Empty Pools

Empty Pools Pool skating is something I've been thinking of a lot for a long while now. For me, it is my holy grail of skateboarding. I'm not suggesting that other forms of skating are somehow second rate -- far from it. The rise of half-pipes and, of course, street skating, co…

A Noble Cause and an Auction for a Rare Spidey De Montrond Personal Rider

A Noble Cause and an Auction for a Rare Spidey De Montrond Personal Rider A rare opportunity to own the personal rider of one of the great Santa Cruz skate legends of the 80's has come up -- and also a concurrent opportunity to support a noble cause in the process. Spidey De Montrond -- who needs no introduction here -- is auctioning off his …

Some Santa Monica Localism: The Rip City Skates Board

Some Santa Monica Localism: The Rip City Skates Board For those of you who are wondering, this site has mainly been active as of late on my Skate Culture Facebook page , so if you into the kind of stuff we have been posting about here, make sure you go over to that page and give it a "like" because otherwise you'r…

The History and Importance of the Vallely Barnyard Deck

The History and Importance of the Vallely Barnyard Deck Head on over to Mike Vallely's Street Plant brand site and read Kyle Duvall's interesting account on 25 Years of the Barnyard . Here's an excerpt: 25 years ago, World Industries released the Mike Vallely Barnyard “double kick” deck. It was the first professionally…

A Short History of Rip City Skates

A Short History of Rip City Skates A great interview with Jim McDowell on the history of Rip City Skates in Santa Monica, California. Jim gets into the origins of the shop, some early competition wars, their collaboration with Wes Humpston and their philosophy of providing high quality pro boards.

Wes Humpston and the Dogtown Skateboards

Wes Humpston and the Dogtown Skateboards Wes Humpston needs no introduction of course. He is the Dogtown skater and artist who was behind so much of what we've come to associate with the Dogtown art of the 1970's. As my refrain always is, there is "o.g." and then there is "O.G.". For m…

Is This the Greatest Grip Art Ever?

Is This the Greatest Grip Art Ever? Okay, I admit it; the title of this post is an exercise in hyperbole, but I do find myself asking that very question -- knowing all the while that there really is no satisfactory answer to it since there is not standard by which to make such a judgement. Grip tape can be a…

Bernie Tostenson Follow-up: Brand X Team Deck Variant

Bernie Tostenson Follow-up: Brand X Team Deck Variant As a follow-up to our last post on the skateboard art of Bernie Tostenson, I wanted to share a little variant on the superb Triple X team deck. Essentially it's the same graphic, but in a different colourway and with the Brand X labelling -- instead of "Triple X.&q…

The Skateboard Art of Bernie Tostenson

The Skateboard Art of Bernie Tostenson S ome of the very best known skateboard artists out there are names like Wes Humpston, Jim and Jimbo Phillips, Sean Cliver, Marc McKee, Andy Jenkins and Ed Templeton -- to name a few. Rightly so of course. These names have contributed a very great deal to the corpus of skat…

Seldom Seen Deck Art: Steve Caballero "Cab Man" Deck Inspired by Ironman

Seldom Seen Deck Art: Steve Caballero "Cab Man" Deck Inspired by Ironman Here is a deck you don't see every day. Steve Caballero's early 1990's "Cab Man" deck from Powell which features, of course, Ironman for the deck art. Image source: "Moloko-plus" on SNB Cab himself notes the rarity of this particular deck and …

Spidey de Montrond: The "Swindle 2" Story

Spidey de Montrond: The "Swindle 2" Story Skate Culture is very excited to be able to present the following guest piece, written by Spidey de Montrond for this site. The article not only gives readers a history of his Santa Cruz model and skating career, but also details his current career with Pocket Pistols Skate…