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A portable pickleball net is the difference between playing whenever you want and waiting for court time. This guide covers regulation dimensions, post stability, wind resistance, setup time, and how to choose a net that survives a backyard, a driveway, or the trunk of a car.

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Most players outgrow their first paddle faster than they expect. If you have been playing two or more times a week for three to six months and your rating is approaching 3.0, the gap between your skill and your equipment is likely wider than you realize. Here is how to close it.

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Pickleball ball machines run from roughly $1,000 to $3,500. For some players, that investment accelerates skill development in ways nothing else can. For others, it collects dust inside a month. Here is how to know which category you fall into before you spend the money.

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An overgrip is the single most affordable, highest-impact maintenance decision a pickleball player makes. Understanding when to replace it, which texture suits your game, and how to wrap it correctly keeps your paddle performing the way it was built to perform.

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Performance is the minimum. For a growing number of players, a paddle must also hold up as an object worth owning — visually considered, cohesive with how they move through the world. ARTI builds paddles that clear both bars without compromise.

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Grip size is one of the most consequential — and most overlooked — fit decisions in pickleball equipment. The wrong circumference affects wrist mechanics, shot consistency, and long-term arm health. This guide covers how to measure correctly and how to choose with confidence.

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