About Carnegie Fitness®
Carnegie-Fitness® traces its brand’s lineage back to one of the steel baron Andrew Carnegie’s miscellaneous liaisons, a copyright from 1921 New York. The brand name roots from one of the family member, Hattie Carnegie and her groundbreaking casual and comfortable fashion lines, and is now a globally recognized brand in wellness, fitness, yoga and pilates symbol.
In 1980s, for quality, reliability, and innovation design at a fair price, Carnegie-Fitness® invested production sites in Taiwan, jointed with manufacturer Long Sporter, famous for its quality fitness and exercise equipment with various patents.
Through 20th century, Carnegie-Fitness® engaged in trendy wellness products featuring Isotraining™ system, best described in its effects as swimming on land in equal measure. The exercises use a complement of balls and boards to produce the equivalent muscular experience of swimming.
Carnegie-Fitness® products come with industry-leading training materials; many products feature our Total Training Pack of DVD workout, matching poster workout and Fitness guide. The information that comes in the box covers all aspects of fitness and a healthy lifestyle from diet to stretching, and eliminates the need to buy an expensive book by a brand-name expert.
The Carnegie-Fitness® system has been embraced by consumers from Japan to Europe to the United States, where we are featured in thousands of stores and counting. Choose Carnegie Fitness and let our products help you look better and feel better.
We welcome feedback about our products and website, so feel free to send us an email using the form on our Contact Us page.
From Carnegie Marketing Manager, Tom Hayton says,
Some of Carnegie’s most promising products come from the Pilates series, as they combine simplicity with usefulness.
Prescient in the timing of its Yoga products, the company has been quickly following up with new lines that expand on the idea of Joseph H. Pilates and his Method. Pilates are low stress exercise that concentrate on “the powerhouse” of the thighs, stomach and lower back.
Moving away from the wisdom of the ages, Carnegie is looking to create its own thoughtfully researched exercise regimen. Combining elements of Yoga, Pilates and Tai Chi, the company has developed Isotraining.
** Isotraining can be best described in its effects as swimming on land. The exercises use a complement of balls and boards to produce the equivalent muscular experience of swimming. ** Tom Hayton, Carnegie Marketing Manager.