3 Chapters
Olivier's dream is creating a signature board design that every skater wants to own..
Olivier kicked his board up and caught it, running his fingers over the plain wooden deck. He wanted to create a design that every skater in Rolling Desert would recognize instantly. A signature board that made people stop and stare. Something that screamed his name without saying a word. The local skateboard shop was his target. That's where every skater went to check out new gear and hang out after sessions. Olivier pushed through the door and walked past walls covered in colorful boards and accessories. He needed to figure out what made people grab one deck over another. The bright graphics jumped out at him, each one fighting for attention. His board had to be different, not just loud. Outside behind his garage, Olivier set up his color mixing station. He'd found a huge cocktail shaker and an old bottle to blend custom paint combinations. He poured in blues and oranges, shaking hard until the colors swirled into something new. The desert sun beat down as he tested shade after shade on scrap wood. Nothing felt right yet, but he was getting closer. The Cactus Skatepark waited for him that afternoon. Towering cacti lined the ramps and rails, casting weird shadows across the concrete. Olivier dropped in and tested how his plain board felt in the air. Every trick gave him ideas about weight and balance. His signature design needed to look amazing, but it had to perform even better. He landed a clean kickflip and grinned. Once he nailed the perfect graphic, every skater would want one.
Olivier needed to start somewhere real. He grabbed his board and headed to the local art supply store in Rolling Desert. Inside, he stared at rows of paint tubes, markers, and brushes. His fingers traced over different materials, feeling their weight and texture. He picked up a set of acrylic paints and some fine brushes. Then he spotted transfer paper that could help him trace designs onto wood. His first step was clear: learn what tools worked best on skateboards. Back home, he cleared space in his garage and set up a wooden bench he'd dragged in from outside. The rough surface was perfect for messy work. He laid out several blank deck samples and started sketching. His hand moved across the paper, drawing waves, then lightning bolts, then desert shapes. Nothing clicked yet. He crumpled up three failed attempts and tossed them aside. This was harder than landing tricks. Days passed as he filled page after page with ideas. An octopus holding a paintbrush appeared in one sketch, its tentacles wrapped around art tools. Something about it felt right—creative and bold. He refined the design, adding colors that would pop against wood grain. The octopus became his focus, a symbol of making things with your own hands. He traced it onto transfer paper, ready to test it on an actual deck. Olivier built a simple rack to display his test boards where he could see them every day. Three experimental designs stood lined up, including his octopus graphic. The colors looked good in natural light. He still had so much to learn about sealing the paint and making graphics last through grinding and impacts. But watching those boards stand together made his goal feel real. Every skater started somewhere, and this was his beginning.
Olivier walked into the Rolling Desert Community Center, where local artists displayed their work every weekend. He needed to see how real artists presented their creations, how they made people want to look closer. Glass cases lined the walls, filled with paintings and sculptures that caught the afternoon light streaming through the windows. One section showed board sports gear customized by local creators—surfboards with wild patterns, longboards with hand-painted landscapes. His eyes locked on a display explaining how artists protected their work with clear coat finishes and UV sealants. He pulled out his phone and snapped photos of the techniques listed on small cards beneath each piece. This place held answers he needed. If he wanted every skater to own his board, he had to learn how the pros made their art last through desert heat and concrete impacts. A staff member pointed him toward the back exit. Outside, a skatepark spread across the lot behind the center. Ramps rose at different heights, rails ran along concrete platforms, and smooth bowls curved into the ground. Skaters rolled through the space, testing tricks and pushing their limits. Olivier's chest tightened with excitement. This was where boards got truly tested, where designs had to prove themselves under real riding. He watched a girl drop into a bowl, her deck scraping along the curved wall. The graphic on her board was still bright and clear, even with obvious wear. That's what his octopus design needed to survive. He walked closer and noticed a massive mural painted across the back wall of the skatepark. Bold colors showed skaters frozen mid-air, their boards spinning beneath them. The artwork pulled his eyes across the entire surface, following the flow of motion and energy. Someone had announced their style right here, making everyone who visited remember what skateboarding felt like. Olivier stepped back and imagined his octopus graphic blown up that large, tentacles reaching across concrete. His signature board needed that same power—instant recognition, impossible to ignore. On a concrete pillar near the entrance sat a trophy shaped like a skateboard, mounted on a small platform. A plaque beneath it listed names of local artists who had designed boards that changed how people thought about skating. Olivier read each name twice. These were the creators who had made something so good that everyone wanted it. His octopus design could join that list someday. He just had to keep learning, keep testing, and make something that lasted. This place showed him exactly what was possible when art met skateboarding.
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