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  • If you ever saw a wooden surfboard it was probably hanging in somebody's house or underneath a deck

  • But kind of in the last 10 or 15 years wood has made a big comeback

  • They surf wonderfully

  • It's beautiful and it feels great to be on one of them

  • I always had a love for wood and kind of passionate about things that went in the water

  • I've kind of been around wooden boats most of my life

  • There's just so much character

  • The way their built, the stories that come with them

  • A lot of that has translated over to why we build surfboards the way we do

  • When we first started thinking about building surfboards, wood was the natural material we chose

  • They have a very high strength to weight ratio

  • Wooden surfboards have the longest history of use in the surf world than any other material

  • People have been surfing wooden surfboards since kinda the first

  • documented history of people riding waves

  • Board starts in CAD, where we take a 3d model

  • break down the shape and kind of create frames and templates and

  • all the inner parts of the board that we get cut

  • on a CNC machine

  • We take those frames and we just pop them out

  • assemble the frame into a kind of skeleton

  • We go out to our lumber shed, pick a bunch of cedar, bring em into our mill shop

  • put glue along the edges, clamp it all together into a panel

  • Everything's book matched, you have symmetry in the colors and texture of the wood

  • Cut your outline

  • Take our assembled frame

  • gently put it down right on top of the plank

  • Once that foundation is started, you're basically building up the three dimensional shape

  • the outside part of the board using lots of strips that kind of interlock and fit together

  • Every piece of wood is going to be different and it's all gonna react differently

  • There are frustrations with it, but I think that's one of the things that keeps it challenging

  • you learn to read the, kind of what the grain lines are doing and what the color of the wood is telling you

  • Once those rails are cleaned up, we put our top planks on

  • It's a little bit like putting a lid on a box.

  • It's like this is it, whatever's inside that board is staying inside that board

  • and by tensioning some rope you can clamp the two together

  • It's like a time capsule

  • What makes our boards unique are they are built right here in york

  • they're built using material that grows right here in the state of maine

  • they're built 100% by hand, by local crafts people and surfers

  • There is a lot of time that goes into these boards

  • between forty and sixty hours, start to finish

  • We wanted to build surfboards that were as hollow as they could be, but still be strong enough to work well

  • Too light and they don't surf well but too heavy and they don't surf well

  • so there's a, there's a balance pint there and that's where we try to be

  • Taking the board off the rocker table, once the top has gone on.

  • that is by far one of my top favorite parts

  • It's just you, and a shaping stand

  • a board and a hand plane

  • Everything else is out of your view

  • it's simple

  • it's pleasurable

  • it's quiet

  • you can be with your thoughts and you can kind of just be present

  • There's something about taking a nice sharp edge tool to a beautiful piece of wood and feeling the curls coming off

  • and knowing that every pass that you're making. you're kind of getting it closer and closer to what you have in mind

  • Once we've shaped it down and the boards looking like it's supposed to look like, time for it to go into the glassing room

  • 4 ounce fiberglass, laying it over the board, draping it over the edges, cutting it, applying epoxy on the board

  • Once both sides are Lamb coated, it's time to put in the hardware

  • drill and router and install the fin box

  • and on the other side we drill and put in the leash plug and a vent

  • There's a lot of air just naturally inside the board

  • And that air wants to expand and contract with temperature changes

  • and that vent has a little piece of gortex fabric in it, and it allows air to kinda breathe both ways

  • but it doesn't allow water in it

  • Once all that hardware's put in, goes back into the glassing room,

  • we brush a nice beautiful thick coat of epoxy over the whole surface

  • and that we call a gloss coat

  • that's supposed to look beautiful and glossy and shiney and flawless

  • you get to see that board come to life

  • whatever the colors in the wood they really come out

  • it just makes it look like candy

  • you jus wanna touch it and run your hands down it and it's just kinda the icing on the cake

  • once everything's hard, we put it into what we call the oven

  • Get that epoxy to cure, really kind of bake it, and just get it to harden

  • put in the fin, screw in the vent, ship it out

  • we just love the idea of building something that's sustainable and long lasting and made by hand

  • kinda give you a deeper connection to the product over something you might buy on a shelf

  • When a customer gets the board

  • they feel it. They 100% feel the amount of work and the amount of passion that went into the board

  • So, I'm not really looking at hours and efficiency

  • I'm looking at like doing it right and enjoying it as we go

If you ever saw a wooden surfboard it was probably hanging in somebody's house or underneath a deck

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木目がいかにして木製サーフボードを作るか (How Grain Makes Wooden Surfboards)

  • 3 0
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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