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K2 Sports, LLC, known simply as K2, is an American sporting goods company headquartered in Seattle, Washington focused primarily on winter sports equipment. K2 operates under the labels K2 Snow and K2 Skates, as well as its subsidiaries Backcountry Access, Ride Snowboards, Tubbs Snowshoes, Atlas Snow-Shoe Company, LINE Skis, Full Tilt Boots, and Madshus brands. [1]
After founding and selling Line Skis to K2, J Skis was created by Jason Levinthal. [7] J Skis is an independent manufacturer of small production and limited edition skis. K2: alpine skis, twin tip skis, snowboards, mogul skis: Seattle, WA, United States: 1962: Founded by Bill and Don Kirschner to make fiberglass skis on Vashon Island, Wash.
Line Skis, commonly shortened to Line or stylized as LINE, is a new school ski company owned by K2 Sports.Line Skis was founded by Jason Levinthal in 1995 to produce short, twin-tipped skis for freestyle skiers, and has since moved to produce full-length free skis.
In this article we are going to list the 15 biggest companies that went bankrupt. Click to skip ahead and jump to the 5 biggest companies that went bankrupt. Look, while we all hate the ultra-rich ...
K2 is a major US-based ski manufacturing company. [31] In 1961 they were one of the first companies to begin producing and distributing fiberglass skis. Today K2 is primarily renowned for its wide variety of torsion-box ski designs. They sponsor several professional skiers and ski teams. Rossignol is a French company established in 1907. [32]
“America is broke right now, and we saw that coming back in 1971, you know, Nixon took the dollar off the gold standard, and then this became trash,” he said during a recent Fox Business ...
Zeno became World Champion with Nordica both in the downhill and the giant slalom of the 1950 World Championships in Aspen, Colorado and gave his name to a ski boot made by the company in Trevignano. The 1960s saw several new introductions: the buckle, a fastening system conceived in Austria and applied for the first time in Italy by Nordica ...
In 2004, K2 Sports bought the original Flexon moulds, planning to enter the boot business. [N 1] However, they initially did nothing with the design. In 2006, K2 purchased Line Skis, and Line decided to immediately re-launch the Flexon under the new brand-name, Full Tilt. Immediate turned out to be a relative term, and the new boots did not ...