Match kit to your practice
Squat-proof leggings and support for power and hot flows, soft layers and props for restorative and yin.
The Yoga Edit
Premium yoga apparel and equipment, curated from the brands that move the way you do, from the first sun salutation to the last long exhale.
Yoga is not one thing. It is the 6am studio session squeezed in before the inbox opens, the lunchtime reset between meetings, the slow Sunday flow on the living-room floor. The kit has to keep up with all of it, squat-proof, sweat-ready, and quiet enough to wear from the mat to the rest of your life.
We pull the pieces that earn their place: leggings that stay put in down dog, bras that support without pinching, layers that survive the commute, and the props that turn a corner of a room into a practice space. No filler, just the wardrobe a real practice needs.
The buyer's guide
Three things worth checking before you buy, so it works as hard as you do.
Squat-proof leggings and support for power and hot flows, soft layers and props for restorative and yin.
Four-way stretch that stays opaque keeps you covered through every fold and inversion.
A bra, a bottom and a top cover most sessions; add props to deepen the practice.
The wardrobe
Every layer of the practice, sorted. Start anywhere, each piece is chosen to work with the rest.
752 items
A good yoga kit starts with three layers: a supportive sports bra, squat-proof bottoms, and a top that moves freely through every pose. The aim is full coverage with zero distraction. You should be able to fold forward, balance, and twist without tugging at a waistband or checking for see-through fabric. Choose pieces that stay put in downward dog and let your skin breathe through long held postures.
Think about your practice first. Slow restorative and yin sessions favour soft, relaxed layers and a touch of warmth. Faster vinyasa, power and hot yoga reward technical, sweat-wicking fabrics that dry quickly and resist clinging. Most practitioners end up with a small mix so they are ready for any class on the timetable.
Look for a buttery, four-way stretch knit with a high spandex content for recovery, so your leggings keep their shape across many wears. A higher, wider waistband sits comfortably under the navel and will not roll during core work. For squat-proof coverage, mid to high opacity fabrics in a true matte finish are safest; check that the gusset is fully lined.
Hot yoga and Bikram demand fabrics that wick fast and dry between poses, so prioritise lightweight, breathable knits and minimal coverage where you like it. Avoid heavy cotton, which holds sweat and weighs you down. A close, supportive fit also stops layers from sliding when the studio heats up. Browse the full range below to find Australian sizing across leggings, bras, tops and equipment.