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  • Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    DUKAS_182062725_EYE
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.

    Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.

    Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    DUKAS_182062742_EYE
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.

    Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.

    Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    DUKAS_182062759_EYE
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.

    Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.

    Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    DUKAS_182062776_EYE
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
    Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.

    Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.

    Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480667_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480661_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480655_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show

    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480669_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show

    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480664_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show

    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480659_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show

    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480658_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480660_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480662_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480668_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480653_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480665_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480656_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480670_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480663_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480654_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    DUKAS_163480657_EYE
    One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
    From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.

    About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.

    Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.

    The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
    Pictured; White board was Tony Hawks first skateboard.
    October 2023, London, UK.

    © Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_024
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623m)
    Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_023
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623q)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_022
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623p)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_020
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623g)
    Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_019
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623d)
    Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_018
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623f)
    Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_017
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623z)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_016
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623y)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_015
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623aj)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_014
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623at)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_006
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623bi)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_005
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623ay)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_004
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623az)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_003
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623ba)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_002
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623be)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    DUK10144587_001
    TOKIO 2020 OLY - Die 13-jährige Britin Sky Brown gewinnt Bronzemedaille im Park-Skateboarding-Finale der Frauen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Shopland/Shutterstock (12246623bf)
    13-year-old Sky Brown wins the bronze medal in the Women's Park Skateboarding Final
    Skateboarding, Ariake Sports Park, Tokyo Olympic Games 2020, Japan - 04 Aug 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078842_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078834_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078841_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078837_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078840_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078839_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078835_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078836_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    DUKAS_127078838_EYE
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown
    Teenage skateboard superstar Sky Brown. When she lands in Tokyo, Sky Brown will become one of the UK’s first Olympic skateboarders – and, at 13, the team’s youngest ever member.
    © Dylan Coulter / Guardian / eyevine

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  • NEWS - Russland: Hitzewelle trifft Moskau
    DUK10133047_006
    NEWS - Russland: Hitzewelle trifft Moskau
    MOSCOW, RUSSIA - JUNE 11, 2020: A topless skateboarder in Gorky Park. On 11 June, the temperature in Moscow is expected to reach 32 degrees Celsius. Stanislav Krasilnikov/TASS/Sipa USA *** Local Caption *** 30031034
    (c) Dukas

     

  • The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.
    DUKAS_112467302_EYE
    The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.
    The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.

    © Rii Schroer / eyevine

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    Rii Schroer / eyevine

     

  • The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.
    DUKAS_112467301_EYE
    The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.
    The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.

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  • The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.
    DUKAS_112467300_EYE
    The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.
    The Bowl at Selfridges London gives you the chance to skate in the windows of Selfridges, high above Oxford Street.

    © Rii Schroer / eyevine

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