
Blade
Hybrid
Compact, low-profile hybrid swim goggle built for drag reduction in pool and open-water use. The L-Profile 3D gasket gives a secure seal, racing-style dual headbands hold position through tumble turns, and three nosepiece sizes allow a customized fit. The wide-vision anti-fog lens maintains sightlines despite the small frame. Built for intermediate and expert adults across fitness, training, competition, and open-water swimming.
Features and Benefits
- •3 Nosepiece Sizes
- •Logo Side Print Area
- •Low Drag Coefficient Design
- •Low Profile
- •L-Profile 3D Gasket
- •Racing-Style Dual Headbands
- •Wide Vision
Specifications
- Lens material
- Polycarbonate (PC)
- Gasket material
- TPE (Thermoplastic Elastomer), 40ShA
- Strap material
- Silicone
- Anti-fog options
- FSI Anti-Fog or proprietary Nano Anti-Fog
- Mirror coating
- Available — in-house PVD (silver, gold, blue, red, REVO)
- UV protection
- Compliant with international UV protection standards
- Standards
- ISO 18527-3:2020, CE, UKCA, FDA registered, REACH, GPSR (in preparation)
- MOQ
- From 300 pcs (×1.15 surcharge); 2,000 pcs at standard pricing
- Sample lead time
- Catalog: 7–10 days · Branded: ~3–4 weeks
- Production lead time
- 60–75 days after PO confirmation
Tested to ISO 18527-3:2020 — see Compliance & Quality for full certifications.
Available Customization
- •Lens tint & mirror coating — clear, smoke, blue and other catalog tints; PVD mirror finishes in silver, gold, blue, red, and REVO gradient.
- •Anti-fog tier — choose FSI Anti-Fog (reliable everyday performance) or proprietary Nano Anti-Fog (more than 2× FSI longevity).
- •Strap color — catalog colors at every MOQ; Eyeline standard Pantone from 2,000 pcs; new Pantone matches from 15,000 pcs.
- •Gasket and frame color — fully customizable to match your brand palette.
- •Logo print — two logo prints included per order; standard placements on strap (left and right), outer gasket frame, and lens corner.
- •Packaging — custom retail boxes, polybags, hangtags, blister packs, header cards, and inner inserts.
- •Strap configuration — single silicone strap with adjustable buckle, double-strap, or split-back race straps (subject to model).
More Hybrid Swim Goggles
Related insights
- In-House R&D at a Swim Goggle Manufacturer: How a New Goggle Is Developed →
What in-house R&D really means at a swim goggle factory — the stage-gate path from brief to certified product, and how to tell real R&D from a spec sheet.
- Custom Swim Goggles in Bulk: A Procurement Guide to Specs, MOQ, and Lead Times →
Custom swim goggles in bulk is three decisions stacked: which existing mold you start from, what you change, and how many. A procurement guide that maps MOQ floors by customization lever, real tooling costs and amortization math, the lead-time stack from concept lock to first carton, and the complete spec sheet brand teams should bring to the first quote conversation.
- How to Choose a Swim Goggle Manufacturer: A Sourcing Guide for Brand Owners →
A sourcing guide to choosing a swim goggle manufacturer: the vocabulary, the vertical-integration test, the vetting steps, and the country trade-offs. It separates real manufacturers from trading companies reselling someone else's mold, and lists what to verify before paying a deposit: tooling ownership, in-house coating, audit history. The country section weighs China against the alternatives on cost, tooling depth, and lead time.
- Types of Swim Goggles, Explained: Eyeline's Ten Categories →
Ten swim goggle categories — competition, hybrid, training, fitness, mask, corrective, junior, kids — and the engineering brief that defines each. Written for brand managers picking where a new SKU sits. Each category gets the brief our toolmakers actually work from: frame size, gasket profile, lens curvature, strap system. The closing decision guide pins down where a new model should sit before any tooling money is spent.
- OEM vs ODM vs Private Label — Three Ways to Source Swim Goggles, and How to Choose →
OEM, ODM, and Private Label swim goggle programs cost differently, take different lead times, and suit different brands. Here's how to choose without overpaying for either. It maps each route to a real situation: testing a new category, running an in-house design team, having a clear vision but no engineering bench, or scaling a range that already sells. It also answers what procurement actually asks — what a DFM review catches, how much of an ODM brief the factory expects you to write, and where it's safe to economize on the mold.
- How Swimming Goggles Are Made: Inside Eyeline's Factory →
A walkthrough of how a high performance swim goggle is made — injection molding, anti-fog nano coating, 3D scanned gaskets, overmolding, and QC. The piece tracks all ten production stages, from the first concept sketch to the packed carton leaving Suzhou. For a brand, it shows which decisions lock in cost and lead time, and which ones can still change once the tooling is cut.
Ordering questions?
MOQs, lead times, customization, tooling — answered in the FAQ.


