Restoring truth and sanity to American history.
Restoring truth and sanity to American history.
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Don Pendleton / What if… ? / 8.875 Deck
Don Pendleton / What if… ? / 8.875 Deck
StrangeLove Skateboards

Don Pendleton / What if… ? / 8.875 Deck

Regular price $90.00 $0.00
  • Artwork by Don Pendleton
  • Manufactured at BBS Mfg.
  • Hand-Screened at Screaming Squeegees
  • Includes "Skateboard Americana," a 36-page, full color zine looking back on the history of social commentary and political satire in skate graphics, produced in conjunction with The Skateboard Museum, with additional articles by Nick Halkias, Don Pendleton, and Ted Barrow.
  • Caveat: Be aware that blemishes and imperfections are an expected and accepted part of the screen-printing process. Each board is screened by hand, one at a time, layer upon layer, making each print unique unto its own—just like snowflakes! That said, sorry, but we will not consent to any returns unless the graphic is determined to be unacceptable at our discretion. Please take this into consideration prior to ordering any screen-printed boards.
  • Dimensions: 8.875 x 31.875
  • Specs: Nose: 7.0 / Tail: 6.675 / WB: 14.0
  • Note: All sales are final. Can't say that any simpler. Unless the product is defective in the wood manufacturing sense, we will not accept any returns—in other words, you bot it, you bought it.
  • Product Description: May sound strange, but there's more truth to it than you know. Come along and enjoy as we explore this sliding dimension door in Don Pendleton's history—all of which is explained in the accompanying zine. What a bargain!
  • Acknowledgments: A big time THANKS goes out to photographer Jeremy Traub via former professional Jerry Fowler who graciously permitted us to use what I believe to be a previously unpublished photo of Sean Sheffey, circa 1993, for the cover of Skateboard Americana. A no less big time THANKS is also due to the legendary lensman Bryce Kanights for allowing us to use his iconic photo of Mike Carroll on the streets of San Francisco, circa 1992, which perfectly encapsulated the Early ‘90s vibe for Ted Barrow’s philosophical treatise on the era.

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