Skateboarding Bags
Description: Vision Street Wear Skateboarding Disstresed 1980s Original Aesthetic Tribute 〶
Vision Street Wear Skateboarding Disstresed 1980s Original Aesthetic Tribute 〶 Bag
by Terahertz'Cloth
$19 $24
Description: This awesome vintage skateboard shop design features a skull and two skateboards. This fictional skate shop is based in Montreal and was established in 1980.
Skully's Skate Shop Vintage Skateboarding Skull Custom Board Bag
by Wasabi Snake
$19 $24
Description: Skate Rags was a Southern California based clothing company that operated from the mid-1980s to early 1990s. Their tagline was "To Fit and Survive" and as such, marketed their apparel as being a bit more durable, though not sure if that was just marketing bs or if there was any truth to it, I just know my SR gear didn't fare much better than any of my other stuff. Nonetheless, Skate Rags had some cool designs and built up a great following, but as the skateboarding landscape changed in the 90s, they struggled to find their place and folded. Their team riders included Mike McGill, Tom Groholski, Monty Nolder, Sam Cunningham, Ben Schroeder, Mark Partain, and Rob Mertz, to name a few. Rip it up!
Town & Country Surf Designs Wood & Water Rage Bag
by TheDisneyElite1955
$19 $24
Description: The 'skateboarding is not a crime' motto has become one of the most famous expressions — and stickers — in skateboard history. Skateboarding has always been a city sport that interacts with architecture, buildings, urban objects, landscapes, and spaces. As skateboarding increasing in popularity, skateboarders faced curfews, prohibitive legislation, and bans from public areas. Soon, tickets and fines were soon being issued across America and Europe, and police officers and security guards quickly became skateboarders' worst nightmares. After the introduction of no skateboarding legislation, skateboarders were suddenly regarded as common criminals, getting harassed and having their boards confiscated.
Description: The High Roller opened in 1978 in the Sunnyslope area of Phoenix during the first generation of purpose-built skateboard parks. It had two full Pipes, one 20' with 16' flat wall and the other was 16' with a 3/4 pipe leading into a long halfpipe run. It also had two bowls, a huge snake run, a classic clover bowl, and then a large banked freestyle area. Despite being designed for it, it was never actually landscaped, so there were patches of rocky desert fill between the runs that many locals decided to bridge with wood so they could add cool transfers into the mix.