WHY THIS SITE
This site was not born from a marketing idea.
It was born from lived experience – and from a very simple observation: we can do better.
A few days on crutches, and you adapt.
I did, like everyone else.
Then the weeks, the months, sometimes longer, change the perspective: I discovered a very simple truth — comfort is not a detail. It changes everything.
Hands get tired. Wrists take the strain. Shoulders compensate.
And eventually, you understand a very unspectacular but very concrete truth: not all crutches are equal.
Experience
Lived experience

Accident, surgeries, prosthesis, months on crutches: I did not discover crutches in a brochure, but in real life.
At first I did what everyone does: I took what I was given.
Then I compared.
Then I started comparing. And I understood that you can get used to discomfort without that discomfort being normal.
That is when I discovered something else: crutches designed with more intelligence, more nuance, and a little more respect for the human body.
The difference is not always obvious in a photo.
You feel it later. In hands that are less willing. In shoulders that are less forgiving. In that evening fatigue that becomes a little less heavy.
And in a very simple thought:
well, today was a little less painful.
Journey
A discreet ode to an ankle prosthesis
I had not exactly planned on developing an ongoing relationship with an ankle, a prosthesis, a few tendons and a small committee of anatomical structures with variable moods.
Life, apparently, had other plans.
So I learned to listen differently.
To distinguish what genuinely helps from what merely exists.
I understood that a design choice, when you live with it every day, very quickly stops being a small thing.
And that an object as ordinary as a crutch can make a difficult period a little more bearable – or unnecessarily harsher.
This site was also born from that: from a journey that forced me to pay very close attention to what many people consider secondary – until the day it suddenly is not.
The choice
Why FDI
After comparing, some FDI models truly stood out.
Not because they tell a beautiful story.
Because they do their job better where it matters:

Shock absorption

Handle comfort

Long-term use
Depending on the model, there is real work on shock absorption, handle comfort, how pressure is distributed, and the overall tolerance of use over time.
I was not looking for an “innovative” object to admire from a distance.
I was looking for something useful in real life.
You know, that small detail that genuinely improves the experience – and keeps us from mistaking thoughtful design for neatly pressed jargon.
The market
Why this site in Switzerland
Because these crutches were difficult to find here – and even more difficult to understand, compare, and choose calmly.
Not clearly visible.
Not really explained.
Not organised in a simple way.
The usual scenario is familiar: you take what you find, you improvise, or you spend far too much time searching at the very moment when what you need most is clarity.
This site was created to correct that.
Not to add another layer of speech.
But to offer something simpler and more useful:

A coherent selection

Clear information

Transparent prices

Direct sales

Delivery in Switzerland

and insights based on real experience
The approach
Our approach
I did not want to create yet another catalogue.
I did not want to line up a few models, their technical names and neatly presented promises, hoping everyone would choose at random between two vaguely similar product pages.
The idea is simpler – and more serious – than that: offer a coherent range, explain what really changes, and help people choose a solution that fits the reality of use.
Because after a certain number of weeks on crutches, comfort is no longer a luxury. It is common sense.
My commitment

To stay clear.

To stay honest.

To stay useful.
Without miracle promises.
Without jargon to sound clever.
Without presenting avoidable discomfort as fate.
Here, no biomechanical rebirth in three steps.
But a serious selection, a direct approach, and the idea that an everyday object can be better thought through – and therefore better lived.

