Saturday, 11 August 2012

Vintage Skateboards - Collector's Item For The Most Popular Extreme Sport

By Jan Peter


As of today, skateboarding is a very popular extreme sport, and a large amount of people who love this sport are collecting vintage skateboards. Whether they're riders or simply spectator owning a collection of vintage skateboards is both a passion and a hobby. A great deal of these skateboards from the 60's, 70's and also the 1980's era are generally recognized as old school, this term was given by modern day skateboarders. Using vintage skateboards provides great aesthetics in this sport and also a great display in every home.

When collecting vintage skateboards, look for brands or styles that were very popular in their day. Many of these had been made by the sport's earliest pros. Nowadays, these boards usually cost in excess of a thousand dollars. These high-end boards from the past are difficult to come by. Not just are they valued by collectors, but they were also produced in very small volumes.

Through the sport's infancy, there simply were not as many skaters around. Those that did get boards often did not have the funds to invest in high-end boards; these kids were working odd jobs like mowing and trimming lawns to save up the cash to buy themselves a board.

Now collectors' items, vintage skateboards went through a number of incarnations before settling on the scale and style of a modern day skateboard. One example is, those made from the 1950s through the 1970s were shaped more like a surf board, and constructed of solid wood or plastic. Several even had steel decks. Most were only six or seven inches wide, and had clay or metal wheels that had been originally created for roller skating.

Skateboards produced in the late 70s, the second incarnation of boards, use contemporary urethane wheels rather than clay or metal wheels. Incorporating trucks and other components which are much closer in style to modern day skateboards than those created in the 1950s through the early 70s, these boards often had decks made of polypropylene, fiberglass, or other modern components, though maple plywood was the most popular components.




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