How to Build Your Own Skis or Snowboard: A Guide

1. Building the Equipment

2. Designing Your Ride: Determine Your Shape and Flex Profile

3. Prepare the Materials

Finished Ski Core with Urethane Sidewalls
All materials and composites for a snowboard, including the triaxial fiberglass and uniaxial carbon fiber stringers.

4. Lay Up (Press) the Skis/Snowboard

A pair of skis in layup on the left and the press on the right ready to receive the skis.
  • Trim to shape using a bandsaw or jigsaw and a belt sander.
  • Clean up and bevel edges to your desired angle (e.g., 1° base, 2° side).
  • Sand and seal the topsheet (for veneer) – epoxy, spar urethane, or polyurethane all work well depending on the look you want.
  • Flatten and stone-grind the base for good glide (your local ski shop can help here, since ski grinding machines are expensive.)
  • Mount bindings or have your local ski shop mount them.

Your first ride is the real test of your build. Pay attention to how the ski or board feels underfoot and compare it to what you designed:

  • Flex & Stiffness: Does the ski feel too soft or too stiff for your intended use?
  • Camber/Rocker Profile: Did the cured shape match your mold, or did heating, materials, or layup thickness change the outcome?
  • Edge Hold & Damping: Does it feel damp or lively? Consider different fiberglass weights, carbon strips, or core wood species.
  • Weight & Balance: Is the ski heavier than expected? Did your material choices strike the right balance?
  • Durability: After a few days on snow, check sidewalls, edges, and topsheet for wear.

Every build is a prototype in some way. Take notes on what worked, what didn’t, and what you’d change, whether it’s a tweak in the core thickness taper, a different camber target, or an adjustment to your edge radius. Ski building is a cycle of build → ride → refine. Each round gets you closer to the performance and feel you’re aiming for.