1999–2006
Early Boutique & Wood Deck EraThe Early Boutique & Wood-Deck Era: A Serious Scene Takes Shape
Hand-pressed wood & forums
phpBB threads, low-res clips, basement parks, and the first European boutiques.
While plastic toys filled toy aisles, a parallel scene in Europe built hand-pressed wooden decks, real ramps, and the first organized fingerboard contests.
While the toy aisle defined fingerboarding for the mainstream, a different scene was quietly being built — mostly in Europe — around hand-pressed wooden decks, purpose-made ramps, and the first real contests. This is the era that drew the blueprint for boutique fingerboarding: small batches, serious craft, and a riding community that took the hobby on its own terms.
Part of a series
Chapter 01 · The spark
Why it trended
Wood changed the feel. Hand-pressed maple decks gave the small but growing riding community something plastic toys never could, and dedicated ramps plus organized competition gave the scene a reason to gather and improve. It trended within the community precisely because it was the opposite of mass-market: purpose-built, small-batch, and made by riders for riders.
Chapter 02 · The makers
Who popularized it
The era's pioneers are well documented by their own sites: Blackriver (Germany, founded 1999) for ramps and scene infrastructure, Berlinwood (founded 2002 by Timo Lieben in Berlin) for early wooden decks, and FlatFace Fingerboards (US, founded 2003 by Mike Schneider) which started with grip tape before expanding to decks and wheels. These founding details come from official brand pages.
Brands and makers of the era
- Blackriver (1999) — Pioneer German brand; founded 1999; early ramps and scene infrastructure including Fast Fingers competition from 2000.1
- Berlinwood (2002) — Pioneering wooden deck brand; founded 2002 by Timo Lieben in Berlin; introduced hand-pressed 5-ply maple decks to the serious riding community.2
- FlatFace Fingerboards (2003) — US boutique brand; founded 2003 by Mike Schneider; started with grip tape, expanded to decks and bearing wheels.3
Chapter 03 · The gear
The gear that defined it
Berlinwood introduced hand-pressed 5-ply maple veneer decks as an alternative to plastic. Early wooden decks were narrower than today's standards — Berlinwood widths of 29mm and 32mm are documented from this period. Deck construction was manual and small-batch. Graphics were screen-printed or applied as stickers.
- Deck sizes: Berlinwood decks available in 29mm and 32mm (and later 33.3mm and 36mm), per the Blackriver shop's Berlinwood listings. Wider sizes evolved over subsequent eras.
- Trucks & wheels: Early boutique setups used plastic trucks adapted from Tech Deck or early homemade designs. Blackriver Trucks were not launched until 2010. This era's truck and wheel hardware was a significant limitation compared to ramp and deck quality.
Chapter 04 · The scene
Community moments
The Fast Fingers competition launched in 2000, and the first dedicated fingerboard park opened the same year. Community forums — named in community histories as sites like Fingerboarders.net and Fingerboard.de — let European and US riders share footage and sell small batches directly to each other. Trading was forum-based; no dedicated marketplace platform existed.
Fast Fingers 1 competition launched in 2000 (Blackriver). The first fingerboard park opened in 2000. Online forums such as Fingerboarders.net and Fingerboard.de allowed European and US communities to share footage and sell small-batch products directly. No dedicated fingerboard marketplace platform existed; transactions were forum-based.4, 5, 6
Chapter 05 · Today
Reading this era's setups today
This is where measurable, comparable specs begin. Early wooden decks were narrower than today's norms — documented Berlinwood widths of 29mm and 32mm date to this period — and truck/wheel hardware lagged behind deck quality, since dedicated trucks were not yet available. For listings, that means width and ply construction become meaningful to state, while hardware on a period setup should be described honestly rather than assumed to match modern standards.
Still being verified
- Berlinwood's 2002 origin is documented by the Blackriver shop (Berlinwood's own retailer) rather than a standalone Berlinwood primary source.
- Online community forum names (Fingerboarders.net, FFI, Fingerboard.de) are noted in community histories; their founding dates are not independently verified.
References
Numbered references to the brand, retailer, and community pages that back this article. The label notes how firmly each source is established.
Official Blackriver about page; confirms founded 1999 by Martin Ehrenberger in Germany. Milestones include Fast Fingers 1 (2000), Blackriver Trucks launched 2010, Berlin shop opened 2010.
Confirms Berlinwood founded 2002 by Timo Lieben in Berlin; handmade in Germany; deck widths 29mm, 32mm, 33.3mm, 36mm; 5-ply construction; popsicle shape.
Founded 2003 by Mike Schneider; started with grip tape; moved into decks then bearing wheels; first US distributor of Blackriver-Ramps domestically.
FlatFace's community-curated museum of historic fingerboard decks, wheels, and ephemera — a useful period reference for the boutique and pro eras. Imagery is FlatFace's; link and credit the museum rather than reproducing its photos.
Long-running community forum name from the early boutique era, now a Kingpin-owned domain. Cited here as a community reference; historical founding dates are not independently verified.
German-language community forum/portal referenced in community histories of the European boutique scene; founding dates are not independently verified.
Retailer blog post covering Blackriver history and ramp product line; confirms 1999 founding and Big Mama as first product.
Keep reading
2006–2012 · Community Growth
The Community-Growth Era: YouTube, Bearing Wheels, and a Global Scene
Video sharing took fingerboarding global, bearing wheels and dedicated trucks raised the hardware bar, and wooden decks became the standard for serious riders.
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.