



This Malibu Wakesetter came in needing some attention. The Bimini top fabric was worn out and the boat didn't have a solid cover setup to protect it while it sat parked. Those two things together are a real problem - sun, heat, and moisture do a number on boat interiors over time.
We took care of both. The Bimini top got a full recover with fresh black fabric that fits the frame cleanly and folds down tight. It looks sharp against the boat's white hull and the tower hardware. More importantly, it'll actually do its job now instead of letting UV through worn-out material.
For the storage cover, we built out a vented boat cover setup. The vents are the key detail here. A cover that traps heat and moisture underneath it can cause just as much damage as no cover at all - mold, mildew, fading upholstery. The venting keeps air circulating so things stay dry when the boat isn't in use. The gray cover wraps the hull cleanly from bow to stern with a snug, tailored fit.
Getting both the Bimini top and the boat cover handled at the same time just makes sense. You protect the interior from sun and rain when it's parked, and you've got a functional top ready to go when you hit the water. No loose, flapping fabric. No sun-bleached seating. Just a boat that stays in good shape between trips.
If your cover is cracked, faded, or just not fitting the way it used to - or if your Bimini top needs new fabric - that's exactly the kind of work we do. A good cover setup is one of the simplest ways to protect what you've got in a boat.