Crash Pads CP Pro Women\"s Padded Shorts - Leopard Small (27-30 inches)

Price 74.95 USD

EAN/UPC/ISBN Code 812746011710

Brand Crash Pads

Manufacture Lehner Industries Inc

CrashPads CP Pro Padded Shorts Crash Pads CP Pro padded shorts combine the company?s ergonomically inspired approach to protective gear design with a snazzy leopard-print fabric. The strategically scored foam pads allow you complete freedom of movement and flexibility while protecting your quads, hips, buttocks, and tailbone so you can stay protected and look good doing it. CrashPads CP Pro Padded Shorts Features: Strategically scored foam padding for maximum flexibility Lightweight and low-profile Half-inch thick pads made from closed-cell high-density, flame-bonded foam Covered by abrasion-resistant fabric Durable, technical fabric contains Body Care with quick dry function CrashPads CP Pro Padded Shorts: Real technology for real women Women?s-specific sports gear is often a poorly designed afterthought that lacks the technical advances of men?s gear. That is absolutely not the case with CrashPads CP Pro padded shorts, which are a women?s version of the best-selling CrashPads 2500 padded shorts . CrashPads CP Pro padded shorts are a full technical short for the female athlete. The padded is made from closed-cell, high-density, flame-bonded foam that is scored and articulated to give you maximum flexibility. What makes the CP Pro padded shorts different are a shorter leg length (ideal for derby girls who want to wear them under a pair of shorts), a wide, soft waistband that can be turned down if you wish, and, of course, that sexy leopard print fabric. Crash Pads Crash Pads is dedicated to making protective gear that is flexible and lightweight but won?t restrict any of your athletic mobility. As a company, Crash Pads is the quintessential small business success story. Back in 1992, in the beautiful river town of Astoria, Oregon, a woman teaching herself to inline skate got tired of the bruises she suffered every time she wiped out. For her own self-preservation, she began to stitch foam pads into her clothing. Through trial and error, her designs became