Dandies S’mores Tart by Flex Your Heart

Dandies S'Mores dessert Vegan marshmallows Our favorite Vegan Marshmallow, Dandies has been working out. Maybe you’ve noticed? If you haven’t go get a bag and check them out. The new size on the left is more like the size of a traditional marshmallow, the original Dandie on the right. The taste and feel of Dandies were already on point. The size just makes them that much more enjoyable.

Dandies S'Mores dessert Vegan marshmallows It may be February, but we were feeling in the mood for some S’mores. Vegan Baker and proprietor of Flex Your Heart Bakery, Allison Schmidt had just the recipe. Dandies S’more Cups!

Dandies S'Mores dessert Vegan marshmallows You can make these in the comfort and warmth of your kitchen anytime. And if you don’t have any open flame, pop them in the microwave for 10 seconds. The Dandies really puff up and do something magical to our mouths!

Here is what you need

1 Bag of Dandies (get a second bag for snacking)

3 Cup Crushed Graham Crackers

1 Cup Sugar

2/3 Cup of Melted Earth Balance

Mix together all three in a bowl. Press firmly into a cupcake tin making sure to pack the bottom and sides tightly. Refrigerate for half an hour, bake at 375 for 8-10min.  This will make 18 Cups

Chocolate Ganache Filling

1/2 Bag Semi Sweet Chocolate (8oz)

1/2 Can Coconut Milk (7oz)

3 Table spoons of Powdered Sugar

Heat coconut milk to a medium heat, just before a boil. Place chocolate chips in a large bowl and then add milk and sugar. Wait about a minute for the chips to start to melt and then begin to stir.  Now pour about a table spoon or enough chocolate ganache to fill each cup about half way.

Vegan Marshmallows from Chicago Vegan FoodsAt this point, you can set them in the fridge and chill for a firmer ganache, or if you like them warm and gooey skip the fridge and start toasting the Dandies!

We used a portable camp stove. If you don’t have anything like this, or don’t like the idea of open flames in side,  place a Dandie in each cup and pop it in the microwave.

Go check out Allison’s Etsy page Flex Your Heart. If you need some Dandies, our friends at Food Fight Grocery would love to send you some in the mail.

Here is your chance to get a free bag of Dandies. Post in the comments your favorite vegan marshmallow and marshmallow enhanced food. We will pick our favorite and announce the winner on Sunday.

Posted in Skate Snacks | 4 Comments

Deathwish Creeps II Skateboard Decks

Deathwish Creeps II skateboard decks inspired by Ed "Big Daddy" Roth monsters, rat finkThe Deathwish Creeps II series pays homage to the art of Ed “Big Daddy” Roth, Rat Fink and some Pro-inspired Hotrod Monsters! The genesis of skateboarding and hot-rod culture are so intertwined that when ever you see a modern interpretation paying respect, one must take notice.  Deathwish did an amazing job on this series, particularly on the team board. Hooded out Rat Fink with pin striping, Ed Roth would be proud.

Warehouse Skateboards  $51.99

Furby, Slash, Team Board, Neen, Greco

Posted in Skateboards | Leave a comment

Emerica The Tempster – First Look Review

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewThe Emerica Tempster has been on our radar for several months and marks the return of a signature shoe from Emerica’s most notable and tenured pro, Ed Templeton! The last shoe to bare the Tempster name was a slip-on in the Fall 2011 season. Emerica spared nothing in bringing this special edition shoe to market. The shoe, the insoles, even the box. VSB has never spent much time looking at the packaging of shoes, after all we want to focus on thing we intend to destroy, however the art is to much to pass on, so let’s dive in with some up close looks.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe review 01TempsterBackVint 02TempsterPortside 03Tempster 04TempsterBoxBottom 05TempsterBoxOpenfrontEverything on the box jumps out with art on every panel! Sect making sweet love to a shoe, etched sides, and what looks like a cut out boxed and matted photo!

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewGreen and Black un-boxed and not fully laced. The Tempster is a classic mid-top construction with a little bit of flair. Without the laces all the way up, notice the curvy lace cage. It’s subtle and doesn’t seem to have function, but it does make the green model look extra serpent-y.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe review 08TempsterBlacklacesThe laces already in the shoe are stiff made from a tough material that has shipped with previous Etnies Eco models. However, if you like a traditional lace, the green model has some extra green while the black has gray laces to match the outsole.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewSuper thin tongue and collar. The tongue panels are a layer of canvas with a soft nylon lining on the inside and no padding. Same around the collar, however the internal and external stitching make a fold that acts as a thin padding and keeps the canvas edges from cutting into the ankle. This might bum some people out, but the result is a mid-top that has the weight and heft of a low-profile skateboard shoe. Here you can see the black shoe’s lining is the same print pattern as the outer of the green and vise-versa. Seriously no detail left out.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewGreen is one of those colors that is simultaneously ugly and eye poppingly beautiful. The heels and collar of the Tempster show the latter. The dark green stripes give the look a nice contrast and the Emerica license plates look fantastic. The heels are stiff, and combined with that little bit of incidental collar padding make the shoe cup the ball of the foot. A bit more padding would go a long way here.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewThe toe caps are solid one piece construction of 20oz canvas nicely tucked into the abrasion resistant foxing tape.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewThe new pattern on Emerica’s abrasion resistant vulcanized soles is a diamond like triangle. The tread is deep and an interesting change up. It feels almost slick to the touch, but on the board and on pavement grips super well (first skate session was on a slightly wet and cold surface to boot). The board feel is no different from what you’re used to if you ride Emerica shoes. Take them out of the box and start to rip!

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewJust another rad detail where form and function collide. With any considerable use the insoles that feature Ed’s illustrations will be worn away with in no time. They also provide an excellent cushion for the pushin’ and have a nice cup at the heel.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewWith much deliberation, we decided that all things beautiful must be destroyed. The green printed Tempsters will see the abuse of the VSB skate test.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewWhile the green print is is getting most of the attention, the black Tempsters are no slouch. The black on black with hints of green is a good look. Noticeable when up close, the gray foxing tape is several shades darker on this colorway.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe reviewTake one last look at these beauties before they get their first taste of grip tape in a quick session.

Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan Skateboard Shoe review

After approx. 45min of abuse and before the snow started to fall here in Chicago.

 

The Tempster out of the box is an instant skater. No break in time needed. Lace them up and get on your board.  The shoe is thinner than one might expect. When we think of mid-tops, we think of a shoe with extra weight and padding.  While this might be a let-down for some, this makes the Tempster great for the majority of skaters today.

The canvas is 20oz which has some great durability. It will be interesting to see how well the stitching and layering hold up since it is right in the ollie area.

The lightness of the shoe makes it comfortable to wear all day, however, the lack of venting in the toes does make for a sweaty foot. Canvas is going to breathe, but the lining seems to block some of airiness. This is great for the winter months, but come summer would be a bit too warm.

The fit can be a little loose at times, however the metal eyelets are great because you can quickly tighten up and get going again. We’ll see how this change as the shoe gets more wear and breaks in.

Everyone in the skate world by now has certainly read or seen the gruesome shots of Ed’s possible career ending leg break. This may be the last Tempster. For loyal Pawns looking to rip, the time is nigh now!

Emerica

Green/Print size 5-14 (no 5.5) $69.99

Black/Grey  size 5-14 $69.99

If you somehow missed it, go back and check out interview with Ed. It’s a three parter, so why not start back at part 1.

In celebration of the release of the new Tempster we are going to have a give away in quiz form. More than one correct answer and we will do a drawing.  Here are the questions.  First prize, a bag of Dandies Vegan Marshmallows and a VSB sticker pack. Second Prize, a pair of Emerica socks and a VSB sticker pack. Third prize, VSB sticker pack!   email your answers to fakie@veganskateblog.com  (US only, unless you want to pay shipping)

Who/What is in the sticker with the Eiffel tower? Don Brown had what job in the Sheep Life of Leisure video ? Whats the significance of the Hans Lindgren sticker?

Entries due by March 1st 2013 11:59pm Central

———————————————————————————————————————————-Here are the results for our The Tempster Give Away!

1st place Joe Barlow (first response and the most detailed.)

2nd Ryan Mann

3rd Shawn Fosnight

and here are the answers, taken from Joe’s entry.

Who/What is in the sticker with the Eiffel tower? 1. The sticker of the Eiffel Tower features the one and only Pierre André Senizergues, founder and CEO of Sole Tech (employer of Ed), executing a handstand.

Don Brown had what job in the Sheep Life of Leisure video ?.During the credits of Sheep’s “Life of Leisure” video you will see one Don Brown’s name parallel to “key grip”, suspecting that this would’ve been considered his job.

Whats the significance of the Hans Lindgren sticker? There may be a few answers to this question: 1. Hans Lindgren and Ed Templeton both rode for New Deal & Schmitt Stix. 2. They’re both old. 3. Hans Lindgren was a freestyler who practiced in Huntington Beach, along side Ed, Pierre Andre & Don Brown. My money’s on the third part of my answer, which would tie Pierre, Don Brown, & Hans together with Ed.

Posted in Shoes | 5 Comments

Sheep Shoes – Life of Leisure

Tomorrow we take a look at something new, today lets look back. Sheep Shoes (a Sole Technology brand) has mostly Vegan skate shoes and an outstanding lineup. Rick McCrank, Brian Anderson, and Ed Templeton! Everyones parts are short and sweet, par for the time, and the credits are classic; Arguments with crazy landlords, security guards, and even some footage from an early SPoT’s Tampa Pro Contests!

Posted in Video | 1 Comment

Conflict Gypsy – No Compromise 23-26

Conflict GypsyConflict Gypsy, run by our friend Josh Harper (also a Vegetable Shredder), is a clearing house for “Animal Liberation” publications. Digitized and uploaded to the web, these long out of print magazines and digests provide an introspective look for those of us who were there and a context of the history for newer activists.

Shac7ScarFaceNo Compromise was undoubtedly the most significant Animal Rights publication in its day. 2004 was an important year in the movement and the entire year of the magazine has just been uploaded . Many activists came under further scrutiny by federal investigators and others found themselves facing years of prison time for operating a website. This was also the beginning of GourmetCruelty.com and a significant blow against the Foie Gras industry. Go read some history and start looking ahead.

Posted in Activism | Leave a comment

Emerica Tempster

Emerica Vegan Skateboard Shoes Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan skate shoeThe Emerica Tempster, our most anticipated vegan skateboard shoe of the year, is finally here! Ed Templeton’s newest mid-top comes in two excellent colorways! Black (True to what seems like the majority of vegan skate shoes) 20oz canvas with grey detailing or Green with Ed’s original art! The canvas print is actually reversed on both. So the inside of those mean greens is black and the black hide some hidden art!  The choice is a no brainer; buy both colors, skate the black and put the green in a glass case next to the skateboard/art collection. Then pine after not buying 2 more to skate and or save.

Emerica Vegan Skateboard Shoes Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan skate shoeThe Tempster is subtle but the offset metal eyelets really give the shoe a unique flair. Stitching on the collar and side paneling add some durability. The toe cap is smooth and has enough layering further back to extend the skate time. A thin tongue and thinly padded collar will make for an easy shoe to rock all day! Vulcanized soles have a new triangle tread pattern for a gripping, close to board feel.

Emerica Vegan Skateboard Shoes Emerica Tempster Ed Templeton Vegan skate shoeEven the insoles are rad! And lets not forget about the art on the box!

 

Keep an eye out for our First Look Review, coming soon. In the meantime you might want to grab up a few pairs. If you do, take a photo and send them our way! We’ll post them on our twitter page @veganskateblog

Emerica

Green/Print size 5-14 (no 5.5) $69.99

Black/Grey (with Green Print on the inside) size 5-14 $69.99

Posted in Shoes | 1 Comment

Ed Templeton Interview pt. 3

 

And now the dramatic conclusion… If you missed it, go read part 1. and 2.Toy Machine Bury The HatchetMr. Fakie: The ‘Bury the Hatchet’ graphic? I’ve got an air fresheners and T-shirts that Tum-yeto sent me. So for the company that’s had very playful board graphics (some might say controversial), you’ve had a lot of people on the team that are open about being Christian or spiritual. Was there some sort of incident that influenced that graphic?

Ed Templeton: No, I don’t think there’s any reason. The whole Josh Harmony thing doesn’t factor in. I’ve always liked comedy when the devil or god is involved because as characters, they’re always both pure evil or pure good. It’s kinda funny to mess with them as characters. When Kids in the Hall would use the devil or god, it was always the best. I think it came up organically without thinking about having Christians on the team. I have the utmost respect for Josh’s beliefs. I think that’s why he’s riding for Toy Machine. Me and our filmer Kevin Barnett are atheists and we mess with Josh a bit, we’ve tested our boundaries in the past. One time we pushed it too far and that ended in tears so we found the line. Now we can poke fun with Josh and he can poke fun with us. He knows we won’t be believers and we know he won’t be an atheist. I love the fact that he writes music and is creative. That’s what Toy Machine is about. He fits Toy Machine perfectly because he’s a creative skater and the fact that he believes in god doesn’t matter to me. There’s been huge discussions in the past but in recent years we let off the whole thing. I love and respect Josh. I believe that believing in god is intellectual suicide. That’s just me. I don’t know if that offends you or if you’re Christian or not.

MF: No, my mother’s vagina is Jewish but I’m not. I stopped going to synagogue and keeping kosher when I got a skateboard.

ET: That graphic was totally random. It just took off. It became popular so we started putting it on more things. That’s when we made the air fresheners.

MF: It seems pretty pervasive. It ended up being on a lot of things and you’re like, “Is there something more behind that?” And then you had the Last Supper deck which was totally rad.

ET: That was one of those things where there were a couple of kids who’s art I wanted to use so I didn’t draw that one. I talked to this kid Jesse Fillingham about it and he came up with it. I grew up completely as a Christian. I know a lot of the songs and I know a lot of the verses. So a lot of my artwork has to do with growing up one way and discovering things on your own. Leaving that belief system is a big theme in my photography and art. It effects people in this world and it’s very interesting to me. I think that’s how the bury the hatchet thing came up. I thought it would be funny to have them arm wrestling.

MF: I thought they were shaking each other’s hands. Arm wrestling? I’ve got it over my computer, I guess they are arm wrestling.

ET: It’s kinda both. Arm wrestling was one but I didn’t draw a table there. It’s in between a bro shake and an arm wrestle. I saw a guy who had it tattooed on his back and I don’t think it came from me. It didn’t say bury the hatchet but it had that kind of motif. I just saw a kid with it tattooed on his chest, and that one did come from the graphic.

MF: There’s a lot of Toy Machine tattoos. Did you expect Transistor Sect to be so popular? There’s the Monster and Devil-cat but Sect seems to blow them out of the water in terms of tattoos.

ET: There was no master plan. I wish I was smart enough to come up with a master plan but it just happened organically. I guess the genesis was doing comics on tour in the early days. TV tours with Jerry Fowler, Mike V. and Jahmal Williams. I would draw these quick comics of terrible things, like Jerry having incestual relations with his mother, and I’d pass it around when we stopped at a gas station and everyone would laugh. That would branch off to other comics and I was trying to create a character that would be easy to draw repeatedly. That’s where the sect came from. That character had to be easy to draw because you draw it frame after frame and you don’t want five fingers or all these eyes. The Sect is just an oval with an eye on it and the claw hand is way easier to draw than regular hands and the feet and the whole thing. That’s the genesis. I just used it in a bunch of stuff. I don’t know why I used it more than once. It became this thing that crossed platforms in a way. I used the Transistor Sect in Emerica stuff so this character represented me as much as Toy Machine. At one point, I realized I shouldn’t be doing RVCA shirts with this character because it’s a Toy Machine character. I was trying to un-blur the lines. It became part of Toy Machine. I think it fits Toy Machine perfectly.

Toy Machine Good and Evil

Sect gets violent in Good and Evil

MF: Has Cartoon Network called yet?

ET: No, I actually know the inventor of Yo Gabba Gabba, Christian Jacobs. He worked at RVCA for a long time. I guess one of the Yo Gabba Gabba characters looks like a transistor sect. I don’t think so. It’s been used a lot and copied to some extent. There’s a company called Grawls, it’s a Target brand or something and it has some characters surprisingly similar to Transistor Sect on some of their stuff.

I think we sent them a cease and desist letter. I thought it’d be great for it to become a Simpson’s type thing. Maybe a little short on the Cartoon Network. And it might work but with all the stuff I’m doing, it’s the last thing I can pursue right now. With Toy Machine, the art stuff, and professional skating, which might be over with this (leg) break. I just feel like if I could find an animator who’d like to do it, I would storyboard it every week or month. It’d be amazing. I just couldn’t do actual animation work on it.

MF: Speaking of going off and doing things, Toy Machine has always had this generational level of talent that starts at Toy Machine and then moves on. We could name them all but Brian Anderson and Jamie Thomas leaving seemed to mark an era. Toy launches careers, but then the riders bounce.  How do you feel about that?

ET: Yeah, I’m proud of it and feel fortunate. I can’t claim that I have the greatest eye for talent, I’ve been very lucky with my choices. I look beyond just skateboarding when I’m choosing people for Toy Machine. I like people with character and a quirk that helps me market them in a better way. I also like attitude. Someone like Bam, for instance, was never the greatest skateboarder but his personality was so large and his comedy was so fun. His success was largely [due to] his persona. A lot of the other guys, not that they don’t have character but they were amazingly talented on a skateboard. I think Muska, Jamie Thomas and Brian Anderson are giants in skateboarding. Leo Romero and those guys make me feel lucky to have the opportunity to sponsor those guys. I think it goes both ways too. A lot of those guys are attracted to what Toy Machine is. I hope they want to ride for a company that doesn’t take itself too seriously but at the same time is serious about making good videos and ads. We’re small and we can’t put out the big bucks so the people that want to ride for us ride for us not for the money but because they believe in the whole thing.

MF: You had Elissa Steamer, the most recognizable female skateboarder since Peggy Oki on the Toy Machine team. Do you guys think you’ll have a woman on Toy Machine again?

ET: I’m open to it, but we don’t have enough cash to make moves like that. I can’t just say lets go find a girl skateboarder and put her on. For us it has to be more organic. But if something arises, I’m totally down. That’s something I’m really proud of, it’s a great historic footnote that Toy Machine was the first to give a female street skater a pro deck. She was the first street skater and she wasn’t treated like a novelty. We gave her the straight deal. Her ads are like the other ads, she does video parts like the rest of the team, she’s not a novelty. We set the precedent to treat all women that way. It’s not some kind of joke.

MF: At demos do you get a lot of feedback like that from younger women?

ET: I think that nowadays it’s so far removed that a lot of people don’t even know. Every once in a while I’ll hear, “Oh Elissa, she’s the best”, but I don’t think people put us together. It’s not a direct connection to me doing that. In fact, it wasn’t directly me. Jamie Thomas discovered Elissa, he saw her at a skatepark in Florida and said, “Hey, let’s put this girl on.” All I did was say, “Hell yeah, that’s rad. Let’s do it.” I don’t get a lot of feedback from that. She was the lightning rod for sure. All the girls from her generation know for sure. They have a respect for that.

MF: Your personal video parts. What’s your favorite?

Ed Templeton Emerica Vegan Skateboard Shoes

ET: I look at it two different ways. My favorite based on skill is the Emerica video ‘This is Skateboarding’ because I feel like that was the time period when I could document the hardest tricks of my life. In the early days, I didn’t document as many tricks. I feel like someone like the Gonz was never properly documented in his heyday. It’s crazy that the Blind video is just the tip of the iceberg for what he did. Most of it was never filmed. It was the stuff you saw in person that would freak you out. My other favorite part was in ‘Good and Evil’ because I feel like it was a representation of an older part. I was past my pinnacle skills but it proved I could still make a part that was watchable and fun, with more bank skating and less handrails. “Welcome to Hell” is one I don’t feel like I took as seriously as I should of. Jamie was on the right track getting crazy and I was like, “Ah whatever.” I wasn’t going out to make the best part I could in a way. I guess putting it that way it’s a little bit of a regret. I feel like I could have done a better part for sure.

MF: Do you have any favorite songs from those days or from those video parts?

ET: It’s funny, that’s the stuff I listen to all the time. If I listen to Sonic Youth and I’m around other people, I have to skip my video part song.

MF: Does everyone on the team pick their own music for the videos?

ET: In the ‘Welcome to Hell’ days everyone could use whatever they wanted, but now as things have gotten more official it became a lot harder. We ask the riders for a first, second, and third choice of song, then go down the list trying to get the rights. Sometime it doesn’t even work out even for the third choice if the licensing is too expensive, so we have to get creative with it. In ‘Good and Evil’ Austin had a song and we couldn’t use it and he got a song he wasn’t as excited about.

MF: You could just have Leo do acoustic covers. Covers are royalty free.

ET: (laughing) That just might be the wave of the future. I really like that…

We’ve done some videos where we use Leo or Josh Harmony’s band music and it’s really cool. I kind of like it that way.

MF: Huntington Beach, You’ve lived there your whole life. Southern California in the 90s transformed skateboarding everywhere. Most of us from that generation think of SoCal, I.E. and Huntington Beach as legendary places. Best and worst parts about HB?

ET: It’s funny because most of my life I kind of hated this place. Seeing it from my perspective now, it’s amazing. But in my childhood, I hated it. I hated the jocks and the surfers; I hated the suburban aspect of it. Especially when I started traveling at 18 and seeing Europe I’d come back and be like, “This place sucks so bad.” The plan was to leave as soon as possible, but I started Toy Machine which was based in San Diego and realized that I couldn’t move to Portland or New York because I had this company. I didn’t want to move to San Diego and Huntington Beach wasn’t that far, so I stayed where I’d always been and in the last 5 or 6 years I really fell back in love with living here. We travel around a lot and everyone we meet in the world wishes they could live in Southern California. It doesn’t matter if there are crappy people here, there are crappy people everywhere.

To your point about it being a skate mecca, it’s always been like that. So many pros lived here in those days. Basically, the Flip team moved from Europe and stayed in Huntington Beach. Some days in the HB skatepark it’d be filled with me, Geoff Rowley, Tom Penny, Tosh Townend and all these amazing people would be skating this crappy park. It’d be funny to see kids making pilgrimages to the famous Huntington Beach skatepark and they’d roll up and be like, “What the fuck? This place is so crappy.” The skatepark was so small and shitty and we loved it. People would come from Europe and be like, “My local park blows this away.”

MF: With ankle biter rails…?

ET: This place is amazing. The weather is great all the time and I live a bike ride away from the beach and there’s lots of good vegan food. I can be in LA in an hour. It’s great.

MF: We talked about the corporate shoe companies, but I wanted to touch real quick on branding. Skateboarding is interesting in that every one of our products is an advertisement in itself. Skaters want to represent the companies they are loyal to (Mr. Fakie is down with Thunder and Spitfire for life), but in recent years it’s no longer just skate companies sponsoring skateboarders. So it begs the question – where is the line?
ET: That’s interesting. I think that’s our generation speaking. What we call “selling out” is the goal for most kids these days. I don’t want to be in a McDonald’s commercial but most kids would love to be in a McDonald’s commercial, that means hitting it big. Get rich or die trying. There’s no moral compass on what you’d promote or not promote. The idea is to get the money and the endorsement deals. Who cares what you promote as long as you are making cash? My generation, or at least the people I took my cues from, like Fugazi, doesn’t believe [in endorsing something you don’t believe in].

MF: You don’t believe in energy drinks?

ET: No, I don’t.

MF: What if GT Dave’s Kombucha calls, will you do that? You gonna get in on the big money?

ET: (Laughing) Maybe. I don’t really get down with that stuff. Frank Scura was trying to get vegans sponsored by vegan companies. Like Cliff Bar was in for a while.

MF: That’s weird.

ET: Yeah. Dr. Bronner’s Soap was trying to get in recently. “Yeah, I’ll take free Dr. Bronner’s.”

MF: This is more a statement then question to finish on. If Jake Phelps is the Hunter S. Thompson of skateboarding, who are you?

ET: Oh man, I have no idea. You stumped me on that one.

MF: I was going to go with Studs Terkel…

ET: Ha! That’s cool!

MF: Maybe put that in your bio, “Ed Templeton, the Studs Terkel of skateboarding”.

ET: I’ve always felt like a skateboarder and accepted in the skateboard community but in the same way, not a part of it.  I’ve never smoked or drank, but I was never “straight edge.” And all this skating stuff, all the hanging out, the smoking and getting drunk I wasn’t a part of…

MF: But you were there to document it.

ET: I was interested in it but I felt like an outsider. Every moment I was in the world I was looking at it from the outside.  I’m 40, I run a company and I occasionally grab a board and I’m at a park and all these kids are like, “Whoa! Ed Templeton! We know who you are!” It’s otherworldly. I feel so much love from the skate world even if sometimes I don’t feel like a skateboarder. Even in my heyday. Maybe it’s because I’m always working on three fronts. I would be skating, but running the company and doing art stuff, too. I’d leave the skate world and go to the art world with distinctly different people with a different language. This interview is making me reflect on a lot of things…

MF: Hopefully that’s good.

ET: Yeah.

———————————————————————————————————-

VSB wants to give a a big big thanks to Ed and Deanna Templeton and Rob Brink for making this interview come together.  We also want to thanks Jenifer Weber, Joey Zittnan, MT, and Rachel Miller.

First Look review of Ed Templeton’s new shoe the Emerica Tempster coming soon!

Posted in Interview | 4 Comments

DC Landau Skate SN

DC Landau SN vegan skateboard shoeDC Landau Skate SN is an all Synthetic Nubuck colorway of this classic skate shoe! The Landau has been a popular model in the skate line for DC in the last few years and we finally have a Vegan option! Triple stitching on the toe with Synthetic on Synthetic for some great durability! Padded collar and tongue and check out the scoop around the ankle! You have to give love to a shoe protecting that achilles heal.  The thin cupsoles give a Vul feel and ditch the pill pattern for more of a herringbone tread.

DC size 5-14 $47.99

Posted in Shoes | 1 Comment

Vegetable Shredder – Armin Halvadzic

Vegan Skateboarder Armin Halvadzic

Location : Nova Gorica,Slovenija (SLO)

Occupation : Student

Where do you like skating : Smooth ground and a nice bank.

Why did you go Veg ? I watched the documentary film Earthlings and by watching it I realized that the only right thing to do is to respect every earthling. At least by not eating them just because we think we are more intelligent then them and because we think they taste great.

What is your favorite thing to skate ? My favorite thing to skate is just a nice little game of skate with my friends or a nice session on the bank.

What shoes are you skating now ? I’m skating Lakai MJ-3.

Or just say whatever you want about skateboarding veg? ….I just want to support skaters who are vegetarian because I feel the same way about eating meat as they do.I would never buy a leather shoes because I know some animal had to die. Is about morals and respecting other living creatures.

Posted in Vegetable Shredder | Leave a comment

Etnies Barge LS and Barge LS Nozaka

etnies vegan skateboard shoeEtines Barge LS and Barge LS Nozaka are two new vegan colorways in this slim silhouette skate shoe. The all canvas upper of the aforementioned is adorned in the art of Japanese artist and professional skateboarder Toshikazu Nozaka. Merging traditional japanese imagery, (like the fan pattern) and contemporary content (skeletons surfing) Nozaka is also a true ripper.  The thin collar and lightly padded tongue combined with a nice vulcanized sole make the Barge LS a great shoe for skateboarding, but you may want to wear these out to your next gallery opening.

Etnies Vegan Skateboard shoeReds are ready to rip to shreds! The waxed red canvas upper will give a longer skate life, just like we saw in the Emerica Laced review. Same great feel with out all the rad art to destroy. The brass eyelets really jazz this shoe up!

Etnies

Nozaka  sizes 6.5-14 $59.99

Red/White/Grey sizes 6-14(no6.5) $54.99

Posted in Shoes | 1 Comment