per screen per color (discounts available
at our discretion, and/or depending on complexity and number
of suits ordered)
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A LITTLE INFO ON MEASUREMENTS.
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We can create a skinsuit using standard sizing or by
using measurements you provide. Measurement Form. This
form can make it easier for you to know which measurements are needed and how to take them properly. For standard
sizing mostly we need height and weight, and whether the performer is an athlete, a dancer, or model. All skinsuits
made under one roof. We can also do screenprinting on skinsuits, our ink has a special blend of ink and stretch
additive so the custom printed artwork stretches better with the lycra.
PLEASE NOTE: The knee/shin pads protrayed in the photos throughout this site are of the old design. We now have a new
design which affords a lot more protection from falls. You'll notice the landing is much softer. :-).
Our knee/shin pads are one continues pad from top of knee to ankle, no breaks but is solid, closed-cell foam. Will
not absorb water should knees hit the ice. With the rave reviews we've received, we believe this is our best design ever! |
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CLICK HERE --"MEASUREMENT FORM"--
PAGE
The Measurement Form has all sizes needed and it also explains how to take your measurements.
We can offer assistance with this process, and you're welcome to call us at 760 - 240-2862. |
ICE SPEEDSKATER,
LONG AND SHORT TRACK
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| Long Track. |
Eric Heiden
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Purple and neon green. |
Neon Green and white stripes on Navy Blue skinsuit. |
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Pink Tie dye pattern. Photo provided courtesy of
Club House Pictures, Culver
City, CA. |
"Creative use of prints
(sorry our flag pattern no longer
available) |
Solid black suit with white screenprinted letters. |
Alaskan Speedskating Club. |
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Sky Blue, Pink and White.
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White Lines
On black suit. |
St Louis Skyline |
Diamond Arms.
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| You are only limit is your own ingenuity and imagination. So many of you have created
works of art with your original designs. We look forward to working with you on your next design. |
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Navy skinsuit with "U.S."
(Japanese characters) inside
red oval. This client designed
this suit and asked that we print
a coffee mug with the symbols. |
Here is a creative use of our all-star fabric. The stripe in legs came from an
all stars printed lycra and we cut a row of
stars to create the side stripes. |
SPEEDSKATING BOOT COVERS. Note,
these are custom printed skate boot covers.
These are put on the feet before you put on
your boots. You put your foot through and
bring up above your ankle, then put on your
skates and then bring covers down so the
widest area goes around the toe and heel. |
Looking forward to you call so we can
discuss your skinsuit/costuming needs.
Call today for pricing information: (760) 240-2862.

And Now For Something Completely Different, A funny article a speedskating friend shared
with us.
Was Published In EVERYDAY MAGAZINE On Sunday, March 31, 2002
"COVERING WINTER GAMES:
the long and "short track" of it." By Dave Barry
Have you ever wondered how professional journalists cover an international sporting event? Well, too bad, because I'm going
to tell you.
In February I spent three weeks at the Winter Olympics in Utah ("Where the Party Never Stops Until 8:30 p.m."). I was part
of the press corps swarming around Olympic events in thermal underwear, asking penetrating questions such as: (1) Who won
this event? (2) How can you tell? (3) What is this event called again? As you can see by these questions, the Olympic press
corps does not always have a solid grasp on the events it's covering. Take, for example, short-track speed skating. This is
one of those sports that nobody you know has ever heard of, let alone participated in. You suspect that the Olympic
organizers invent these sports just to see if they can trick the press corps into covering them. Clearly this was the origin
of curling ("I know! Let's have the competitors flail the ice with brooms!" "No! Even the press corps isn't stupid enough
to fall for THAT!").
I spent two nights watching short-track speed skating, and I never did figure it out. It consists of people skating around
very fast in a little circle, bent way over, with their faces almost touching the skater directly ahead, looking like
performers in a musical extravaganza called "Proctologists on Ice." So far, so good: It appears to be a race. But almost
always, just before the end of the race, most of the competitors would fall down. This happened so often it appeared to be
the preferred strategy ("Uh-oh! Finish line coming! Time to fall down!").
So the winner often turned out to be a competitor who, until the end of the race, had not been at all competitive. One
much-publicized Olympic short-track event was won by an Australian, who, many eyewitnesses believe, was not even IN the race,
because it is a known fact that there is no ice in Australia. This man was sitting off to the side, trying to figure out
which skate went on which foot, when suddenly the race officials handed him a gold medal.
On those rare occasions when the leading competitors failed to fall down, the apparent winner would cross the finish line,
skate around triumphantly for maybe a minute, and then ... get disqualified. I am serious. In the key races I saw, the
officials invariably declared that the winner had violated some rule, and therefore somebody ELSE was the actual winner.
Then, no matter who had won, a formal protest would be filed by Korea, which as far as I can tell is the only place in the
world that takes this sport seriously.
So imagine you're a journalist covering this event. You watch the big race. At the end, the ice is littered with fallen
proctologists. Out of this chaos, a random winner emerges and is immediately disqualified, at which point the formal Korean
protest is filed. The crowd, 13,000 people, is on its feet, going: "Huh?"
And now you, the journalist, must write a story on this. Step one is to ask the journalists around you if they have any
idea what just happened. (This is basic journalism procedure; it's what enables journalists who cannot correctly fill out
their mileage reimbursement forms to write stories about the collapse of Enron.)
Once all the journalists have determined, by interviewing each other, that nobody has the faintest clue how short-track
speed skating (or Enron) works, it's time for the entire press corps to race downstairs in a mob and interview the
participants. The irony is, at least in short-track speed skating, the reporters already know what the participants will
say. No matter what question they're asked, they'll shrug and respond: "That's short track!"
This is how they explain EVERYTHING in their sport - the falling down, the disqualifications, everything. If an alien
spacecraft crashed onto the ice and a 75-foot high two-headed lobster popped out and sang "My Way," the skaters would shrug
and say: "That's short track!"
At this point, you, the journalist, race back to the media workroom, where you risk being decked by microphones wielded by
angry roving Korean TV crews, who are DEMANDING SOME ANSWERS on this gigantic story, which has both North and South Korea on
the brink of declaring war on somebody. Somehow you must ignore the bedlam around you and, in minutes, produce your
authoritative story, armed with only two facts: (1) Nobody knows what happened; and (2) Whatever it was ... It was short
track!
This is the kind of heroic effort that we in the media made night after night at the Winter Olympics so that the next day's
newspaper would have a story that you, the reader, could ignore because you don't care about short-track speed skating. Not
that you should! It's a minor story, really. Until the missiles start arriving from Seoul.
Published in Everyday Magazine on Sunday, March 31, 2002.

MARGARET WAITE ATHLETIC DESIGNS
P.O. Box 1501 Apple Valley, CA. 92307-0028 (760)240-2862
North of beautiful Big Bear Mt. in Southern California
2012 Margaret Waite
Athletic Designs
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WEB SITE by JOHN WAITE |
Margaret Waite Athletic Designs is Owned and Operated by GOLD EAGLE ENTERPRISES. |
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