Face climbing
In rock climbing a face climb is a type of climbing route where the rock face is both fully vertical, unlike in slab climbing, and largely featureless, unlike in crack climbing. Face-climbing routes are typically sustained and exposed, and longer multi-pitch face-routes can become big wall climbing. Face-climbing became more common with the introduction of sport climbing in the 1980s, when French climbers began to fix permanent bolts into the rock for climbing protection — in contrast to traditional climbing — allowing them to ascend the blanker rock faces in places like the Verdon Gorge and Buoux in France.
Face climbs emphasize the rock-climbing techniques of 'crimping' and of 'edging' that use small features on the rock to help with upward mobility. Face-climbing on advanced limestone routes can also involve using one and two-finger pockets that require considerable strength in the finger tendons. Because face climbs are not always uniformly sheer from top to bottom, some off-angle slab climbing skills may also be required, and the terms are often used interchangeably — although incorrectly — to describe any form of non-overhanging, near-vertical, featureless climbing route.
The evolution of new technical grade milestones that came with face-climbing was helped by the simultaneous introduction of new climbing training techniques and tools, and in particular the hangboard, and by the campus board. Particularly notable face-climbing routes include Jerry Moffatt's ' from 1983 in Germany, the world's List of grade [milestones in rock climbing#Redpointed by men|first-ever] graded route, and Wolfgang Gullich's Kanal im Rücken, Punks in the Gym, and ', which were the world's first-ever routes at the grade of,, and respectively. The creation of single-pitch sport climbing routes such as Ben Moon's Hubble in 1990, and Gullich's Action Directe in 1991, moved the focus of the leading rock climbers to overhang climbing routes on which all future new milestones in climbing grades would be set. However, face-routes would continue to feature in new grade milestones in multi-pitch climbing, such as the of graded big-wall face-climbing routes freed in 1993 to 1994, by Stefan Glowacz, by Thomas Huber, and by .