Accessory route
Custom Neoprene Sleeves
Accessory route
Custom neoprene sleeves should start from a foam-first material route.
This page is for printed sleeve panels, zipper-ready layouts and small first orders where you want to validate the accessory before scaling.
Key point 1
Foam first
Key point 2
SBR only when the brief justifies it
Key point 3
Closure decisions come after the material
Recommended base
For sleeves and softer covers, foam is usually a cleaner base than forcing a sports-panel logic onto the brief.
Routes and references
Material routes that usually make more sense
For accessories, the better decision is usually about choosing the right base first, not forcing a wetsuit material into the wrong product.
Foam 2 mm
The cleanest base for softer accessories
Usually the better route for sleeves, pouches, covers and softer protective pieces.
SBR 2 mm
Only when the brief starts acting like a panel
It makes sense when the piece stops being a simple accessory and needs a more technical response.
First sample
The lowest-risk way to validate pattern and handling
Before you think about longer runs, it pays to see how the material behaves in the hand.
When foam wins
When foam is normally the better answer
- When the product is a sleeve or a cover. It gives a more natural base for softer protection and lighter pieces.
- When pattern and daily handling matter most. The first sample quickly shows whether the feel and thickness are going the right way.
- When you do not want to overbuild the material choice. There is no need to force a sports-panel logic into an accessory product.
What to avoid
What should not be forced too early
- SBR does not have to lead first. It should only move forward if the brief genuinely needs a more technical piece.
- Zippers do not fix the wrong base material. Material and pattern come before closures.
- CR is rarely the priority here. First validate whether the product even needs to move away from foam.
Flow
A clearer way to start the first order
Step 01
Upload the artwork and place the product family first.
It helps to know whether the piece is acting more like a technical panel or an accessory.
Step 02
Lead with SBR or foam based on the real use case.
SBR for panels and aquatic sports routes; foam for sleeves, covers, pouches and cases.
Step 03
Leave CR and hardware until they genuinely belong.
They only move forward when the brief justifies them and the base is already clear.
Feedback
What people tend to mention after the first order
The same three things come up most often: they felt guided before ordering, the result looked right, and the material choice made the next step easier.
★★★★★
Support before ordering
I had a lot of questions before using the configurator, so I wrote on WhatsApp. They were patient, helped me choose the right thickness and the parcel arrived earlier than I expected.
Luca
★★★★★
Custom design
I was tired of the usual plain black suit and tried my own colours. The result came out sharp, the design looked right and people keep asking where I had it made.
July
★★★★★
Fit and weekly use
Standard sizing never worked properly for me. Going custom felt much closer to a second skin, with no water getting in through the neck and a material choice that finally made sense.
Alex
FAQ
What usually needs clarifying before ordering
Should I start with SBR if the product is closer to a sleeve or a case?
Usually no. Foam is normally the better base for sleeves, pouches and softer accessory products. SBR makes more sense when the route is moving toward wetsuit and aquatic sports construction.
Should CR be the default upgrade from the start?
No. The cleaner commercial route is to keep CR selective and compare it against standard SBR before moving there.
If the route is already clear, the first panel usually saves time later
Upload the artwork, validate the material on a real panel and use WhatsApp if you want the route checked before paying.
Instagram: @customneoprene