Signature Techniques
Where motion leaves a trail.
You saw the moment.
It happened too fast to fully take in.
Instant replay shows what happened.
We reveal what the moment actually contained — the path, the force, and the effect of the player’s actions.
Not effects. A visual language.
This isn’t about slowing things down.
It’s about making the moment readable — showing how it moves, how it’s built, and what it actually does.
Each technique isolates a different part of the action: the path it travels, the structure behind it, and the energy driving it.
Velocity Trail™
The path, made visible.
Movement leaves a path — even when the eye can’t hold onto it.
Velocity Trail reveals that path, allowing the full arc of motion to be seen as it unfolds.
What would normally disappear becomes something you can follow —
not just where it ends, but how it got there.
Prime Motion
The moment, mapped before it unfolds
Key positions of the movement are placed ahead of time — held in stillness before the action begins.
As the athlete moves, each position is met, absorbed, and replaced by the next.
Instead of leaving a trail behind, Prime Motion reveals the structure of the movement in advance — showing how the action is built as it happens.
Kinetic Arc
Energy, carried through motion.
Every movement transfers force — from the ground, through the body, into release.
Kinetic Arc traces that transfer, carrying the energy through the motion in a continuous arc.
Not as an added effect, but as a direct extension of the action itself —
revealing what the movement actually does.
What This Does for Your Program
Capturing truth under pressure — where the poetry emerges.
Great performance isn’t just the result — it’s the precision, timing, and control behind it.
These details are often missed, not because they aren’t there, but because they happen too fast to fully register.
By revealing the path, the structure, and the energy within the motion, your athletes aren’t just seen — they’re understood.
And that changes how your program is experienced, remembered, and valued.
Used with intention
These techniques are not meant for every play.
Their impact comes from when they’re used —
to highlight key moments, introduce players, or punctuate sequences that carry weight.
Used selectively, they elevate the moment.
Overused, they lose their meaning.
The goal isn’t to apply them everywhere — it’s to apply them where they matter most.

