Archives Glossary Terms

What Is Snowboarding?

Snowboarding is a snow sport in which the rider descends slopes on a single board with both feet strapped in sideways via bindings. Riders use a regular (left foot forward) or goofy (right foot forward) stance and turn by edging the board. Styles include freeride, freestyle (park and pipe), and all-mountain riding, at resorts and in the backcountry.

What Is Ski Mountaineering?

Ski mountaineering combines mountaineering and skiing — climbing peaks on skis (or carrying them) using skins, crampons, and ice axes, then descending on skis through alpine terrain. It spans serious ski alpinism on glaciated, technical mountains and the fast, lightweight racing format known as skimo, demanding both mountain and skiing skills plus avalanche and glacier knowledge.

What Is Telemark Skiing?

Telemark skiing is a downhill style using free-heel bindings (the heel is never locked down) and a distinctive turn in which the skier drops into a lunge, leading with one ski and trailing the other with a bent rear knee. Named for Norway's Telemark region, it demands balance and technique and is prized for its graceful, athletic feel — 'free your heel, free your mind.'

What Is Backcountry Skiing?

Backcountry skiing is skiing in unpatrolled, ungroomed terrain outside ski-area boundaries, where there is no avalanche control, grooming, or rescue. It offers untracked snow and solitude but demands self-sufficiency, avalanche education and gear (beacon, shovel, probe), fitness, and route-finding. Most access is by ski touring uphill under your own power.

What Is Ski Touring?

Ski touring is traveling uphill and across snow-covered terrain under your own power using specialized bindings that free the heel for climbing, then lock it down to ski descents — with climbing skins on the skis for traction going up. It's the engine of backcountry skiing, letting skiers reach untracked terrain away from lifts.

What Is Cross-Country Skiing?

Cross-country skiing (Nordic skiing) is human-powered skiing across flat and rolling snow-covered terrain using lightweight skis and free-heel bindings that fix only the toe. Its two main styles are classic (striding in parallel tracks) and skate skiing (a skating motion on firm snow). It's a major endurance sport and an efficient way to travel over snow.

What Is Alpine Skiing?

Alpine skiing is downhill skiing on groomed slopes using fixed-heel bindings that lock both toe and heel to the ski, typically at lift-served resorts. It emphasizes carving and controlling speed on descents and is the most common form of recreational skiing, distinct from cross-country and free-heel telemark skiing.

What Is UPF (Ultraviolet Protection Factor)?

UPF (Ultraviolet Protection Factor) rates how effectively a fabric blocks ultraviolet radiation from reaching your skin. A UPF 50 fabric lets through only about 1/50th (2%) of UV, blocking roughly 98%. Unlike SPF, which rates sunscreen against UVB, UPF measures clothing against both UVA and UVB, and depends on the fabric's weave, color, weight, and treatments.

What Are Man-Made Cellulosic Fibers?

Man-made cellulosic fibers (MMCFs) are semi-synthetic fibers made by chemically dissolving and reforming natural cellulose, usually from wood pulp — including viscose/rayon, modal, and lyocell (e.g., Tencel). They feel soft and natural like cotton and are biodegradable, but their sustainability depends heavily on responsible forestry and clean production processes, which closed-loop lyocell does best.

What Is Infinna Fiber?

Infinna is a regenerated cellulose fiber made by Infinited Fiber Company from cotton-rich textile waste, breaking down discarded fabrics and reforming the cellulose into a new fiber that looks and feels like natural cotton. As a true textile-to-textile recycled fiber, it offers a circular alternative to virgin cotton and conventional viscose for more sustainable apparel.