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Makers & Movements

FlatFace: A Kid Who Thought He Could Do Better Than the Toy Aisle

US boutique brand; started with grip tape, expanded to decks and bearing wheels (G-series); first US distributor of Blackriver ramps.

Kingpin Editorial6 min read2003

Mike Schneider started FlatFace as a young rider selling grip tape — and grew it into one of the biggest names in fingerboarding.

Part of Pioneer Brands

This is one story in the Fingerboard Pioneer Brands series — a source-cited map of makers, scenes, shops, events, and media.
Founded
2003
Country
United States
Focus
Decks, Wheels, Shops
Confidence
Confirmed
FlatFace HQ set up for a session — the graffiti walls and park tables that host the Rendezvous scene.

Origin

Where it started

FlatFace Fingerboards was founded in 2003 by Mike Schneider, a young rider who figured he could do better than the mass-market boards in the toy aisle. It started about as humble as a brand can: grip tape. But the ambition was always bigger than the first product.1, 2

The push

What changed

From grip tape, FlatFace expanded into decks and its own bearing wheels (the G-series), and became the first US distributor of Blackriver ramps — wiring the American scene into the European one. Along the way Schneider also became one of fingerboarding's most visible figures and a community builder, running a museum of historic gear and keeping the brand a hub for riders, collaborations, and culture.1, 2

Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2013-11-22.

Signature

What they pushed forward

FlatFace's signature contributions are the moves that turned a one-kid grip-tape operation into infrastructure for an entire continent's scene.

  • G-series bearing wheels: Developing its own bearing wheels moved FlatFace from accessories to core hardware, giving riders a US-made option engineered for real rolling and grinds.1
  • First US distributor of Blackriver ramps: By bringing Blackriver's professional ramps to the US, FlatFace connected the American community to the European obstacle scene — a quietly pivotal bit of plumbing for the global hobby.1
  • The FlatFace community 'museum': FlatFace's community-curated museum of historic decks, wheels, and ephemera preserves the scene's memory — a rare brand-run archive that treats fingerboard history as worth keeping.2
Dual-durometer G-series bearing wheels — the product family that set the rolling standard.

Legacy

Why it still matters

FlatFace is the proof that fingerboarding rewards obsession: a kid's grip-tape side project became one of the largest fingerboard operations in the world, a US-to-Europe bridge, and a cultural home base that still anchors the scene.1, 2

Archive images

A current FlatFace G16 deck — the mold lineage that grew out of a kid outbuilding the toy aisle.
A museum-collection deck, worn to the plies — the community archive FlatFace keeps of its own history.
The G4BR three-way collab — boutique makers pooling their signatures into one limited wheel.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-07-23.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-04-21.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-07-23.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-04-21.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-11-11.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-09-22.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-09-22.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2012-01-29.
Archived FlatFace Fingerboards brand/product image captured via the Wayback Machine on 2011-04-21.

Setup-era context

For the wider gear story around this period, read The Early Boutique & Wood-Deck Era: A Serious Scene Takes Shape.

Evidence note

Founded 2003 by Mike Schneider; runs a community 'museum' of historic gear.

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.About FlatFace FingerboardsFlatFace FingerboardsOfficial

    US brand founded 2003 by Mike Schneider; started with grip tape, expanded to decks and bearing wheels; first US distributor of Blackriver ramps.

  2. 2.The FlatFace MuseumFlatFace FingerboardsCommunity

    Community-curated museum of historic decks/wheels/ephemera; useful period reference. Imagery is FlatFace's — link/credit, do not reproduce.

Independence & sources

Kingpin is an independent fingerboard marketplace and is not affiliated with the brands, makers, shops, events, or publishers referenced. Brand facts are cited where possible and flagged where uncertain.