The Blackriver Fingerboards X-Wide Girl Gass Severed deck features a signature 5-ply construction and is handmade by professionals in the Blackriver workshop in Germany.
Paired with a black stain with a collaborative graphic from Girl skateboards, this fingerboard is a thing of beauty. In addition, this deck includes one piece of Riptape to get you started right away.
After coming back from a trip to the US in 1998 with his first plastic fingerboard, Blackriver founder Martin Ehrenberger quickly realized that almost every skateboarding trick can be replicated 1:1 with a fingerboard.
He then conducted his market research, to find out that there was not one supplier of professional fingerboarding equipment in the whole world. That marked the beginning of Blackriver. Being a trained carpenter, Martin then built the first fingerboard ramp, the all-time classic, Big Mama.
Blackriver was the first company in the world that recognized fingerboarding as an official sport, and advanced the pioneering of fingerboarding. Suitable for advanced or professional fingerboarders alike!
BLACKRIVER X-WIDE GIRL GASS SEVERED:
- 33.3 mm X-Wide shape
- 5-ply wood construction
- Includes 1 sheet of Riptape
- Handmade in Germany
- More here: BLACKRIVER DECKS
It’s a mystery. It seems impossible to understand and even difficult to explain. In the course of our spring clean, we sorted all of the outdated Berlin Wood graphics into one cupboard, which over night turned into a magic vending machine full of top quality Berlin Woods. It let’s us choose the shape but seems to shoot out the graphics at random. The machine takes 24,95 € per board, which is the price we’d offer to you as well. Means, keep on feeding the magic vending machine, tell us which shape you prefer and we send you a top quality Berlin Wood with a random graphic. Just kidding. Of course we produce them in our workshop with a series of precise movements. How precise you ask? Well this video allows you to peak behind the curtain. See the magic behind every board and find out, why Stefan Klauser is only able to print graphics at random.