Supreme x Völkl Skis
Supreme vs. Original

Supreme version

About the original
The Volkl all-mountain freestyle ski is built around a multilayer beech and poplar wood core, a titanal reinforcement band for torsional stiffness, a directional twin-tip shape with early-rise tip rocker and camber underfoot, and a P-Tex 2100 race base, available in 165, 173, and 181 cm lengths for park-to-resort use. Volkl was founded in 1923 by Georg Volkl as a saddlery in Straubing, Germany and began producing wood skis the same year; the factory still produces every pair of Volkl skis in Straubing, making it one of the oldest continuously operating ski manufacturers in the world. The FW25 Supreme collab uses the same freestyle platform with box-logo topsheet graphics and retailed at $698.
About Völkl
Völkl is a German ski manufacturer founded in 1923 by Georg Völkl in Straubing, Bavaria, where it still produces skis today. The company began building wooden skis in a small workshop and released the Zebra, one of the first mass-produced metal-laminate skis, in 1965. Völkl remains one of the few ski makers manufacturing in Europe, operating a factory that supplies alpine racing, freeride, and all-mountain models to the World Cup circuit and retail market. Its current lineup includes the Racetiger, Mantra, and Katana lines. Supreme's collaboration with Völkl produced a co-branded ski printed with the Box Logo.


