With FIT ADV, the garment’s materials have been engineered to deliver exactly what an athlete needs to combat the elements, Nichol says. For example, if a garment is tailored to keep an athlete dry and cool, Nike designers will focus on specific areas, informed by meticulous lab testing, where we know the athlete will experience significant sweat and heat during movement. You can see this in the Nike Alpha Ultrabreathe with Dri-FIT ADV above; in high heat and sweat zones, the sports bra’s material are designed with cooling, wicking mesh.
These insights are based on significant athlete testing in the Nike Sport Research Lab, now the new state-of-the art LeBron James Innovation Center, one of the largest sports research labs in the world. There, Nike designers are able to collect massive amounts of athlete insights—how much an athlete sweats and where, what parts of the body are most vulnerable to wind and cold—and collate it all into digital computational designs. This means designers can engineer a material pixel by pixel to cool, warm or protect an athlete exactly where they need it most on their body, Nichol says. It’s one seamless garment that works as a comprehensive performance system.
“That’s where the ‘advanced’ comes in,” says Nichol. “It’s the ability to get incredibly specific and prescriptive about where technologies need to be, and then to have a little fun with how those technologies show up—say, highlighting the cooling zones with a pop of color, which, visually, can be compelling and beautiful.”