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Keith Hufnagel is just one of those dudesâ¦
From his raw NY style to bombing SF hills, from the sheer but controlled speed of his lines to the attention to detail and cultural references on products; Huf is just one of those dudes who commits to everything with style and determination. Â
There were a whole bunch of subjects I wanted to chat to Keith about; from his roots as a pro skater, to becoming a store owner, to eventually running his own brand. During a recent visit to California, we grabbed a cold beer and started from the beginningâ¦Â Â
Hey Keith, letâs take it back to the early days - How was life growing up skating in NYC? My friends were skateboarding at the time so I got a board and right away I became addicted to it. I started searching out the skateboarding scene and there was this huge underground scene, as you know, which existed at the Brooklyn Banks and little pockets around the city. I really searched out, became part of that culture and once I found that I was in. All my friends (who were skating) ended up not skating anymore so when they disappeared I just kept going, found new friends who were skaters and that led me to all the other boroughs of New York City.
Did that original group of friends move on from skateboarding, due to changing circumstances, or did they just find a new outlet? They were just into other things but I was addicted to skateboarding and that was what I was happy with.
The NY skate scene in the late â80s - mid â90s was so unique, I remember first going there in 1994 and it felt like a totally different vibe to what was happening over in California⦠what are your best memories from that era?
New York City is all about just getting on your board and just pushing, pushing, pushing and going from spot to spot to spot. There are other cities like that but thereâs no city like New York City. Skateboarding there has so much energy and it brings you on a new path every time you put your board down â there are so many things happening and itâs pretty frickinâ amazing!
Back then all we did was push and hop on the train, which was so easy, like London â itâs very similar. When you grow up pushing around a city I think it makes you a different type of skater because youâre using your legs more and more, youâre ollie-ing up every little thing thatâs around so youâre creating a different type of skateboarding. Sometimes some skaters will just show up at a spot and skate that actual ledge or something like that but with city skating you gotta duck and weave, things are coming at you, traffic, people and all sorts.
From NYC to LA youâre probably more famous as a resident of SF - what prompted your move out West in the first place? Yes, I did a long time in San Francisco. When I moved out there in â92 San Francisco was the mecca for skateboarding â it was Embarcadero, the place to be. I wanted to be part of skateboard culture so I chose San Francisco to skate Embarcadero, to skate the hills, to be in with this new type of skateboarding.
Who were you hanging with at Embarcadero in those early days? I grew up with Keenan in New York but I met Carroll out there, Mike York, Karl Watson, Kelch and all the REAL crew; Jim Thiebaud, Tommy Guerreo, Kelly Bird. All the people living there became friends.
Is that how you ended up in FTCâs âFinallyâ? Yeah I was part of FTC back then, I was hanging out there. When I moved to San Francisco I was riding for FUN, Ron Allenâs company, who I rode for a while before I quit and I ended up getting with REAL. Iâve been on REAL since 1993 and I would hang out at FTC and get my extra things there.
I first visited the HUF store when Mega (co-founder of Black Scale) was the manager and there was a real buzz about the store at the time. What prompted the desire to open a sneaker store given that you were still skating professionally at the time? For me I just wanted to do something besides skateboarding. I had been skateboarding for so long and travelling a lot of the major cities from Tokyo to London, from Los Angeles to New York, and there was something I was interested in which was sneakers, footwear and apparel. There was this whole subculture going on which existed in LA, with places like UNION, and San Francisco had stores but they didnât have the store I really liked going to so I thought I would just create it there, and not compete with anyone, and just be our own style. That was HUF - the actual beginning of HUF âthe brandâ was retail.
How much of an influence was DQM and what Chris and Dave were doing on the East Coast back then? Same thing, Iâm super good friends with those guys and I grew up with Chris. Weâre all on the same path, communicating with each other, showing each other our products, doing it all.
Letâs talk about the development of HUF the brand â Youâve moved it on from being a series of stores to a lifestyle brand in itâs own right. Was this always the plan or just a natural progression? Itâs all a natural progression - it hasnât been easy; weâve gone through a lot of hiccups. In the beginning the goal was just to do retail and do a small private label line through the store. As time went on, and we experienced all the problems with production and building a brand, we ended up choosing the brand over the retail. We closed the stores and decided to focus on building the brand with the plan to eventually come back into retail. Thereâs a lot of things which led up to that but we ended up just saying âHey, weâll come back to thisâ and weâve made it past that and will be re-opening a store this year.
Will that be in LA or SF? Weâre going to open in LA first and Iâd like to take it to New York after that (cracks a huge grin) but weâll see. Iâm not going fast at this, weâre taking it very slow â watch Los Angeles first and see how it goes.
Which neighbourhood in LA, the obvious one? Yep, weâre gonna be in Fairfax village â back on the block, no one will know we ever left!
Now HUF is as much of a name in fashion as it is in skateboarding â does that seem kinda weird or kinda cool to you? I think itâs a good thing. Our roots are skateboarding, 100%. We will always be part of skateboarding and support skateboarding but we also need to spread our wings further into other categories so that the brand can survive and live. It needs more and we want to do more. We want to be more than just one category â we want to be skateboarding, we want to be lifestyle, we want to be some weird old-fashioned stuff but it all comes back to skateboarding. We all dress different, we all do different things, weâre all into art, weâre all into music; but all these things revolve around skateboarding.
From DC to DVS and designing colourways for Nike SB to starting your own footwear brand â Have you always been into sneakers? Yeah definitely, Iâve gone in and out of it but yeah I have a huge passion for footwear and Iâve been involved in footwear for a long time now.
So was a HUF footwear line always in the back of your mind when you started the brand? Iâve wanted to do that even longer than doing the store. I just didnât think it was possible for a long time then an opportunity came up for me to do that.
Bringing Dylan and Austyn onto the HUF Footwear team is a strong move; are you planning signature shoes for those dudes? Theyâll both have signature shoes â Dylanâs weâre showing now so theyâll be out Fall â14 and then Austynâs will be out Spring â15.
Dylanâs Gravis shoe polarized opinions; will his HUF shoe continue a similar style? It has the aesthetic, of that, but itâs new, updated and improved. It definitely has the Dylan style but wonât be the same.
The Plant Life socks are a bona fide phenomenon â whatâs the deal with those socks? Everybody wants them, everybody wants to put weed on their feet, everybodyâs feet are getting high; I dunno, itâs rad though. Weâre knocked off left and right, people are stealing it but we invented it and itâs our thing. I love it!
How did the Snoop collaboration come about? Every 420 (April 20th is weed day in the US) we pick a mascot who represents 420. The year before that we picked Kristina Rose, whoâs like a really rad porn star/stoner girl, then we kinda went really big and picked Snoop Dogg. He may be one of the most famous people in the world but heâs a big weed advocate so we chose him. Every year weâll have a new one, weâll pick a person and theyâll be our spokesperson for that day.
With the likes of Thrasher, WuTang, Haze and Snoop youâve produced some very cool hookups - Is there anyone in particular you would like HUF to collaborate with? Thereâs so many! Some Iâm trying to get approval and some Iâm trying to search out so canât really talk about it but I do pick and choose them very carefully. They need to be special and not to be oversaturated.
I do a lot of collaborations with my friends, who have companies, like UXA, LMAJC, DQM to really big things like WuTang and Snoop so weâre trying to get the big and the small. A collaboration can be a one piece thing or a whole capsule so you gotta be picky in what you chose to do.
Talking of collaborations, the HUF x THRASHER Stoops Tour was a great success and it was really cool to see you guys stop off at Southbank when you came to London. Â That was insane, great demo. If they are going to just demolish it then that sucks. Sometimes you just canât stop people but if they can make a big enough fuss and protect it then thatâs awesome â more power to âem. You know skateboarding though, spots come and go.
Look at the Banks⦠Exactly! They say itâs gonna come back but, you never know, that could all just be a front!
Do you think youâll ever move back East or are you Cali through and through? Not right now but you never know. Getting older sometimes you donât want to be in the hustle and bustle of New York City. I love it personally but it can be exhausting if youâre in there every day - if you go for a few days itâs the best thing ever though! I like LA right now and plan on having my roots here for a while and then weâll see.
Do you miss bombing hills in SF? Yeah thatâs such fun. There are actually some hills here in LA though, some gnarly hills. Weâve been hitting them up but theyâre sketchy as Hell â big hills with gnarly cracks!
Finally â whatâs the future for HUF? Weâre focusing on building the brand, building the footwear, focusing on the team, making awesome products, build the retail, make things better â weâre just doing the same thing on a bigger path.
Interview: Ross Wilson