Recovery
Recovery Support That Doesn’t Require Compression
Most “recovery” products fall into two camps:
1. tight (compression)
2. active (devices you have to use)
Well, there’s a third lane:
wearable infrared that works via skin contact - not squeezing.
*Educational content only. Products are for general wellness use and not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
This is for you if:
- You get “heavy legs,” stiffness, or swelling after long sitting days
- You want support you can wear during work, after training, or while traveling
- You dislike tight compression or you don’t want another device to manage
Contact vs. Compression
Compression works by applying pressure. That can feel supportive - but it also means the product needs to be worn tight, and “tighter” often gets mistaken for “more effective.”
Wearable infrared is the opposite philosophy: it’s designed to work through skin contact, not pressure. The goal is a wearable tool that supports the body’s natural recovery processes without binding or constricting.
- No squeezing required - contact, not compression
- Passive - can be worn during normal life
- Practical - easy to use consistently (which is the real game)
Get the research (plain-English)
Download the guide: Contact vs. Compression + how wearable infrared is used in recovery settings.
Includes a first purchase discount code.
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& First Purchase Discount Code.
Plain-English explanation of wearable infrared, contact vs. compression, and why this technology came out of clinical recovery settings.
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What “Wearable Infrared” Means (without the marketing fluff)
“Infrared” gets used loosely online. In this context, it refers to fabrics engineered to reflect/emit far-infrared energy back toward the body. The user experience is simple: you wear it like a base layer or sleeve - the fabric does the work.
The important distinction: this is a passive recovery tool. No routines, no tightness calibration, no device charging, and no “session” you have to remember.
Why This Matters in Real Life
- Desk days: long sitting → heavy legs, stiffness, fluid retention patterns
- Travel days: extended sitting → similar “stuck” feeling
- Training days: soreness + recovery load without adding another modality
- Overnight: many people prefer passive recovery while sleeping
Copper vs. “Infrared” (Not The Same Thing)
Copper products are everywhere. The problem is buyers assume “copper” means “recovery tech.” It doesn’t. Copper is typically marketed for general properties like conductivity - not engineered infrared performance.
If you tried copper and felt “not much,” that doesn’t tell you anything about contact-based infrared fabrics. Different mechanism, different intended effect.
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*Educational content only. Products are for general wellness use and not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Download the Contact vs. Compression Guide (PDF)