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Over the past decades, skateboarding has gone through many phases and
swings in popularity. Riding styles have changed many times, and are still
evolving, and as Piumarta related, skateboard designers have to change
the design of boards to support and enhance those styles:
"Considering
that the early 70's were all downhill riding, slalom riding, we made
boards that were almost like snow skis.
Then skateboard parks and pools came along, we had flat 10-inch wide
boards with no nose and a big kicktail, because everyone was just going
forward and carving in pools and parks. Street skating took over, and
we introduced the first street skateboard back in 1979, and it was called
the Street Skate of course. As skateboard parks closed and people moved
out into the street, the ten-inch boards wouldn't work. So all the boards
got narrow, and eventually I started putting upturned nose into some
of our early concaves. Which eventually migrated right over into narrow
boards on the street with an upturned nose and an upturned tail, with
concave, but all at around8 and one half to 9 inches wide.
Vert, as pool riding
was called, came back in the form of ramp riding back in the mid-80-'s,
and boards got wide again, up to 9 inches wide. Again big concaves,
upturned noses, a lot more tricks being done than in the late 70's,
so the upturned nose stayed on those boards. Then with vert really dying
down, and street skating going crazy, which is where were at right
now, the boards have gotten down even narrower than what was called
a freestyle board back in the late 70's. These boards are 7 1/2 -7 3/4
inches wide, big upturned nose, big tail, and a lot of concave, and
again the thickness varying form 3/8 inch to 420/1000."
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So
the size and shape of the skateboard has been fluid, changing to fit the
needs and demands of the riders, reflecting the changing interests and styles
of skaters out on the street. Many former pro riders have gone into the
design and production of skateboards; perhaps that is why skateboard manufacturers
are so attuned to the needs of skaters.

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Exploratorium
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