
Thongs that don't ride up (here's why most do)
A thong that rides up isn't asking for a smaller size, a bigger size, or more patience. It's telling you something specific about how it was made. Riding up is a construction problem - which is good news, because construction problems have construction answers.
Why thongs migrate
Three build decisions decide whether a thong stays where you put it:
- Stretch without recovery. Cheap fabric stretches and stays stretched. By mid-afternoon it's a slightly different garment than the one you put on, and the loose fabric goes wandering. Look for fabric that snaps back - "4-way stretch with recovery" on the label, or just: does it return to shape after a wash?
- Stitched seams at the leg line. A stitched seam is a little ridge. Ridges catch on leggings, tights and jeans, and every catch drags the fabric with it. Bonded (flat, glued) edges have nothing to catch.
- A waistband that anchors in the wrong place. If the waistband grips at the natural waist and your movement happens at the hips - walking, stairs, a reformer class - the fabric between those two points is constantly negotiating. It loses. A hip-anchored cut moves with you instead.

The sizing myth
"Size up and it won't ride" is half-true. Sizing up fixes riding that comes from tension - a too-small pair pulled taut will creep, always. But sizing up a pair with poor recovery just gives you more loose fabric to migrate. If a bigger size still rides, it was never a size problem.
The test to run in the change room
Squat once. Sit down, stand up. If it moved in the change room, it will move fifty times more by Thursday. A well-cut thong passes this without you thinking about it - which is the whole point.
Where ours fits
The Gym G was built against this exact checklist: bonded edges (nothing to catch), performance nylon with real recovery (nothing to stretch out), a hip-anchored cut (nothing to negotiate). $32 a pair, from $21.90 a pair in packs. Athletes stress-tested it; everyone else just gets the benefit.


