
The Beach House
The Beach House has been serving the spirit and romance of surfing since 1962. The shop first opened in Summerland, CA just four miles from The Queen of the Coast, Rincon Point. Needless to say, the shop was closed when the surf was up. Over 50 years later we’re still serving the same surfers and their families, although we don’t close for waves these days.

Hand-Picked
Explore a gathering of curated, inspired content from a community of ocean lovers, adventurers & activists.
RIDE THE WAVES OF SURF HERITAGE
Explore our rich history and diverse selection of surf products that celebrate the spirit of the ocean. Join us in embracing the surf culture that has thrived since 1962.












Unleash Your Surf Spirit
Experience the ultimate surf lifestyle with our products.

Featured Products
Owl Surfboards Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Owl Surfboards Pullover Hoodie Sweatshirt
Andreini Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Marc Andreini's "The Gift"
Santa Barbara Surf Shop Premium Sueded Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Santa Barbara Surf Shop Distressed Logo Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Santa Barbara Surf Shop Tank Top
Surf N' Wear Script Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Heather Grey
Surf N' Wear Script Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Cream
Surf N' Wear Script Short Sleeve T-Shirt - White
Greenough Long Sleeve T-Shirt
Greenough Short Sleeve T-Shirt - White
Greenough Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Navy
Yater Surfboards Bosch & Apocalypse Now Short Sleeve T Shirt - Military Green
Yater Surfboards Bosch & Apocalypse Now Short Sleeve T Shirt - Coyote Brown
Yater Surfboards Bosch & Apocalypse Now Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Collectors Edition
Yater Surfboards Apocalypse Now "C.D.S" Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Beach House Diamond Logo Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Beach House California Republic Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Beach House Retro Circle Short Sleeve T-Shirt
Beach House Mosaic Surf Short Sleeve Shirt
Vaqueros de las Olas Pullover Sweatshirt - Black
Vaqueros de las Olas Pullover Sweatshirt - Saddle
Vaqueros de las Olas Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Indigo
Vaqueros de las Olas Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Black
Yater Surfboards Bosch & Apocalypse Now Short Sleeve T Shirt - Military Green
Yater Surfboards Bosch & Apocalypse Now Short Sleeve T Shirt - Coyote Brown
Yater Surfboards Bosch & Apocalypse Now Short Sleeve T-Shirt - Collectors Edition
Yater Surfboards Apocalypse Now "C.D.S" Short Sleeve T-Shirt

Explore Our Surf Shop in the Heart of Downtown Santa Barbara
Visit us to discover a curated selection of surfboards, apparel, and accessories. Experience the vibrant surf culture that defines our community.

Discover the Exciting Future of Surfing at Our Upcoming Surf Museum
Join us as we celebrate the rich history of surfing. Our surf museum will showcase vintage collections and highlight the evolution of surf culture.
Explore Local Surf Culture
Discover the best surf spots in Santa Barbara.
Holiday Surf Gifts Guide
It's the most wonderful time of year to give your nearest and dearest the best surf gifts! The Beach House crew has curated this list of the best gifts available this year, online and in our store. Catch Surf Soft Boards Price Range $275-$450These might not make it down the chimney, but our elves have been busy stocking up on the best selection of soft surfboards, available in our store. Santa Barbara Surf Shop Backpack Chairs Price Range $70 Comfort, style, local as it can be. Give the gift of comfort and chill with our SB Surfshop Backpack Beach Chairs. Available in our store. Santa Barbara Surf Shop Dog Hats Price Range $24No words needed. This is the best dog owner gift of the year, available in our store and online here. Santa Barbara Surf Shop Coffee Mugs Price Range $18-$20 Every desk needs this. Drink your coffee and dream of a Leadbetter longboard session at sunset. Available in our store and online here. Surfer Dudes Toys Price Range $20-25 For the aspiring groms on your list, available in our store. Ukuleles Price Range $45-100 Make it a musical Mele Kalikimaka with these artful ukuleles, available in our store. Santa Barbara Grandma hand knit beanies Price Range $40 Our exclusive, top-selling holiday gift! The most local and thoughtful idea. Super hip beanies knit by a super hip Beach House family grandma. Available in our store while supplies last. Carver and Arbor Skateboards Price Range $150-$270 For the skaters in your family, come on down to the Beach House and check out our selection of Carver and Arbor Skateboards. Changing Ponchos Price Range $40-$80We are fully stocked with all of the coolest surf ponchos in our store! Slippers Price Range $40-120 Who doesn't want new slippers to cozy up after a winter Rincon surf session? Available in our store at Surf 'n Wear's Beach House. Santa Barbara Surf Shop Hats and Beanies Price Range $18-$30 Among our top gifts every year, these Santa Barbara Surf Shop hats and beanies are available in our store and online here. Jewelry Price Range $32-$58 Available in our store and online here, specialty surf inspired jewelry from Ocean Jewels is sure to dazzle your favorite surfer girl. Freestyle watches Freestyle $65-$70 Get home on time with these retro freestyle watches. Available in our store. Surf Accessories Surf accessories are always a welcome gift. We are fully stocked in our store with fins, leashes, stomp pads, board bags, wax, etc. Surf pads price range $45-55 Leashes price range $30-50
Learn moreTom Blake Surfboards: A Classic 1940s Rogers and Blake Mahogany Paddle Board
Tom Blake Surfboards in Surfing History Thomas Edward Blake (1902-94) was a pivotal figure in surfing history, and possibly the most influential individual in the history of wooden surfboards. He was an accomplished swimmer and surfer whose experiences with ancient Hawaiian surfer culture blended with his background in Malibu water sports to produce unprecedented surfboard designs. In the 1920s and 30s, Blake's experiments and innovations resulted in lighter paddleboards and surfboards, as well as alternative construction techniques, the introduction of the fin, and a basic leash. Tom Blake surfboards and the designs they influenced are credited from advancing surfing from its Polynesian origins to a national ocean sport in the US.Blake's significant contributions began in 1927 when he and Sam Reid pioneered surfing in Malibu, California, while at the same time working on a replica Olo surfboard in Hawaii. This massive fifteen-foot board, weighing approximately 150 pounds, underwent extensive modifications by drilling hundreds of holes through the deck to reduce weight, a technique that enabled Blake to win numerous paddleboard races. His experimentation progressed to chambering solid boards, carving out internal sections, and eventually developing a skin and frame construction method, revolutionizing the industry with significantly lighter boards, as light as 40 pounds. Although construction techniques have evolved over the years since Blake patented his design in 1931, his original concepts endured for decades, used globally as lifeguard rescue boards and commercially produced by various manufacturers.Blake pushed surfboard innovation further in 1935 when he added an aluminum skeg salvaged from a speedboat to the bottom of his cedar surfboard, encasing it in wood for protection. This precursor to the surfboard fin was a modest one-foot-long, four-inch-high addition provided Tom Blake surfboards with directional stability, enabling surfers to navigate tighter angles on waves and initiate turns effectively. Blake's relentless quest to improve surfboard design forever altered surfing, and modern surfboard shapers owe a significant debt of gratitude to his pioneering spirit and innovative techniques. Tom Black Rogers Co. Mahogany Paddle Board circa 1940 This hollow paddleboard circa 1940 in the Surf n' Wear classic surfboards collection was designed by Tom Blake in partnership with The Thomas Rogers Company of Venice, California, which also manufactured airplane wings. Blake patented his designs, which were produced by the Rogers Company, and exhibited similar design attributes with airplane wings. Most significantly this design approach reduced the weight of solid-wood surfboards, making surfing accessible to a broader audience. This board has a hollow structure with a ribbed interior, reinforced transversely. Blake, in close collaboration with Rogers, oversaw the production of some of the earliest commercially manufactured surfboards and paddleboards. Lifeguards and racers mostly used paddleboards, which they also used for leisure surfing. You can just picture it, gliding across the waves in Malibu... Come on down to the Beach House board room to check out more classic boards in our surfboard collection. Shop our in-house collection of surfboard shaper apparel and stickers, including Yater, Santa Barbara Surfshop, Andreini Surfboards, and Greenough Designs.
Learn moreMr. White Owl: Tales of the Incomparable Jeff White, Founder of Surf n' Wear
Surf n’ Wear surf shop founder Jeff White (1938-2010) is remembered in the history of Santa Barbara surfing as a wise mentor with a golden heart whose steadfast support of local innovation in the craft of surfing elevated the careers and lives of many. White glossing a board at the original White Owl Surf Shop in Summerland, 1962 White moved to Santa Barbara in 1956 from Hermosa Beach to study engineering at UCSB. He lived at Miramar, near Hammonds, where he earned the nickname “White Owl” when a friend saw him puffing on a White Owl cigar at a college party on Miramar Beach. During his time as a student, White worked as a lifeguard at Carpinteria State Beach and took up dory racing. White surfing Hammonds in 1964 In a 2008 interview with local Santa Barbara surfer and filmmaker David Pu’u, White recounts getting his first surfboard at the age of 12 in 1951 in Venice Beach from shaper Bob Simmons. He and some friends bought some old World War II balsa life rafts in San Pedro and brought them to Simmons to shape for $5 a piece. The boards were about 8’ or so. White and his dad glassed the boards themselves at home. He bought his next surfboard a year later from Dale Velzy: a redwood board with a detachable fin. The Summerland White Owl shop in 1962 (Brian Bradley, Stan Veith, Jesse, Jeff White, and Steve Scofield) In 1961, White set out to launch a boat-building business. He used a small business loan to rent shop space at 2320 Lillie Avenue in Summerland, next to Renny Yater’s shop. The space was attached to Shanty, a popular local burger joint. Instead, he enlisted Brian Bradley, and local Carpinteria grom surfer Stan Veith, to help him use the space to shape surfboard blanks. And so White Owl Surfboards was born, with the tagline “Fine surfboards by craftsmen who care.” Other local shapers soon joined the team, including Bruce Fowler, Curtis Jackson, Tom Rowland, Brian Bradley, and eventually Marc Andreini. By 1963, the name evolved to become just Owl Surfboards. In 1964, White opened a second Owl surfboard shop in Santa Cruz, California, at 24 Front Street. Veith moved up to Santa Cruz to run the shop, which began to sell more and more boards and rent boards for $5 a day. White Owl Surf Shop Summerland in 1966 Meanwhile, White expanded the Lillie Avenue shop to include surf apparel and wetsuits for sale. The shop grew as a hangout spot for young surfers from Carpinteria, Summerland, and Montecito. Local Hammond’s surfer Greg Tally tells a story about his mom dropping him off at the Owl shop as a kid, where he would hang out with other local surf groms, Peter and Marc Andreini. White taught the kids how to do ding repair and recruited them for an informal White Owl surf team. Marc Andreini recounts, “Jeff was so good to us... We were just little kids finding our way. But he took us in and made us a part of his deal. He really cared about people and about kids. When somebody has that kind of outlook on life, it makes things happen.” Marc Andreini surfing in a White Owl surf contest at Stanley's in 1966 In 1965, White made his next enterprising move in the local Santa Barbara surf scene when he founded a downtown surf shop named Surf n’ Wear on Carrillo Street, which focused on selling surf apparel and accessories as well as surfboards. By 1974, Jeff had opened Surf n’ Wear surf shops in San Luis Obispo, San Jose, and Goleta. Around this time, he asked Marc Andreini if he would shape boards under the Owl label. In 1975, Roger Nance started working at the Goleta Surf n’ Wear shop and eventually became manager. Nance had moved to Santa Barbara from Santa Cruz to attend UCSB. He remembered White with admiration from the Santa Cruz shop. Nance and White formed a partnership in 1978, which led to the opening of new Surf n’ Wear shops in Thousand Oaks and Santa Maria. They also briefly partnered with Matt Moore of Rincon Designs to run a shop in Carpinteria. That same year, Nance and White kicked off the annual Rincon Classic surf contest. A few years later, all Surf n’ Wear shops except for the flagship downtown shop were sold. Roger Nance at the Carrillo St. Surf n' Wear in the 1970s In 1987, White and Nance seized on a timely opportunity to open another downtown store on the waterfront at 10 State Street. The stars aligned at this spot in 1991 with the return of Marc Andreini, who resumed shaping boards under the Owl surfboards label to sell in the new Surf n’ Wear’s Beach House location. By 1993, White and Nance had bought Williams’ share of the business and expanded the board room at the shop to sell Yater surfboards as well as some Bradbury boards. In 1999, Surf n' Wear's Beach House became the official Yater Surfboards showroom. Jeff White soaking in the ocean air circa 1985 White’s love of swimming and ocean sports ultimately had a profound healing effect as White began to suffer from multiple sclerosis. With his characteristic positive and grateful spirit, White defied his physical limitations to swim in the ocean in front of his Carpinteria home every day. His love of community and the ocean lives on in the surfing history legacy he created through the simplest of things. As White recounted, “I really liked making surfboards. It wasn’t like going to work. It was like playtime. You liked the people you were surrounded with, you liked what you were doing. It’s a thrill to sell a surfboard.”
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Ride the Waves in Style
Gear up with the best surfboards, apparel, and accessories for your beach lifestyle.

