Ridgeflow™: Where Perseverance Meets Performance

Ridgeflow™: Where Perseverance Meets Performance

Ridgeflow™ cap at the shoreline

The Ridgeflow Project began with a simple question: what would it take to create a cap that truly keeps pace with the people who push themselves? If you’ve run with sweat burning your eyes or hiked wishing your gear were tougher, you already know why Ridgeflow™ exists.

Ridgeflow™ is our answer. Purpose-built, clean, durable. It’s engineered to disappear when you’re in motion so you can stay locked into your flow.

Why a Cap?

Small gear, big impact. A great cap travels with you through pre-dawn miles, steep climbs, and hot-weather sessions where focus matters most. Built right, it protects, cools, and quietly improves every step.

That’s what Ridgeflow™ is designed to do: eliminate distractions so you can focus on the work ahead.

The Culture That Shapes Us

LLRULE isn’t chasing the crowd. We’re building in a different lane, a culture of perseverance where results come from consistent effort, not shortcuts. I still remember our first order notification from Alaska: one person, one crewneck, proof that steady work compounds.

That moment set our DNA. We go hard and stay humble. We obsess over details and remain grounded in community. We share the journey, but we don’t compromise the destination. Ridgeflow™ carries that mindset into the world.

What Ridgeflow™ Is

Ridgeflow™ is performance equipment tuned for changing conditions. Lightweight, quick-dry, and breathable to keep you cool. A moisture-managing sweatband that stops sting before it starts. UPF 30+ for long, exposed efforts. A flexible brim that packs down and snaps back. Two closure styles so fit is a choice, not a compromise.

Ridgeflow™ details and materials

More Than a Product—A Project

We’re launching Ridgeflow™ on Kickstarter because we’re building openly—sketches, prototypes, setbacks, and breakthroughs included. This isn’t a pre-order funnel; it’s an invitation to join us at the edge of a new lane we’re creating.

The Founders Circle VIP is how you step in early: a fully refundable $5 deposit secures early-bird pricing, access to an exclusive Kickstarter colorway, direct updates from the founder, and recognition as one of Ridgeflow’s first backers.

Join the Founders Circle

Step into the first wave of Ridgeflow™ and be ready when we launch.

Reserve Your Ridgeflow™ — SOLD OUT

Where We’re Headed

Ridgeflow™ is the first marker in a wider expanse we’re charting: a focused ecosystem of performance essentials—jackets, shorts, layers, and accessories—built on the same principles. Solve real problems. Strip out noise. Make gear you trust when the day asks more of you.

We’re not competing for attention in crowded water—we’re shaping our own. If the ethos resonates, we’d be honored to have you alongside as we move.

If this aligns with how you move, start with Ridgeflow™.

Reserve Your Ridgeflow™ — SOLD OUT Back to Home

LLRULE — Performance built on perseverance.

Community Resilience Performance Gear Ridgeflow

Older Post Newer Post

Leave a comment

TRAILHEAD A Trail Running Series by LLRULE

RSS

Tags

A hiker climbing iron rungs bolted into granite cliff on the Precipice Trail, Acadia National Park, Maine
Acadia Cadillac Mountain Coastal Hiking Maine National Park Precipice Trail Trail Running TRAILHEAD

Acadia: The First Light

TRAILHEAD · ACADIA NATIONAL PARK · MAINE Between early October and early March, the first sunlight to touch United States soil lands on the summit...

Read more
A hiker crosses a suspension bridge on the Wonderland Trail, Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
Hiking Mount Rainier National Park Trail Running TRAILHEAD Volcano Washington Wonderland Trail

Mount Rainier: Ninety-Three Miles Around a Volcano

TRAILHEAD · MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK · WASHINGTON Mount Rainier is a stratovolcano, which is a useful fact to carry with you on the Wonderland...

Read more
A climber on the Chasm View section of Longs Peak, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
14er Alpine Colorado Hiking Longs Peak National Park Rocky Mountain Trail Running TRAILHEAD

Rocky Mountain: The Air Above Twelve

TRAILHEAD · ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK · COLORADO The alarm goes off at 2:30 a.m. in Estes Park, and you are already calculating: the trailhead...

Read more
Two backpackers on trail with Grand Teton rising behind them, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
Cascade Canyon Grand Teton Hiking National Park Trail Running TRAILHEAD Wilderness Wyoming

Grand Teton: No Foothills, No Warning

TRAILHEAD · GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK · WYOMING Most mountain ranges give you foothills first. A gradual grade up through lower elevations, through transitional terrain,...

Read more
A person exploring an ice cave in Glacier National Park, Montana
Glacier Highline Trail Hiking Montana National Park Trail Running TRAILHEAD Wilderness

Glacier: Running with Bears

TRAILHEAD · GLACIER NATIONAL PARK · MONTANA You carry bear spray on your hip from the moment you step out of the car at Logan...

Read more
Yosemite: Above the Valley Floor
California Half Dome Hiking National Park Trail Running TRAILHEAD Yosemite

Yosemite: Above the Valley Floor

TRAILHEAD · YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK · CALIFORNIA The trail up Half Dome begins in shadow. At the Happy Isles trailhead, before dawn has pushed full...

Read more
Hikers descending the South Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
arizona camping grand canyon national parks rim-to-rim southwest trail running

Grand Canyon: Rim to River to Rim

TRAILHEAD · GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK · ARIZONA Every trail run begins with a descent. The Grand Canyon is the only one in America where...

Read more
The Lost Coast: California's Most Remote Run
California Coastal Humboldt TRAILHEAD Wilderness

The Lost Coast: California's Most Remote Run

The highway couldn't follow this stretch of California coast. The terrain was too steep, the cliffs too unstable. So they built the road inland and...

Read more
How to Read a Trail
Craft Skill Trail Running TRAILHEAD Training

How to Read a Trail

Road runners look at where their feet are. Trail runners look at where their feet are going to be. The skill that separates them is...

Read more
Sedona After Sunrise: Red Rock Before the Heat
Arizona Desert Red Rock Sedona TRAILHEAD

Sedona After Sunrise: Red Rock Before the Heat

The red rocks of Sedona hold heat from the day before. Run them at first light, when the temperature is still in the fifties and...

Read more
Malibu Creek: The Santa Monicas' Best Kept Secret
California Los Angeles Malibu Santa Monica Mountains TRAILHEAD

Malibu Creek: The Santa Monicas' Best Kept Secret

Twenty-six miles from the Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu Creek State Park holds 4,000 acres of California chaparral, volcanic rock, creek crossings, and a trail system...

Read more
Columbia River Gorge: Wind, Basalt, and Wildflowers
Columbia River Oregon Pacific Northwest TRAILHEAD Washington Waterfalls

Columbia River Gorge: Wind, Basalt, and Wildflowers

The Columbia River Gorge holds more waterfalls per square mile than anywhere in North America. In spring, the basalt walls run with snowmelt and the...

Read more
Zion Narrows slot canyon
Canyon Desert TRAILHEAD Utah Zion

Zion Narrows: The River Is the Trail

There is no trail through the Zion Narrows. There is only the Virgin River and the canyon walls above it — a thousand feet of...

Read more
Hurricane Ridge alpine trail in Olympic National Park
Alpine Olympic Peninsula Pacific Northwest TRAILHEAD Washington

Hurricane Ridge: Above the Clouds

The Olympic Mountains hold snow until July. The views from Hurricane Ridge reach across the Strait of Juan de Fuca into Canada. This is the...

Read more
Point Reyes coastal trail in morning fog
California Coastal Marin County Point Reyes TRAILHEAD

Point Reyes: Running the Edge of the World

Fog. Elk. A two-hundred-foot cliff above the Pacific. The Bear Valley to Arch Rock corridor is one of the most dramatic trail runs on the...

Read more
Yosemite Sentinel Dome
Exploration TRAILHEAD Yosemite

Yosemite Sentinel Dome

At 8,122 feet, Sentinel Dome delivers one of the most rewarding views in the Sierra Nevada — and only asks two miles from you to...

Read more
Running Yosemites Most Scenic - Mirror Lake Loop
Exploration TRAILHEAD

Running Yosemites Most Scenic - Mirror Lake Loop

Mirror Lake isn't a destination — it's a mirror. Five miles through the floor of Yosemite Valley, with Half Dome doubling itself in still water.

Read more
Chase the Falls: Running Whatcom Falls Park
Exploration TRAILHEAD

Chase the Falls: Running Whatcom Falls Park

The falls are the destination, but the miles getting there are the point. A technical loop through old-growth forest, creek crossings, and stone bridges.

Read more
TRAILHEAD: Running the Interurban Trail
Exploration TRAILHEAD

TRAILHEAD: Running the Interurban Trail

Sixteen miles of converted rail corridor through Bellingham, Washington. A case for the urban trail as a form of moving meditation.

Read more
TRAILHEAD: Stimpson Family Nature Reserve
Exploration TRAILHEAD

TRAILHEAD: Stimpson Family Nature Reserve

A thousand acres of old-growth cedar and fir, ridgelines that open into sky, and a trail system built for those who want to disappear into...

Read more
Joshua Tree: Where Time Bends and Creativity Breaks Open
Exploration TRAILHEAD

Joshua Tree: Where Time Bends and Creativity Breaks Open

In the Mojave, the landscape doesn't just challenge you — it changes you. A run through Joshua Tree is a reckoning with silence, scale, and...

Read more
TERRAIN
TRAILHEAD
THE DRIFT
DISPATCH