Shadows Fade | Quinn Wolferman

Shadows Fade - An unassuming solo project. Edited by: Clayton Vila & Loren Creer Principal Cinematography: Justin Mayers Additional Cinematography: Caleb Ely, Hotlaps Official (Andrew Gayda), Reid Ferguson, AJ Dakoulas Music: ThxSoMuch- SPIT IN MY FACE! Givenchy (feat. Asaad) 1017 ALYX 9SM Do It (Remix) (feat. Jam City & Aidan) 1017 ALYX 9SM Supported By: Monster Energy & Armada Skis

Quinn Wolferman

Profile and significance

Quinn Wolferman is an American freeski standout from Missoula, Montana whose calm, creative movement has translated across edits, SLVSH games, World Cups and the broadcast stage. Born in 1997, he grew up lapping Montana Snowbowl before basing in Utah and splitting his days between Park City Mountain and Alta Ski Area. His breakout moment came at the X Games in 2022, where he won Ski Knuckle Huck gold with a run built on patient nose-butter takeoffs, inventive body slides and the kind of timing that reads perfectly in slow motion. Around that milestone he stacked a deep catalog of rider-led projects—Strictly’s street-and-backcountry films and backcountry-heavy cuts with the Montana/Wyoming crew—that made him one of the most “replayable” skiers of his generation. With long-standing support from Armada and a profile on Monster Energy, Wolferman matters because he shows how modern freeskiing can be both inventive and teachable.



Competitive arc and key venues

Wolferman’s competitive résumé balances culture and results. Early top-10s on the FIS World Cup—most notably ninth in slopestyle at Snowmass in January 2018—signaled that his film-ready mechanics could survive start-gate pressure. He appeared in World Cups across Europe and North America, then refocused on formats that reward touch and originality: SLVSH Cup matchups, jam-style nights, and the X Games Knuckle Huck, where Aspen’s floodlights and long decks at Aspen Snowmass showcased his trademark nose-butter doubles and shifty-heavy takeoffs. The 2022 X Games gold confirmed what crews already knew from years of filming with him: he makes complex ideas look inevitable.

Venue-wise, the map explains the method. Snowbowl provided repetition and thin-cover discipline. Utah added volume and infrastructure—structured laps at Woodward Park City to drill rail timing and knuckle feel, powder days at Alta to carry speed and manage landings in softer snow, and contest buildouts at Park City Mountain to keep jump cadence sharp. Spring film blocks at Mammoth Unbound layered in XL spacing and wind reads, while European detours to Grandvalira’s Sunset Park Peretol tied him into the SLVSH ecosystem where line reading beats brute force. Those places formed a rider who can win under lights and deliver segments that stand up to frame-by-frame scrutiny.



How they ski: what to watch for

Wolferman skis with economy and definition. Into the lip he stays tall and neutral, sets rotation late, and locks the grab before 180 degrees so the trick breathes without throwing the body off axis. His knuckle vocabulary is unusually clean: nose presses start from the ankles and hips rather than an upper-body lean, which is why his buttered doubles and late shiftys look suspended rather than forced. On rails, look for square entries, backslides and presses held long enough to read, and exits where the shoulders remain aligned so speed survives to the next feature. Surface swaps are quiet—minimal arm swing—and edge pressure is organized early so the base stays flat through kinks. Even at higher difficulty, landings read centered and inevitable, a product of soft ankles and hips stacked over the feet.



Resilience, filming, and influence

Film seasons are the backbone of Wolferman’s profile. He helped carry Strictly’s run of influential projects through the late 2010s and early 2020s, showing equal comfort on city steel and in sled-accessed terrain. Those parts emphasized honest speed, horizon awareness, and compositions that let viewers study timing and body organization. Parallel to Strictly, he appeared in Montana/Wydaho backcountry projects that prize sled hustle and measured line choice—segments that broadened his résumé without blurring his identity. SLVSH games, from Sierra-at-Tahoe to Grandvalira, put his rail craft and trick definition under peer review and expanded his influence with the riders who care most about how skiing reads in real time.

The X Games chapter amplified that influence to a global audience. Winning Knuckle Huck gold in 2022 on the Aspen course—under cameras, commentary and live scoring—validated a movement language he’d refined for years. Since then, he has toggled between selective contest starts and filmer-led winters, increasingly steering projects where the shots serve the skiing rather than the other way around. The through-line is a method that rewards attention to detail: calm entry, patient pop, early grab definition, and exits that preserve speed. It’s why coaches use his clips in breakdowns and why park crews copy his lines when they rebuild features.



Geography that built the toolkit

Place is central to Wolferman’s skiing. Missoula’s Snowbowl forged his edge control on modest vert and variable snowpacks, the perfect classroom for centered landings and clean exits. In Utah, Woodward Park City supplied consistent takeoffs, dense rail sets and a winter-long progression ladder for knuckle moves. Alta added soft-snow timing and the patience required to keep structure when visibility drops. Spring and early-summer at Mammoth Unbound contributed XL spacing and wind management; European weeks at Sunset Park Peretol drilled nighttime rhythm and feature-dense flow. When Aspen calls, Aspen Snowmass becomes the stage where those habits show at full scale. Trace those dots and you can see their fingerprints in every clip.



Equipment and partners: practical takeaways

Wolferman’s current and recent partners reflect his priorities. With Armada he rides park platforms that balance press-friendly flex with predictable pop for nose-butter takeoffs; Monster Energy backs his split calendar of contests and film trips; past apparel support from Spyder layered in long park days and glacier laps. For skiers trying to borrow his feel, the hardware lessons are straightforward. Choose a true park ski with a balanced, medium flex you can bend without folding; detune contact points enough to reduce rail bite while keeping dependable edge hold on the lip; and mount close enough to center that switch landings feel neutral and presses sit level. Keep binding ramp angles that don’t push you onto your heels so you can stay stacked over your feet. The bigger “equipment” is process: film your laps, compare shoulder alignment and hip-to-ankle stack against a short checklist, and repeat until patient pop, early grab definition and square-shoulder exits are automatic.



Why fans and progressing skiers care

Fans care about Quinn Wolferman because his skiing ages well. The clips prize timing, organization and line design over noise, which is why they stand up to slow-motion scrutiny years after release. Progressing riders care because the same choices are teachable on normal parks and real snowpacks. If your winter looks like weeknights at a small hill, weekend missions to a destination park, and a few floodlit jams or SLVSH-style games with friends, his blueprint fits perfectly: calm entries, patient pop, early grab definition, long presses that read, and exits that preserve speed for what comes next. The medal—a 2022 X Games Knuckle Huck gold—is a milestone; the lasting takeaway is a method any skier can study and apply from Missoula to Mammoth to the lights of Grandvalira.