OUR MISSION
Why Sulkii exists, and what we’re building.
Sulkii was born out of years of small frustrations.
As true enthusiasts of the mid week pole session we understand how hard it is to find a polewear set that works. Invertability, grip concious cuts and a clean aesthetic just dont exist in the same place.
As true enthusiasts of the mid week pole session we understand how hard it is to find a polewear set that works. Invertability, grip concious cuts and a clean aesthetic just dont exist in the same place.
We found that many women struggled to find tops that were both supportive and invert friendly. Support was inconsistent. Coverage was compromised. And “good enough” and constantly rearranging became the standard. Read more about why we started Sulkii →
https://medium.com/@sulkii
Where was the polewear for women who train three, four, five times a week? The ones building strength. The ones who want coverage without feeling frumpy. The ones who need real support upside down but still want to look and feel good in what they're wearing.
With over fifteen years of experience across technical design, garment construction, and product development, we understand fit. We understand durability. We understand what separates something that looks good from something that is built well.
So we built what was missing.
Sulkii creates practical, flattering performance polewear designed for real training and real bodies. Considered blocks. Secure fits. Coverage where it matters. Styles that feel elevated without sacrificing function.
Sulkii creates practical, flattering performance polewear designed for real training and real bodies. Considered blocks. Secure fits. Coverage where it matters. Styles that feel elevated without sacrificing function.
It’s not about being the most revealing in the room.
It’s about feeling secure enough to forget what you’re wearing.
Sulkii exists because too many women accepted “good enough.” We knew it could be better.
It’s about feeling secure enough to forget what you’re wearing.
Sulkii exists because too many women accepted “good enough.” We knew it could be better.