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  • Pre-1985Origins
  • 1985–1994Skate Video & DIY Era
  • 1994–2002Tech Deck Era
  • 1999–2006Early Boutique & Wood Deck Era
  • 2006–2012Community Growth Era
  • 2012–2018Pro Setup Era
  • 2018–presentModern Boutique Era
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  1. Blog
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  3. Skate Video & DIY Era

1985–1994

1985–1994

Skate Video & DIY Era

The Skate-Video & DIY Era: How a Homemade Board Spread an Idea

VHS tapes & basement ramps

VHS tracking lines, paused skate videos, sink-ledge spots, and hand-cut deck templates.

Kingpin Editorial·June 27, 2026·6 min read·Through the Years: Era by Era

A homemade fingerboard in a 1985 skate film is widely cited as an early public showcase — and a generation started building their own from popsicle sticks and cardboard.

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A hand riding a fingerboard across a homemade indoor obstacle.
Photo: י.ש. / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
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  • Why it trended
  • Who popularized it
  • The gear that defined it
  • Community moments
  • Reading this era's setups today

This is the era of the homemade board and the VHS tape. A brief fingerboard moment in a 1985 Powell-Peralta film is widely remembered as the spark that sent kids to their kitchen drawers for popsicle sticks, cardboard, and tape. It was still entirely grassroots — but for the first time, the idea was traveling.

Part of a series

This is one era in Fingerboard Setup Trends Through the Years. Each page covers the spirit of a single era — the gear that defined it, why it trended, and how to read setups from that period today.

Chapter 01 · The spark

Why it trended

Skate video was the medium. As skateboarding's home-video era took off, footage reached living rooms that no skate shop ever could, and a single fingerboard segment was enough to plant the idea nationally. The barrier to entry was almost zero: the 'gear' was whatever was on hand, so the trend spread on imitation rather than purchase.

The Future Primitive (1985) moment community histories cite as fingerboarding's first big on-screen spark, surfaced via Igloo Fingerboards' Lance Mountain feature. Igloo Fingerboards

Chapter 02 · The makers

Who popularized it

The widely-told origin centers on Lance Mountain's homemade fingerboard appearing in Powell-Peralta's Future Primitive (1985). The exact construction method — cardboard deck, erasers for wheels — is documented in community retellings rather than an official Powell-Peralta history, so it is best presented as the era's defining anecdote rather than a verified spec sheet.

Brands and makers of the era

  • Powell-Peralta (1978) — Skateboard brand whose video (Future Primitive, 1985) featured Lance Mountain's homemade fingerboard.1

Chapter 03 · The gear

The gear that defined it

Fully DIY era. Accounts of Lance Mountain's homemade board differ — Wikipedia describes wood, tubes, and toy-train axles for the Future Primitive board, and cardboard with pencil erasers for his earlier prototype. Home workshops used whatever was available: popsicle sticks, balsa wood, tape, clay. No commercial wooden fingerboard deck existed yet.

  • Trucks & wheels: No commercial fingerboard trucks or wheels. DIY objects used improvised or fixed plastic components. Martin Winkler is documented (per Winkler Wheels) as making his own fingerboards and wheels by the mid-1980s, though the specific 1987 three-ply detail is community-sourced.
The core of the DIY era: a single finger, a wooden deck, and any flat surface to ride.

Chapter 04 · The scene

Community moments

There was still no organized industry — no dedicated retail, no standardized hardware, no contests. Community sources note early experiments with three-ply wooden boards as far back as 1987, but these are not corroborated by official records. The activity lived in bedrooms and at the back of skate shops, swapped informally among friends.

No marketplace. Boards were swapped informally among skate friends. The activity had no dedicated retail presence and no collector economy.1, 2

Skate-video culture spilled into hands and driveways — fingerboarding grew as a shared, social habit.

Chapter 05 · Today

Reading this era's setups today

Like the origins era, there is little here to list or measure — boards were one-offs. The relevance for today's buyers and sellers is interpretive: anything described as a 'DIY-era' or 'first-generation' board is, by definition, undocumented and unstandardized, so descriptions should avoid implying a verifiable pedigree or value.

Still being verified

  • The exact year fingerboarding gained attention in local skate shops (reported as 'late 1980s to early 1990s') is a community-history generalization without a primary retail or trade-press source.

References

Numbered references to the brand, retailer, and community pages that back this article. The label notes how firmly each source is established.

  1. 1.Lance Mountain and the Fingerboard Moment That Changed Everything— Igloo FingerboardsCommunity↩

    Describes Lance Mountain's cardboard-tape-eraser fingerboard shown in the 1985 Powell-Peralta video Future Primitive.

  2. 2.The History of Fingerboarding by Chris Daniels – Part One— Fingerboard 411Community↩

    Community-authored overview covering origins from 1950s keychain skateboards through the 2000s, including the 1987 Somerville International trademark, Ernon Troya's 1978–1979 DIY boards, and the 1985 Future Primitive appearance.

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About this article

This article is educational and reflects general, sourced community and retailer knowledge about fingerboard gear. It is not a grading, valuation, rarity, or authenticity service, and Kingpin does not guarantee the value, rarity, or authenticity of any item based on this content. Always review the actual listing photos, specs, and seller details before buying.

If something in a listing looks off, report it and choose the category that fits.

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A hand riding a fingerboard across a homemade indoor obstacle.
Photo: י.ש. / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
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On this page

  • Why it trended
  • Who popularized it
  • The gear that defined it
  • Community moments
  • Reading this era's setups today

← Previous

Where Fingerboards Came From: The Pre-1985 Origins

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The Mass-Market Toy Era: Fingerboards Reach Every Toy Aisle

Keep reading

Pre-1985 · Origins

Where Fingerboards Came From: The Pre-1985 Origins

Before fingerboarding had a name, it lived as keychain novelties and homemade finger toys swapped between skate friends — no industry, no standards, no marketplace.

1994–2002 · Mass-Market Toy

The Mass-Market Toy Era: Fingerboards Reach Every Toy Aisle

Licensed miniature decks brought fingerboarding into mainstream toy retail and made it a collector fad — while linking it, in the public mind, to plastic construction.

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