Wadding thermal insulation
Thermal insulation will keep your young skiers at the right temperature, neither too hot nor too cold. The garment adapts to the body's physical activity and to the outside environment. Wedze uses wadding for insulation to keep the body warm. Wadding is a synthetic component made from polyester which stores more or less air, depending on the length of the fibres. The thicker the wadding, the more air it contains and the warmer it is.
Coating treatment
The coating is a waterproof substance that's spread on the inner side of the outer suit fabric. It prevents water from seeping into the garment but allows water vapour produced by the body's physical activity to escape. This way, young children stay dry and are more comfortable.
Taped main seams
As well as waterproof fabric, we have made this suit even more watertight by taping the seams. These are waterproof, adhesive strips taped to the inside seams of the garment to make it perfectly watertight. These taped seams are in the areas most exposed to snow. On this ski suit, this means the shoulders, chest and buttocks.
Tip
Your children move a lot when they're on the snow and they sometimes lose their mittens. We have a tip for keeping them in place: simply pass the elasticated wrist tightening tab between the thumb and index finger before fixing it to the rip-tab.
PULL'N FIT Concept
The innovative PULL'N FIT concept makes it easy to adjust the leg length of the ski suit with precision so that it adapts to the child's body shape. Just pull the elastic in the ankle pockets and there you go, a shortened ski suit!
Ski pass pocket
No need to get your ski pass out any more! Your sleeve has a ski pass pocket so you can access the lifts quickly.
Customisation
There's a label on the inner lining you can write the child's name on to personalise the product. Handy for finding their suit after ski school, at the crèche or at school.
How should you dress your children to make sure they keep warm on the ski slopes?
To make sure you stay warm and dry, we recommend using the 3-technical-layer rule: Layer 1 or second skin, to stay dry. Layer 2 or an insulating layer, to keep the heat in. Layer 3 or a protective layer, to protect against bad weather.
How should you dress children to prevent them getting cold legs on the slopes?
To keep your legs warm and dry, 2 layers of clothing are enough: 1 skiing base layer to wick away perspiration and 1 pair of ski trousers to protect from the weather and provide warmth.