This story first appeared in Issue Five of Gear Patrol Magazine.
Before multimillion-dollar corporations and factories spanning acres, there were unyielding makers and dim workshops. Production and design were guided by how a ski or snowboard felt cutting through fresh snow, not how well a carefully formatted spreadsheet could expand a bottom line. As with craft beer, ski and snowboard manufacturing is going back to its small-batch roots. Small is better. Small means wide noses and swallow tails, artist-drawn graphics and wood veneers. Small means the people building the boards also ride them. The trend isn’t unique to one place; cottage makers from Japan to the Rocky Mountains to New England are proving that hands are just as deft as machines.
Skis
Igneous Raglefant 114

Before designing and building custom skis in Jackson, Wyoming, Mike Parris worked to develop extraplanetary rover technology as a robotics engineer. Prototype testing stints in Antarctica and the Atacama Desert left Parris craving mountains, and he was constantly drawn to the Tetons, where longtime friend Adam Sherman had founded Igneous in the early 90s. When Parris signed on, his instinct was to automate ski production — until he got back to working with his hands. Every pair of fully custom, wood-veneer, handmade skis that comes out of the Igneous shop is designed in a highly personalized process that, if he has his way, involves making fresh turns with Parris.
Price: $1,749