At Meier Skis, quality, craftsmanship, and sustainability converge to offer you a great skiing experience with our custom-designed skis.
When you opt for custom-design skis, you're not just getting a unique design; you're investing in quality. Each pair is built one at a time, ensuring that every detail, from the core to the topsheet, meets the highest standards of craftsmanship. Your custom skis will be handmade in our very own Craft Skiery™ in Denver, Colorado, and can be easily customized with graphic changes, whether you want beloved photos or a business logo.
Our goal is to create unique, custom skis just for you, suitable for any model or length in our lineup.
$1,099 Semi-Custom Design: Select from a range of existing designs from our standard lineup collection. Limited edition designs are available by graphic at various other price points.
$1,495 Customer-Supplied Design*: Use a provided design template to bring your unique vision to life. Includes Meier branding application to uploaded design.
$1,495 Professional Graphic Design: Share your design ideas, and let a team of professional graphic designers materialize your vision. Includes 4 hours of design time working with our graphic designer!
*Excludes licensed graphics
Once you choose the type of design you want, a dedicated team member will work closely with you to get the model and the right length that will fit your unique skiing style, terrain preference, and ski ability. From there, it typically takes our craftsman 4–6 weeks for your custom skis to be ready for the slopes.
Are you the DIY type? You also have the option of using your own design. Just use our provided design template and follow our design specs, available here.
Meier Skis is committed to sustainability. We use 100% American wood, including aspen and beetle-kill pine right from Colorado. These woods are renowned for their durability, flexibility, and responsiveness, providing a skiing experience that is both smooth and exhilarating.
Beyond materials, we also focus on eco-friendly manufacturing processes. We use bio-based Super Sap epoxy in the construction process and have eliminated nearly all single-use plastic from our shipping process. Even the sublimation paper used for printing designs is reused for packing, reinforcing our commitment to sustainability and environmental education with the "3 R's" (reduce, reuse, recycle).
Note: the binding plates that appear on the skis in this video are no longer a part of our manufacturing process. The skis look even better, now!
Ted started with Meier Skis in 2010 when he met founder Matt Cudmore. Together, they moved Meier Skis out of Matt's garage and setup a factory in Glenwood Springs. Ted moved the company to Denver in 2016 and, like most small business owners, does way too many things to list here.
Ted is originally from the Boston area.
Michelle joined Meier Skis in 2018 after Ted’s "friendly encouragement" (AKA months of "please work at Meier") finally won her over. It was a twist she never saw coming when she was living her best ski bum life in Beaver Creek and Jackson Hole. With an advertising degree in hand, Michelle started out marketing small businesses in ski towns, which somehow evolved into marketing skis from a big city. These days, she balances Meier duties while managing life with Ted, two adventurous boys, and a dog with zero chill.
Michelle is originally from Michigan.
Parker grew up in Connecticut and moved to Colorado in 2016 when he started school at CU Boulder studying Mechanical Engineering. He started working at Meier in 2021 as a tuner before moving into the Director of Production and Engineering role. When he is not at the shop, he is doing extensive R&D on our skis and shot skis.
Will is one of our versatile ski builders. He can go from the tune room to the press room with ease and coordinates that massive job that is printing our many different ski graphics.
Originally from Connecticut, he wants everyone to know that "I like skiing powder." Same WIll, same.
He followed up with, "whether on resort or in the backcountry, I'm always looking for the steepest and deepest lines."