
![]()
Tiny skateboards a big deal to many youths
Phil Davis / Los Angeles Daily News
LOS ANGELES -- Eleven-year-old Michael Donato practices kick flips, pop shove-its and
other skateboard moves right on the coffee table in his living room. And his mom doesn't
even blink. It helps that Michael's skateboard is only about 4 inches long -- a hot new
toy called a fingerboard. Boys across the nation are snapping up the miniature boards for
$6 to $12 a pop. "It's really big," Michael said. "A really lot of people
are into it."Teachers' desk drawers are beginning to bear the weight of this new
trend. The space for confiscated contraband that not so long ago was occupied by the likes
of beeping Tamagotchis and collectible pogs today is filling with fingerboards and their
tiny paraphernalia. "Yes, we are getting them," said Larry Meyer, dean of eighth
grade at George Ellery Hale Middle School in Woodland Hills, Calif. "It's just
another item that's dealt with as a nuisance. The teachers take them away and send them to
the deans. We require the student to bring a note from home that says, 'I realize they are
a disruption and I will keep them at home.' Then we return it. I'm sure in a couple more
months, when it gets hot, it will be squirt guns. These things come and go in
cycles." Don't be so sure it's just a passing fancy, say toy store owners. "It's
something that's very playable for a lot of kids. Even if they can't ride a skateboard, at
least they can play with these," said Chris Quenga, who works at Acta Game Guys in
Van Nuys, Calif. "A lot of kids come in here asking for Tech Decks and we have to
tell them we're out of stock. Every time we get them, they go right out the door."
And fingerboard makers know how to milk a trend. Like Matchbox cars and Beanie Babies,
these toys are collectible. Escondido-based toy manufacturer X-Concepts, the makers of
Tech Decks, have gone as far as securing licenses to duplicate -- in miniature -- the
graphics on some of the hottest full-size skateboards made by companies such as World
Industries, Zero and Birdhouse. There are 208 different Tech Deck fingerboards on the
market, and more on the way. "Fingerboards have been around since the '80s,"
explains X-Concepts co-owner Tom Davidson. "What we did with Tech Decks is work to
make them as realistic as possible. The graphics are the real graphics they put on real
skateboards. They're a step ahead of what's been out there for a long time."
Davidson's fingerboards feature real metal trucks (the part that holds the wheels on),
grip tape, bushing and wheels. They also come with tiny tool kits so kids can customize
the wheels and trucks just like on real skateboards; the tiny parts make fingerboards an
ages-9-and-up toy. Fingerboards also raise the need for a full complement of accessories:
mini concave ramps, tiny staircases and even finger-size park benches and picnic tables.
Then there's always the equally hard-to-find wad of wax that helps fingertips stick to the
boards during flipping, twisting and other split-second maneuvers. All the better to do
tricks with. And that, say kids on the cutting edge, is the real fun of fingerboards.
"Tech Decks are cool on the bottom, but doing stuff is a lot more fun than just
looking at them," said Michael. His current favorite, in fact, is not one of the
realistically decorated Tech Deck boards but a plain, plastic demo model he got from a
couple of guys who were at a local toy store demonstrating fingerboard tricks. The board
doesn't look as realistic as a Tech Deck, but fingers stick to its plastic top better, and
that makes tricks easier. "The Tech Decks are really big now, but when these come
out," Michael said, holding up his demo board like an old pro making market
predictions, "the Tech Decks are out." Then, again, there's a solution to every
problem, and Michael's on to one: finger shoes. Just like skateboard shoes help skaters
stick to the grip tape on their boards, something similar for little fingers would make it
a lot easier to do tricks with Tech Decks. "Shoes for your fingers," Michael
said, laughing. "That'd be funny."