Devonian Fins Mako

Biomimetic fins.
400 million years of R&D.

Launching Soon

Nature perfected fin design long before we ever stood up on a board. Why reinvent it?

Design Philosophy

Perfect imperfect.

Biomimicry is the practice of learning from nature — studying how living things have solved problems over millions of years, then applying those solutions to human design. In the ocean, evolution has been relentless. Every curve, every edge, every surface texture on a fin exists for a reason.

Our fins are not symmetrical — and that's intentional. Small irregularities help control turbulence and improve flow. Subtle imperfections create smoother, more responsive movement in water.

It's perfect imperfect.

Different sharks and fishes are known for different attributes: high speed, explosive power, snappy turns. Each of our fins draws from a different chapter of that story.

Tiger and Mako fins

Coming Soon

Fossil
The Devonian Period: 419 — 359 MYA

Shaped over millions of years.

The Devonian period is known as the Age of Fishes. It was during this era that the seas became a laboratory — hydrodynamic motion tested and refined over millions of years.

Nature ran more iterations than any engineering team ever could. What survived is not random, it is the result of the most rigorous R&D process that has ever existed on this planet.

We didn't reinvent the fin, we just studied it.

Steal their design.
Not their ocean.