



The Vision Psycho Stick PINK FOIL is already one of those boards that looks like it escaped from an ’80s skate mag, kicked the door open, and never apologized. Now Vision has taken that full “Totally Nuts” energy and blasted it into the Pink Foil Series — a loud, shiny, collector-worthy version of one of the most influential shapes in skateboarding.
The Psycho Stick has always been impossible to mistake. That wide squared tail, short nose, chunky midbody, tapered back end, and screaming graphic make it one of the wildest silhouettes from the golden age of vert, pools, ramps, and backyard chaos. The pink foil finish turns the whole thing up another notch, catching light like it belongs under a shop window spotlight, on a collector wall, or rolling into a session looking way too good to be normal.
This reissue keeps the classic Psycho Stick attitude but updates it for modern riders. You get the original-style shape and iconic graphic, paired with modern concave and a new-school hole pattern so you can build it up with today’s trucks without fighting the setup.
VISION PSYCHO STICK PINK FOIL SPECS:
- Lenght: 30″ Width: 10″
- Wheelbase: 15 3/8″
- Nose 3.5″
- Tail 6.75
- Iconic cut and graphic
- Made in U.S.A.
- More Vision Reissues Here
Skaters in order: Mike Crum, Keith Gruber, Derek Krasauskus, Chris Gentry, Ben Chibber, Joe Gruber, Mark Cernicky, Bo Ikeda, Mark Oblow, Buck Smith, Ronnie Boschetti, Gianni Cass, Jeff Ferris, Jeremy Zitter, B. Gibo © 1991 Vision Skateboards/Vision Sports Inc.















Started in 1976 by Brad Dorfman, Vision initially began as a skateboard brand, sponsoring the likes of Mark Gonzales, Mark 'Gator' Rogowski and Tom Groholski.
In the early 80's Vision sports released their first pro model skateboard for skater Mark 'Gator' Rogowski.
This was followed by a release of a pro model deck for skater Mark Gonzales, both designed by Los Angeles-based artist Andy Takakjian.
Gonzales went on to release a few more pro models with Vision before departing to form Blind Skateboards, (a play-on words with Vision) with World Industries.
Vision was also one of the first skate brands to connect with the subculture of music, releasing skate decks from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Beastie Boys and Agent Orange.

