The Friese doorloper is a type of ice skate from the Netherlands. "Friese" means "Frisian" ("of Friesland"), and doorloper "to walk" or "run through", reflecting the design.
With the older designs, the wearer braked by raising their toes and digging their heels into the ice, with the new one breaking occurred by angling the blades.
By the early years of the 20th Century, Friese doorlopers had completely replaced the older designs. The skates were popular among competition tour skaters, and were used by several winners of the unpredictably-held Elfstedentocht (the frost has to be hard enough for the whole of the roughly long course over canals and lakes to freeze). Friese doorlopers were also used for speed skating (kortebaanschaatsen - straight-line sprinting).
After 1945, the design was gradually replaced by ice skates with boots, in which the metal blade is directly attached to the sole of the boot. The last specialist manufacturer of Friese doorlopers closed in 1965. However, models which use plastics instead of wood are commercially
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