Line Skis
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.
The brand also sells items such as ski poles, streetwear, and various accessories.
Line Skis manufactures its stock in the same factory as K2 Skis.
Line Skis maintains a professional team featuring athletes like Eric Pollard (skier) Tom Wallisch, Leo Tailleffer, and Hadley Hammer. Many are featured in Line's online webisode series, the LINE Traveling Circus.
History
Establishment
Line Skis was formed in a one-car garage, where the founder Jason Levinthal began manufacturing Line's skiboards. After visiting a trade show known as the SIA with some prototypes, Levinthal signed a contract with a Japanese distributor for his first order of 1000 pairs of skis. Line Skis then moved to a rented garage, where friends and family helped him fill the order.In 1997, Line Skis filed the first patent for twin-tipped skis.
Line Skis had little U.S. market until the 1997 SIA, when the large company Salomon presented its own novelty ski boards, and sales improved.
The next season, Line signed five of its first athletes: Carter Griffin, Mike Nick, Reg Pare, Doug Levinthal, Mike Wilson, and Jason Levinthal himself. Line also introduced four new ski boards: the Mike Nick Pro Model, the Jedi 89, the Cruiser 89, and the Kicker 76.
In 1998, Line introduced a full-length pro model, "The Ostness Dragon", as well as a short, center mounted, symmetrical ski called the Twelve Sixty. K2 Skis had previously released the short, unwieldy K2 Poacher, and Salomon had produced the Salomon 1080.
Post-establishment
By this time, in 1999, Levinthal was producing 4,000 skis a year through various garages. Months later, Line Skis was acquired by the Canadian manufacturer Karhu, from Cowansville, Quebec, who began producing Line Skis; Karhu already produced Karhu skis and some Burton snowboards.When Karhu was acquired by the larger K2 Sports in 2006, and Line Skis moved to Seattle, Jason Levinthal continued to direct the company from Burlington, Vermont.
In 2008, Andy Parry and Will Wesson joined the Line team. Together they established the LINE Traveling Circus, and finished filming their tenth season in 2018.
In 2013, Jason Levinthal left his top position at Line Skis in order to start a new, direct-to-consumer company known as J Skis. He was succeeded by former intern Josh Malczyk.
Sale of company
In 2003, Jason Levinthal sold Line Skis to Trak Sports USA. Line Skis then moved from Levinthal's garage in Albany, NY, to a shared complex in Burlington, VT with Karhu USA, another one of Trak Sports' ski company subsidiaries.Later, in 2006, Trak Sports USA sold Line Skis and Karhu USA to K2 Sports, thus combining K2's manufacturing connections with Line's ski development. Line Skis moved production from their original factory in China, to the same Chinese factory as K2 Skis. Although Line's skis are outsourced to China, the design and prototyping is conducted in Washington.
Following the acquisition, Tim Petrick, vice president of global sales for K2 Sports, announced: " different brands with different distribution strategies, and distinct pricing structures backed by a reliable supply chain, management, warranty protection, and solid production facilities."
Line Skis and Karhu subsequently moved to K2 Sports' headquarters in Seattle, WA, although they retained several of their Burlington employees; namely, the directors, graphic designers, and engineers.
K2 Sports itself was acquired by Jarden Corp. in 2007 for $1.2 billion. Then, in 2016, Newell Rubbermaid acquired Jarden Corp. as they merged into Newell Brands, Inc. The resulting $16 billion consumer goods company shortly began to offload the winter sports businesses Jarden had acquired in 2007, which included Line's parent K2 Sports. For ten months, Line Skis was in danger of closure; Michael Polk, CEO of Newell Brands, told investors in September 2016 that if they were unable to find a buyer for their winter brands by June 2017, K2 Sports would face closure. However, some consumers argue that there was little chance of this, due to the quality reputations of K2 and its subsidiaries.
In late May 2017, Kohlberg & Company, LLC agreed to purchase K2 Sports from Newell Brands for $240 million. The vice president of K2 Sports expressed his excitement at the sale, saying: "it's the first time in a long time that we've had ownership that has been 100% excited about the opportunity of the winter sports business."
As of July 2018, Line Skis continues to serve as a subdivision of K2 Sports beneath its parent business, Kohlberg & Company, LLC.
Eric Pollard
Eric Pollard is an artist, designer, and professional skier for Line Skis. Line has sponsored Pollard since 1997. Eric Pollard works directly with Line's engineers to develop his pro models; his first recorded personal project, and second pro model, was the LINE Elizabeth in 2005. Since 2003, the partnership between Pollard and Line Skis has produced ten pro models, each with topsheets and bases designed yearly by Pollard himself.As of the 2018-2019 season, his signature collection comprises the LINE Pescado, Sakana, Magnum Opus, Mordecai, Sir Francis Bacon, and Sir Francis Bacon Shorty. He also has a pro model pole: Pollard's Paintbrush.
Eric Pollard is artistically involved with Line, and has previously gone beyond ski topsheets and graphics to contribute to the brand's streetwear as well. Line's engineers concur that Pollard "epitomizes our ethos of going down the mountain in a different way, of looking at the hill with a new perspective."
Tom Wallisch
Signed with Line Skis on November 3, 2014. Tom Wallisch is a professional freeskier. He began skiing in 1990 and competing in the sport in 2009. After graduating from high school, Wallisch moved to Salt Lake City for post-secondary education at the University of Utah where he is pursuing a degree in the school of business.Line Traveling Circus
To contrast to the high budget ski films and online webisodes, Line created the Traveling Circus to document pro skiers adventures in an average person’s playground. High School friends and professional skiers Will Wesson and Andy Parry first approached Levinthal with the idea of traveling around and skiing after they graduated from college, and filmed a pilot episode at Mt. Hood, Oregon.The series centers on the new school skiing and non-snow adventures of Wesson and Parry, with many guest stars throughout. The series epitomizes the ultimate quest for snow that is a ski bum's lifestyle. Many of the locations filmed are low profile resorts, especially from the East Coast.
In season 3, episode 2, the Traveling Circus acquired the now famous yellow TC van, which is still in use. Also in season 3, the TC expanded their boundaries outside of North America by venturing to Europe for the first time in episode 4. Season 5 again expanded the boundaries with Will, Andy and friends going to New Zealand and then to Japan to explore the bottomless powder. Released as roughly monthly webisodes online in 2008, the series has had 18 seasons to date.
After episode 8.1, principal cinematographer Shane McFalls retired. Jake Strassman now films and edits the series.