Blade Putter
SIK built its reputation on one idea: the face. The Pro C-Series carries the company's Descending Loft Technology, four separate loft angles milled into a single face, and that is the whole reason this putter exists. Instead of one flat loft, the striking surface steps down through four lofts so that whether your hands are ahead of the ball, behind it, or dead level at impact, the ball leaves the face on a similar launch. Bad hands still roll like decent hands.
The C-Series is a blade, so you get a compact head, a thin topline, and the traditional look a lot of feel players want over the ball. There is no alignment line or dot up top. That is a deliberate choice. If you aim with the shaft, the shape, or the leading edge rather than a painted sightline, this head stays out of your way.
Full toe hang is the other half of the story. This putter wants to open and close through the stroke, which is what a player with a noticeable arc does naturally. Pair the DLT face with a swinging-gate stroke and you get a putter that is built around forgiveness at impact rather than forgiveness through a big high-MOI head.
Design
The face is where the money went. DLT machines four ascending lofts into the striking surface, and the point is roll consistency across a range of shaft-lean and hand positions. Golfers who deliver the putter differently on a fast downhill four-footer than a slow uphill lag tend to launch the ball inconsistently, and that is exactly what this face is trying to flatten out. It will not fix your read, but it takes one variable off the table. As a blade with full toe hang, the head is on the smaller side and the balance clearly favors an arc. The clean top with no alignment aid keeps the setup simple and puts the responsibility for aim on you and the shaft. This is a putter that rewards a repeatable stroke and honest practice, not one that hides a wandering path behind a big mallet.
Who It's For
- You have an arced stroke and want the toe hang that matches it instead of fighting a face-balanced head.
- Your hands and shaft lean vary from putt to putt, and inconsistent launch off the face is costing you distance control.
- You prefer a compact blade and a clean top with no sightline, trusting the shape and shaft to aim.
- You care more about how the ball comes off the face than about maximum forgiveness on heel and toe misses.
- You are a feel putter willing to practice a repeatable stroke rather than lean on a high-MOI mallet.
Technology
About SIK Golf
SIK Golf brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.
Specifications
| Brand | SIK Golf |
| Model | Pro C-Series |
| Year | 2025 |
| Type | Blade |
| Toe hang | Full toe hang |
| Alignment aid | No |
| MSRP | $399 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is SIK's Descending Loft Technology and does it actually matter?
- DLT is four separate loft angles milled into the face, stepping up from lower to higher. The idea is that no matter how much shaft lean or hand position you deliver at impact, the ball meets a loft that launches it similarly. If your delivery varies a lot from putt to putt, it helps keep launch and roll more consistent. If you already have a very repeatable stroke, the benefit is smaller but still there.
- Is the Pro C-Series good for a straight-back-straight-through stroke?
- Not really. Full toe hang means the face wants to rotate open and closed through the stroke, which suits a player with an arc. If you have a straight-back-straight-through motion, a face-balanced putter fights your natural release less. Match the toe hang to how your putter actually swings.
- Why is there no alignment line on top?
- SIK left the top clean on purpose. Plenty of good putters aim better without a painted line, using the shaft, the head shape, or the leading edge instead. If you rely on a sightline to line up, this blade will take some adjustment. If a busy top has ever felt like clutter to you, you will like this one.
- Is a blade like this forgiving on off-center hits?
- A blade has less heel-to-toe forgiveness than a big mallet because the head is smaller and lower in MOI. What the C-Series does differently is add forgiveness at impact through the DLT face, so mishits in your delivery launch more consistently. It is a different kind of forgiveness than a high-MOI mallet, not a replacement for one.
- Who plays SIK putters on tour?
- SIK is most associated with Bryson DeChambeau, who has used the brand's Descending Loft Technology for years. That tour connection is part of why the DLT face gets attention, though the tech is the reason to buy it, not the name behind it.
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