Spanish chess maker's sales soar after 'Queen's Gambit' cameo
David Ferrer, Spanish chess board maker, moves a chess pawn on a chessboard at the Rechapados Ferrer factory in La Garriga, north of Barcelona, Spain, Feb. 11, 2021. (Reuters Photo)


Being featured in a film or production can have real-life knock-on effects as a Spanish chess board maker discovered after learning that his products made an appearance in the hit Netflix series "The Queen's Gambit", with the shop's sales steadily increasing since the cameo.

"One day I came into work and a colleague, Miguel, told me that Netflix had released a new series 'The Queen's Gambit' and some Rechapados Ferrer boards appeared in the trailer," said David Ferrer, 30, who runs Rechapados Ferrer.

The series, based on the 1983 novel by Walter Tevis, debuted in October 2020 and fast became a hit.

It follows orphaned chess prodigy Beth Harmon as she takes on the male-dominated world of chess.

A triumphant finale takes her to Moscow to play one of the Soviet Union's star players. It is in this pivotal scene that the distinctive Rachapados Ferrer chess board takes center stage.

A still shot from "The Queen's Gambit" where Anya Taylor-Joy's character thinks before making her next move in a chess match. (Netflix via AP)

Viewers have been keen to buy a piece of the action, boosting sales already on the rise due to demand linked to strict COVID-19 lockdowns.

The company based in La Garriga, near Barcelona, has already doubled its annual orders from around 22,000 in 2020 to 45,000 for 2021 and has now moved any new orders to 2022.

"Orders of chess boards have skyrocketed," said Ferrer, whose grandfather founded the company in the 1950s. "This year is full in terms of production."

Ferrer told Reuters the board that appears in the finale has become one of the most requested, but is so far only available through one German distributor. It was through them that the series – much of which was filmed in Berlin – got the boards.

But with demand booming and chess more popular than ever, Ferrer says the company might try to sell the board through other channels too.