Carver 32" Psychedelic Sunset C7 Surfskate 衝浪滑板

【 Carver x Snake Craft 聯名系列 】
.搭配 Carver C7 輪架

編號 C7-SPYSUNSET
單價 9,200 /
數量
加入購物車

 

Jake Wood of Snake Craft is a surfer and artist from San Clemente, California whose work is an exploration of the beauty of our coastal world. Jake creates highly stylized representations of natural elements in surreal compositions through his obsession with dots. Lots of dots.

We love working with surfers because they get the nuance and intricacies of a world view seen through the lens of an oceanic lifestyle, exemplified perfectly with this vignette of flora surrounding a dreamy curl of dancing droplets.


Specs :
  • Length: 32"
  • Width: 9 7/8"
  • Wheelbase: 17"
  • Nose: 4 1/2"
  • Tail: 6 1/4"

 

Components :

  • Truck Option: C7
  • Truck Color Option: Raw
  • Wheels: 68MM Mag Smoke 78A
  • Bearings: Built-In
  • Grip Tape: Mayhem Deck Pad
  • Hardware: Stainless Steel
  • Length: 32"
  • Width: 9 7/8"
  • Wheelbase: 17"
  • Nose: 4 1/2"
  • Tail: 6 1/4"

 


 

 

HISTORY OF CARVER SKATEBOARDS

 

It all started one quiet summer in Venice, California in 1995. Greg Falk and Neil Carver had been surfing all winter, and were pumped to surf the warmer waters of the Breakwater during the long days of summer, but it was as flat as a puddle. Not even a longboard ripple to justify getting wet. So, like the many generations before them, they took to the streets with skateboards in search of hills to surf.

The historic neighborhoods of Venice and Santa Monica are a veritable skatepark of steep alleys and banks, and as they dropped in on those asphalt waves they were struck with how unlike surfing it was. Sure, they sort of got a surf-like experience, as much as standing on a board and banking turns can provide, but they really missed the snap and drive that a surfboard has, that crisp pivot you get at the tail that lets you really pump a wave for speed. Their skateboards felt stiff by comparison. They tried loosening the trucks even more but all they got was speed wobble, and the steepest hills became virtually unskateable.

And even with those loose trucks, the dynamic of the turn was still all rail-to-rail, symmetrical nose-to-tail. Picking up the nose to tic-tac at high speed down a steep incline was sketchy, so they were left only imagining the performance they wanted, unable to get that feel with any skateboard on the market.