WHAT IS BONE BINDING?

Bone Binding is a new movement within snowboarding created to improve comfort while riding.  This flexibility lets riders more freely express their creativity on the snow and in the air.  The binding explodes the possibilities for the body positions you can get to on a snowboard. 

The distinctive feature is a new tilting degree of freedom that lets your legs pivot with respect to the board.  It turns about an axis pointed along the foot at ankle height. This lets you be way more flexible without sacrificing control. 

Bone Binding is about doing something new and different while feeling fantastic. It is about unlocking creativity.

STABILITY

Bone Bindings are safe and stable.  With the pivot axis at ankle height, the binding creates a mini-swing.  With the axis over the foot instead of under it, the binding does not rotate unless you want it to. This is where your foot rotates naturally, and the key is in the height of the axis. 

You have control of you body since you apply force on the board in 2 places – your front foot and back foot.

THE FEELING

Bone bindings create a surfy feeling for normal shredding, and heel-to-toe control over the board is the same as traditional bindings.  Your feet don’t need to be rigidly locked to the board. You control the board by naturally shifting your weight front to back.

WHY... NOT?

Do you remember the first time you strapped into a snowboard and feeling over restricted?  After time, riders get used to this feeling, but it doesn’t need to be this way.  The bindings can be more flexible and let your legs move to their most natural position. 

The binding is also comfortable on the lift because your board hangs down without stressing your knee. Being able to make small movements during traverses and normal riding adds up to make a big difference at the end of the day. 

The Consequence

Being able to bend your body in a new way in the air opens up huge possibilities for never been done trick and a whole new style in the air.

Intellectual Property

Bone Bindings are patented in America and patent pending in countries across the world.