Burton Bonded Hoodie Men's - 2012 Burton Hoody from Burton Snowboards Riding in your standard cotton hoodie seems like an awesome idea, until it gets wet, stays wet, and chills you to the bone. Riding in the 2012 Burton Bonded Hoodie, with its DRYRIDE Thermex bonded fleece is awesome all day long. Highly breathable, quick-drying, and warm, this sweatshirt on steroids joins a shell fabric to a plush fleece backing for enhanced weather resistance and comfort. Riding, hiking, or hanging—once you go DRYRIDE, you’ll never go back to cotton again. The last hoodie you’ll ever need. Ride, hike, or hang without succumbing to the chilling side effects of cotton. Shop all our new 2012 Burton hoodies! Burton snowboard hoodies are the best hooded sweatshirts on the planet!
- Bonded, Hard-Surface Fleece
- Joining a face or shell fabric to a fleece backing allows us to combine the comfort and style characteristics of a variety of fabrics—some with enhanced performance properties, others for style. We incorporate bonded fabrics throughout our fleece line to give you a variety of styles to choose from.
Burton Snowboards was founded by Jake Burton Carpenter in 1977. Carpenter was inspired by the snurfer, invented by Sherman Poppen. He modified it. In 1977 Carpenter moved to Londonderry, Vermont to make the first Burton Snowboards. Carpenter first made snowboards by hand in his garage. He couldn't afford the proper equipment -- so he applied polyurethane wearing a scuba mask. His co-founder Dimitrije Milovich, was an East coast surfer and founder of Winterstick.
In 1978, they moved to Manchester, Vermont. During the early years 4 or 5 workers sold, shaped, and repaired their snowboards.
Carpenter campaigned for local resorts to open their lifts to snowboard riders. The first mountain to have reportedly let snowboarders in was in 1982, the Suicide Six Resort in Pomfret, Vermont. Next was Stratton Mountain, and later, Jay Peak and Stowe. When resorts started to accept riders, the public did too. Burton was in place to supply them with snowboards.
In 1982 Burton was marketing their product at the National Snowboarding Championships were organized at the Suicide Six Resort. In 1985 the National Snowboarding Championships moved to Stratton Mountain and became the U.S. Open Snowboarding championships which was operated and owned by Burton. This competition helped legitimize the sport.
In 1985 Burton established the European Division of Burton in Innsbruck, Austria. In 1986 distribution started in New Zealand. In 1992 the Burton factory relocated to Burlington VT. In 1994 they opened the Japan division in Urawa-shi.
In 2009, Burton owned 10 companies that sold snowboards, outerwear, and shoes. R.E.D, Gravis, Anon, Analog, Forum, Special Blend, Foursquare, Jeenyus, and most recently Channel Islands. Channel Islands is a surfboard company, and surfboards seems to be Burtons next goal. In 2008 Burton began to make surfboards in Vermont.
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